icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon
The Violet Fairy Book

The Violet Fairy Book

icon

Preface 

Word Count: 575    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

OLET

EDIC

LET FAI

ef

invent them 'out of his own head.' He is accustomed to being asked, by ladies, 'Have you written anything else except the Fairy Books?' He is then obl

he curiosity to read the 'Legendary Australian Tales,' which Mrs. Langloh Parker has collected from the lips of the Australian savages, will find that these tales are closely akin to our own. Who were the first authors of them nobody knows - probably the first men and women. Eve may have told these tales to amuse Cain and Abel. As people grew more civilised and had kings and queens, princes and princesses, these exalted persons generally were chosen as heroes and heroines. But originally the characters were just 'a man,' and 'a woman,' and 'a boy,' and 'a girl,' with crowds of beasts, birds,

ome ladies from being of the same opinion. But who really invented the stories nobody knows; it is all so long ago, long before reading and writing were invented.

ars,' 'The Lute Player,' 'Two in a Sack,' and 'The Fish that swam in the Air.' Mr. W. A. Cra

in the late Dr. Steere's 'Swahili Tales.' By the permission of his representatives these

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
The Violet Fairy Book
The Violet Fairy Book
“Andrew Lang's Fairy Books constitute a twelve-book series of fairy tale collections. Although Andrew Lang did not collect the stories himself from the oral tradition, the extent of his sources, who had collected them originally (with the notable exception of Madame d'Aulnoy), made them an immensely influential collection, especially as he used foreign-language sources, giving many of these tales their first appearance in English. As acknowledged in the prefaces, although Lang himself made most of the selections, his wife and other translators did a large portion of the translating and telling of the actual stories. "The irony of Lang's life and work is that although he wrote for a professionliterary criticism fiction poems books and articles on anthropology, mythology, history, and travel...he is best recognized for the works he did not write." Lang's urge to collect and publish fairy tales was rooted in his own experience with the folk and fairy tales of his home territory along the English-Scottish border. When Lang began his efforts, he "was fighting against the critics and educationists of the day," who judged the traditional tales' "unreality, brutality, and escapism to be harmful for young readers, while holding that such stories were beneath the serious consideration of those of mature age."”
1 Preface2 A Tale of the Tontlawald3 The Finest Liar in the World4 The Story of Three Wonderful Beggars5 Schippeitaro6 The Three Princes and Their Beasts7 The Goat's Ears of the Emperor Trojan8 The Nine Pea-Hens and the Golden Apples9 The Lute Player10 The Grateful Prince11 The Child who Came from an Egg12 Stan Bolovan13 The Two Frogs14 The Story of a Gazelle15 How a Fish Swam in the Air and a Hare in the Water16 Two in a Sack17 The Envious Neighbour18 The Fairy of the Dawn19 The Enchanted Knife20 Jesper who Herded the Hares21 The Underground Workers22 The History of Dwarf Long Nose23 The Nunda, Eater of People24 The Story of Hassebu25 The Maiden with the Wooden Helmet26 The Monkey and the Jelly-Fish27 The Headless Dwarfs28 The Young Man who Would have His Eyes Opened29 The Boys with the Golden Stars30 The Frog31 The Princess who was Hidden Underground32 The Girl who Pretended to Be a Boy33 The Story of Halfman34 The Prince who Wanted to See the World35 Virgilius the Sorcerer36 Mogarzea and His Son