Children who have read our Fairy Books may have noticed that there are not so very many fairies in the stories after all. The most common characters are birds, beasts, and fishes, who talk and act like Christians. The reason of this is that the first people who told the stories were not very clever, or, if they were clever, they had never been taught to read and write, or to distinguish between Vegetable, Animal, and Mineral. They took it that all things were ‘much of a muchness:’ they were not proud, and held that beast and bird could talk like themselves, only, of course, in a different language. After offering, then, so many Fairy Books (though the stories are not all told yet), we now present you (in return for a coin or two) with a book about the friends of children and of fairies—the beasts. The stories are all true, more or less, but it is possible that Monsieur Dumas and Monsieur ThÉophile Gautier rather improved upon their tales. I own that I have my doubts about the bears and serpents in the tales by the Baron Wogan. This gentleman’s ancestors were famous Irish people. One of them There ought to be a moral; if so, it probably is that we should be kind to all sorts of animals, and, above all, knock trout on the head when they are caught, and don’t let the poor things jump about till they die. A chapter of a very learned sort was written about the cleverness of beasts, proving that there must The longer stories from Monsieur Dumas were translated from the French by Miss Cheape. ‘A Rat Tale’ is by Miss Evelyn Grieve, who knew the rats. ‘Mr. Gully’ is by Miss Elspeth Campbell, to whom Mr. Gully belonged. ‘The Dog of Montargis,’ ‘More Faithful than Favoured,’ and ‘Androcles’ are by Miss Eleanor Sellar. Snakes, Bears, Ants, Wolves, Monkeys, and some Lions are by Miss Lang. ‘Two Highland Dogs’ is by Miss Goodrich Freer. ‘Fido’ and ‘Oscar’ and ‘Patch’ are by Miss A.M. Alleyne. ‘Djijam’ is by his master. ‘The Starling of Segringen’ and ‘Grateful Dogs’ are by Mr. Bartells. ‘Tom the Bear,’ ‘The Frog,’ ‘Jacko the Monkey’ and ‘Gazelle’ are from Dumas by Miss Blackley. All the rest are by Mrs. Lang. |