CONTENTS

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INTRODUCTION iii
THE OLD FAIRY TALES
The Road to Fairy Land 2
By Cecil Cavendish
The Beautiful Princess Goldenlocks 3
Prince Hyacinth and the Dear Little Princess 7
By Madame Leprince De Beaumont
Cinderella 10
By Charles Perrault
The Sleeping Beauty 13
Adapted from the Brothers Grimm
Beauty and the Beast 15
Prince Darling 20
Rumpelstiltskin 26
Adapted from the Grimm Brothers
Rapunzell, or the Fair Maid with Golden Hair 28
By the Brothers Grimm
Snow-White and Rose-Red 30
By the Brothers Grimm
Hansel and Grethel 34
By the Brothers Grimm
STORIES BY FAVORITE AMERICAN WRITERS
The Flag-Bearer 39
By Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
Johnny Chuck Finds the Best Thing in the World 40
By Thornton W. Burgess
Little Wee Pumpkin’s Thanksgiving 41
By Madge A. Bingham
The Coming of the King 42
By Laura E. Richards
The Little Pig 44
By Maud Lindsay
The Travels of the Little Toy Soldier 44
By Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
What Happened to Dumps 45
By Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
The Wreck of the Hesperus 47
By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Ballad of the Little Page 48
By Abbie Farwell Brown
The Snow-Image 51
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Castle of Gems 55
By Sophie May
The Hen that Hatched Ducks 58
By Harriet Beecher Stowe
The Ballad of Piping Will 63
By Anna Hempstead Branch
Little Annie’s Dream, or the Fairy Flower 68
By Louisa M. Alcott
Companions 71
By Helen Hunt Jackson
194
The Assembly of Animals 194
The Cock and His Three Hens 194
The Black Dog and the White Dog 195
The Elephant and the Ape 195
The Crow and the Dawn 195
The Lion and the Goat 195
The Sunling 196
The Mushroom and the Goose 196
The Fables of Pilpay the Hindu 196
The Fox and the Hen 196
The Three Fishes 196
The Falcon and the Hen 197
The King Who Grew Kind 197
MODERN FABLES
The Horses’ Council 197
Adapted from John Gay
The Oak and the Reed 198
Adapted from the French of La Fontaine
The Advantage of Knowledge 198
Adapted from the French of La Fontaine
The Torrent and the River 198
Adapted from the French of La Fontaine
The Tomtit and the Bear 199
By the Brothers Grimm
Why Jimmy Skunk Wears Stripes 200
By Thornton W. Burgess
How Cats Came to Purr 202
By John Bennett
STORIES FROM SCANDINAVIA
The Greedy Cat 207
Gudbrand on the Hillside 210
Pork and Honey 212
How Reynard Outwitted Bruin 212
The Cock and the Crested Hen 213
The Old Woman and the Tramp 213
The Old Woman and the Fish 216
The Lad and the Fox 217
Adventures of Ashpot 217
Norwegian Bird-Legends 219
The Ugly Duckling 222
By Hans Christian Andersen
The Wild Swans 227
By Hans Christian Andersen
Taper Tom 235
The Boy Who Went to the North

The Road To Fairy Land

The day is dull and dreary,
And chilly winds and eerie
Are sweeping through the tall oak trees that fringe the orchard lane.
They send the dead leaves flying,
And with a mournful crying
They dash the western window-panes with slanting lines of rain.
My little ’Trude and Teddy,
Come quickly and make ready,
Take down from off the highest shelf the book you think so grand.
We’ll travel off together,
To lands of golden weather,
For well we know the winding road that leads to Fairy Land.

A long, long road, no byway,
The fairy kings’ broad highway,
Sometimes we’ll see a castled hill stand up against the blue,
And every brook that passes,
A-whispering through the grasses,
Is just a magic fountain filled with youth and health for you;
And we’ll meet fair princesses
With shining golden tresses,
Some pacing by on palfreys white, some humbly tending sheep;
And merchants homeward faring,
With goods beyond comparing,
And in the hills are robber bands, who dwell in caverns deep.

Sometimes the road ascending,
Around a mountain bending,
Will lead us to the forests dark, and there among the pines
Live woodmen, to whose dwelling
Come wicked witches, telling
Of wondrous gifts of golden wealth. There, too, are lonely mines.
But busy gnomes have found them,
And all night work around them,
And sometimes leave a bag of gold at some poor cottage door.
There waterfalls are splashing,
And down the rocks are dashing,
But we can hear the sprites’ clear call above the torrent’s roar.

Where quiet rivers glisten
We’ll sometimes stop and listen
To tales a gray old hermit tells, or wandering minstrel’s song.
We’ll loiter by the ferries,
And pluck the wayside berries,
And watch the gallant knights spur by in haste to right a wrong.
Oh, little ’Trude and Teddy,
For wonders, then, make ready,
You’ll see a shining gateway, and, within, a palace grand,
Of elfin realm the center;
But pause before you enter
To pity all good folk who’ve missed the road to Fairy Land.
Cecil Cavendish


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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