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The Grey Fairytales. Andrew LangЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Grey Fairytales - Andrew Lang


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       Andrew Lang

      The Grey Fairytales

      35 Traditional Stories & Fairly Tales

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2020 OK Publishing

      EAN 4064066394912

       Preface

       Donkey Skin

       The Goblin Pony

       An Impossible Enchantment

       The Story of Dschemil and Dschemila

       Janni and the Draken

       The Partnership of the Thief and the Liar

       Fortunatus and His Purse

       The Goat-Faced Girl

       What Came of Picking Flowers

       The Story of Bensurdatu

       The Magician's Horse

       The Little Gray Man

       Herr Lazarus and the Draken

       The Story of the Queen of the Flowery Isles

       Udea and Her Seven Brothers

       The White Wolf

       Mohammed with the Magic Finger

       Bobino

       The Dog and the Sparrow

       The Story of the Three Sons of Hali

       The Story of the Fair Circassians

       The Jackal and the Spring

       The Bear

       The Sunchild

       The Daughter of Buk Ettemsuch

       Laughing Eye and Weeping Eye, or the Limping Fox

       The Unlooked-For Prince

       The Simpleton

       The Street Musicians

       The Twin Brothers

       Cannetella

       The Ogre

       A Fairy's Blunder

       Long, Broad, and Quickeye

       Prunella

      PREFACE

       Table of Contents

      The tales in the Grey Fairy Book are derived from many countries—Lithuania, various parts of Africa, Germany, France, Greece, and other regions of the world. They have been translated and adapted by Mrs. Dent, Mrs. Lang, Miss Eleanor Sellar, Miss Blackley, and Miss Lang. 'The Three Sons of Hali' is from the last century 'Cabinet des Fées,' a very large collection. The French author may have had some Oriental original before him in parts; at all events he copied the Eastern method of putting tale within tale, like the Eastern balls of carved ivory. The stories, as usual, illustrate the method of popular fiction. A certain number of incidents are shaken into many varying combinations, like the fragments of coloured glass in the kaleidoscope. Probably the possible combinations, like possible musical combinations, are not unlimited in number, but children may be less sensitive in the matter of fairies than Mr. John Stuart Mill was as regards music.

      DONKEY SKIN

       Table of Contents

      There was once upon a time a king who was so much beloved by his subjects that he thought himself the happiest monarch in the whole world, and he had everything his heart could desire. His palace was filled with the rarest of curiosities, and his garden with the sweetest flowers, while the marble stalls of his stables stood a row of milk-white Arabs, with big brown eyes.

      Strangers who had heard of the marvels which the king had collected, and made long journeys to see them, were, however, surprised to find the most splendid stall of all occupied by a donkey, with particularly large and drooping ears. It was a very fine donkey; but still, as far as they could tell, nothing so very remarkable as to account for the care with which it was lodged; and they went away wondering, for they could not know that every night, when it was asleep, bushels of gold pieces tumbled out of its ears, which were picked up each morning by the attendants.

      After many


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