sistents of DFS will then help to lend such papers, as are demanded. Without special permission the numbers of Section I (Grundtvig's collection) are accessible in the reading-hall of the Royal Library.
2. Questions in letters may be send by the members of FF, and copies and excerpts may be procured (to the prices fixed by FF).
Ballads are arranged in this way: 1) Old ballads (corresponding to the edition: »Danmarks gamle Folkviser») 2) Humerous ballads (»Skæmteviser») (cat. DFS 32); 3) Younger ballads (»Kæmpevisens efterklang») (cat. DFS 33).
Tales (»Æventyr») are arranged mainly after the system of Grundtvig, described in the following paper. (In future this system will be compleated by the system of FF, which is in elaborating yet.)
Local legends (»sagn») are in the New Collection arranged topographically. (For the legends of Mythical beings a system is in work; cfr. DFS 1906, 29. 29b. 119—121).
Superstitions & Customs (»folketro», »folkeskik»). A system is in work.
Rhymes. A system of Dancing rhymes is elaborated (by Thuren and Grüner Nielsen; cfr. »Danske Studier» 1907, p. 130—133)[1]
- ↑ Special Catalogues (»DFS Fagkataloger», quite elaborated or yet in work):
1. Folklore MSS in other (scandinavian) libraries. 2. Ballads (I. Nyerup and other older collections, II Grundtvig's Coll., III E. T. Kristensen, IV New Coll.). 4. Ballad Refrains. 5. Ballad Melodies. 6. Phonograph Records. 7. Tales of Evald Tang Kristensen. 8. Of new coll. 9. Tales, systematical (continuation of DFS 72—72c). 10. The Topographical arrangement of parishes in Denmark.