Tales of Folk and Fairies. Katharine Pyle

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Название Tales of Folk and Fairies
Автор произведения Katharine Pyle
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664654458



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       Katharine Pyle

      Tales of Folk and Fairies

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664654458

       THE MEESTER STOORWORM

       A Story from Scotland

       JEAN MALIN AND THE BULL-MAN

       A Louisiana Tale

       THE WIDOW’S SON

       A Scandinavian Tale

       THE WISE GIRL

       A Serbian Story

       THE HISTORY OF ALI COGIA

       From the Arabian Nights

       OH!

       A Cossack Story

       THE TALKING EGGS

       A Story from Louisiana

       THE FROG PRINCESS

       A Russian Story

       THE MAGIC TURBAN, THE MAGIC SWORD AND THE MAGIC CARPET

       A Persian Story

       THE THREE SILVER CITRONS

       A Persian Story

       THE MAGIC PIPE

       A Norse Tale

       THE TRIUMPH OF TRUTH

       A Hindu Story

       LIFE’S SECRET

       A Story of Bengal

       DAME PRIDGETT AND THE FAIRIES

      LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
He took out his pipe and blew a tune.Frontispiece
Seeing no one, the creature dropped on its knees and bellowed, “Beau Madjam!”29
She sat down beside the hearth and took off her head.127
Then the demon flew out through the window and away through the night.169
The Princess took the cup and drank.191
The Rajah brought the girl down, while the crows circled about his head.241

      TALES OF FOLK AND

      FAIRIES

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      There was once a lad, and what his real name was nobody remembered, unless it was the mother who bore him; but what every one called him was Ashipattle. They called him that because he sat among the ashes to warm his toes.

      He had six older brothers, and they did not think much of him. All the tasks they scorned to do themselves they put upon Ashipattle. He gathered the sticks for the fire, he swept the floor, he cleaned the byre, he ran the errands, and all he got for his pains were kicks and cuffs and mocking words. Still he was a merry fellow, and as far as words went he gave his brothers as good as they sent.

      Ashipattle had one sister, and she was very good and kind to him. In return for her kindness he told her long stories of trolls and giants and heroes and brave deeds, and as long as he would tell she would sit and listen. But his brothers could not stand his stories, and used to throw clods at him to make him be quiet. They were angry because Ashipattle was always the hero of his own stories, and in his tales there was nothing he dared not do.

      Now while Ashipattle was still a lad, but a tall, stout one, a great misfortune fell upon the kingdom, for a Stoorworm rose up out of the sea; and of all Stoorworms it was the greatest and the worst. For this reason it was called the Meester Stoorworm. Its length stretched half around the world, its one eye was as red as fire, and its breath was so poisonous that whatever it breathed upon was withered.

      There was great fear and lamentation throughout the land because of the worm, for every day it drew nearer to the shore, and every day the danger from it grew greater. When it was first discovered it was so far away that its back was no more than a low, long, black line upon the horizon, but soon it was near enough for them to see the horns upon its back, and its scales, and its one fierce eye, and its nostrils that breathed out and in.

      In their fear the people cried upon the King to save them from the monster, but the King had no power to save them more than any other man. His sword, Snickersnapper, was the brightest and sharpest and most wonderful sword in all the world, but it would need a longer sword than Snickersnapper to pierce through that great body to the monster’s heart. The King summoned his councillors—all the wisest men in the kingdom—and they consulted and talked together, but none of them could think of any plan to beat or drive the Stoorworm off, so powerful it was.

      Now there was in that country a sorcerer, and the King had no love for him. Still, when all the wisemen