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The Hope of the Katzekopfs

Introduction 

Word Count: 1034    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

Staffordshire!' And who may he be? I

wedded, look you, to immortal verse. Doctor Corbet, Bishop of Norwich,-'the wittie Bishop,' as King James the First was wont to call him-conferred on me the title of Registrar-General to the Fairies. Have you never read his 'Fairies' Farewell'? They say, indeed, that his poems, like many better things, are little read now-a-days; but you will find it among the ballads collected by a congenial spirit (a prelate likewise), Bishop Percy o

have left o

trar th

eserve the

th wise

of their

hat I co

store; con t

am for t

Churne, of S

d and pr

eale, can me

s both ol

m all giv

ye for hi

he Fairie

if it we

h the Bishop-Poet spake of me. I warrant you,

your riddle. You would not have us believe, would you, that a man who was born in the sixteenth century, was story-telling in the nineteenth? I fear you must be

that you have a larger share of the unbelief of this dull, plodding, unimaginative, money-getting,

mitted yourself to be, carried you off some moonlight night, two hundred years ago, and

wever, I do not say but that it may be even as you suppose. Perhaps, while time and

fifty years old! Why, your face must be a wilderness of wrinkles! And your dress, how strange and antiquated

be the case, it is more than probable that I h

g us! What advances have been ma

is another question. However, of this I can assure you, gentle reader, that I would

y do you

es; whether they have yet patience to glean the xviilessons of wisdom, which lurk beneath the surface of legendary tales, and the chronicles of the wild and supernatural; whether their hearts can be moved to noble and chivalrous

nny Magazines, and such like stores of (so called) useful knowledge, will condescend to read a Fable and its moral, or to interest

is my

Thames, and they are talking of a canal across the

not th

retail those 'hundred merry pranks' of Fairy-land, of wh

der, when I know how far your patience has carried you thro

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The Hope of the Katzekopfs
The Hope of the Katzekopfs
“The former edition of this little tale was put forth with an Introduction (which was intended to be in keeping with it) from the pen of an imaginary author,—that William Churne, of whom Bishop Corbet writes, and who, two centuries since, seems to have been the great authority on all matters connected with Fairy-land.”
1 PREFACE2 Introduction3 CHAPTER I4 CHAPTER II5 CHAPTER III6 CHAPTER IV7 CHAPTER V8 CHAPTER VI