INDIAN FAIRY TALES
This book was especially republished to raise funds for these charities & many more...
33% of the publishers profit from the sale of this book will be donated to charities.
A GREAT READ FOR "CHILDREN" OF ALL AGES
Soils and national characters differ, but fairy tales are often the same in plot and incidents, if not in style. Most of the 27 tales in this volume of Indian fairy tales are known in the West in some form or other; how can we account for their simultaneous existence in both Europe and Asia?
To assemble this volume, Jacobs has selected the best from the Jatakas, the Bidpai, the Tales of the Sun, the Baluchi folk-tales, and the folk-tales of Kashmir. In this volume we find stories about Punchkin, the Evil Magician, and the quaint myth: "How Sun, Moon, and Wind went out to Dinner, the Magic Fiddle, the Broken Pot, the Tiger, the Brahman, the Jackal, and more.
In short, Jacobs has made this book a representative collection of all the fairy tales of India. It is only a further proof that fairy tales are something more than Celtic or Hinduthey are human.
Some have declared that India is the home of the fairy tale, and that all European fairy tales have been brought from thence by crusaders, Mongol missionaries, Gipsies, Jews, traders, and travellers. After all, India is on one branch of the fabled Silk and Spice Routes, over which Europeans and Asians have been travelling for several millennia. We should be prepared, within certain limits, to hold a brief for India. The common fairy stories of the children of Europe, which form a greater part of their stories as a whole, are derived from Indian tales. In particular, the majority of the Drolls, or comic tales and jingles, can be traced without much difficulty back to the Indian peninsula.
So, we invite you to curl up with a sliver of exotic folklore and fables from the Indian sub-continent and lose yourself in a culture and lifestyle of the ancient, Eastern past.
Of the net profit from the sale of this book, 33% will be donated to the Christchurch Earthquake Appeal.
YESTERDAY'S BOOKS RAISING FUNDS FOR TODAY'S CHARITIES
Excerpt from INDIAN FAIRY TALES
THE BROKEN POT
Once Upon a Time here lived in a certain place in India a Brahman, whose name was Svabhavakripana,which means "a born miser." He had collected a quantity of rice by begging,and after having dined off it, he filled a pot with what was left over. He hung the pot on a peg on the wall, placed his couch beneath, and looking intently at it all the night, he thought, "Ah, that pot is indeed brimful of rice. Now, if there should be a famine, I should certainly make a hundred rupees by it. With this I shall buy a couple of goats. They will have young ones every six months, and thus I shall have a whole herd of goats. Then, with the goats, I shall buy cows.
As soon as they have calved, I shall sell the calves. Then, with the calves, I shall buy buffaloes; with the buffaloes, mares. When the mares have foaled, I shall have plenty of horses; and when I sell them, plenty of gold. With that gold I shall get a house with four wings.
And then a Brahman will come to my house, and will give me his beautiful daughter, with a large dowry. She will have a son, and I shall call him Somasarman. When he is old enough to be danced on his father's knee, I shall sit with a book at the back of the stable, and while I am reading, the boy will see me, jump from his mother's lap, and run towards me to be danced on my knee.
He will come too near the horse's hoof, and, full of anger, I shall call to my wife, 'Take the baby; take him!' But she, distracted by some domestic work, does not hear me. Then I get up, and give her such a kick with my foot."
While he thought this, he gave a kick with his foot, and broke the pot. All the rice fell over him, and made him quite white.
Therefore, I say, "He who makes foolish plans for the future will be white all over, like the father of Somasarman."
Table of Contents for INDIAN FAIRY TALES
The Lion and the Crane |
How the Raja's Son won the Princess Labam |
The Lambikin |
Punchkin |
The Broken Pot |
The Magic Fiddle |
The Cruel Crane Outwitted |
Loving Laili |
The Tiger, the Brahman and the Jackal |
Harisarman |
The Charmed Ring |
The Talkative Tortoise |
Lac of Rupees for a Bit of Advice |
The Gold-giving Serpent |
The Son of Seven Queens |
A Lesson for Kings |
Pride Goeth Before A Fall |
The Ass in the Lion's Skin |
The Farmer and the Money-lender |
The Boy who had a Moon on his Forehead and a Star on his Chin |
The Prince and the Fakir |
Why the Fish Laughed |
The Demon with the Matted Hair |
The Ivory City and its Fairy Princess |
How Sun, Moon, and Wind went out to Dinner |
How the Wicked Sons were Duped |
The Pigeon and the Crow |
General Notes |
Story Notes |
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