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Alphabetical [« »] independent 1 independently 6 index 1 india 66 indian 81 indica 1 indicates 1 | Frequency [« »] 67 more 67 poor 66 every 66 india 66 oh 66 why 65 years | Joseph Jacobs Indian Fairy Tales IntraText - Concordances india |
Tale
1 Pre | England - have declared that India is the Home of the Fairy 2 Pre | limits, to hold a brief for India. So far as the children 3 Pre | whole - are derived from India. In particular, the majority 4 Pre | drolls and folk-tales from India about the time of the Crusaders. 5 Pre | contact between Europe and India, in the case of one branch 6 Pre | Aesop, were derived from India, probably from the same 7 Pre | The story-store of modern India has been well dipped into 8 Pre | folk-tales have been found in India. Whether brought there or 9 Pre | current among the folk in India can be traced back more 10 Pre | degree weakened the case for India as represented by this book. 11 Pre | published story-store of India by granting me the use of 12 Demon | be the chief man in all India. On hearing what the Brahmans 13 GeNote| THE story literature of India is in a large measure the 14 GeNote| all the popular stories of India round the great teacher. 15 GeNote| the popular literature of India, his followers also invented 16 GeNote| Buddha the central figure of India folk-literature. Curiously 17 GeNote| collection of fables existed in India before Buddha and independently 18 GeNote| portions of Shakespeare back to India. It should also be mentioned 19 GeNote| See Note on No. v.)~In India itself the collection of 20 GeNote| the serious fairy tale to India. Few of the tales in the 21 GeNote| these were to be traced to India, an examination of the contemporary 22 GeNote| Legends current in Southern India, collected from oral tradition 23 GeNote| collected from all parts of India Some of these have been 24 GeNote| Sets of tales from Southern India, collected by the Pandit 25 GeNote| title Folk-Lore of Southern India, three fascicules of which 26 GeNote| J. Robinson, Tales of S. India (1885), together with those 27 GeNote| huge population as that of India: the Central Provinces in 28 GeNote| privileged to use. Altogether, India now ranks among the best 29 GeNote| ancient with the modern, India has probably some 600 to 30 GeNote| as to the relations with India. He has taken up the work 31 GeNote| the East, ultimately from India, not by literary transmission, 32 GeNote| mainly a modern product in India as in Europe, so far as 33 GeNote| found of recent years in India. Thus, the Magic Fiddle, 34 GeNote| The moral of this is, that India belongs to a group of peoples 35 GeNote| common store of stories; India belongs to Europe for purposes 36 GeNote| go further and say that India is the source of all the 37 GeNote| presumption is in favour of India, because of the vitality 38 GeNote| animism or metempsychosis in India throughout all historic 39 GeNote| nucleus is derived from India and India alone. The Hindus 40 GeNote| is derived from India and India alone. The Hindus have been 41 GeNote| fairy tales, it owes this to India.~I do not wish to be misunderstood. 42 GeNote| they are all derived from India. The latter scholar has 43 GeNote| I regard as coming from India mainly at the time of the 44 GeNote| collection of folk-tales in India, the great importance of 45 StNote| the Fable originated in India, and came West, by two different 46 StNote| become rarer and rarer in India during historic times, and 47 StNote| must have borrowed from India, or India from Europe. As 48 StNote| borrowed from India, or India from Europe. As this must 49 StNote| favour of borrowing from India, possibly through the intermediation 50 StNote| travels of the fable from India to La Fontaine. See also 51 StNote| ultimately to be derived from India.~Remarks. - The stories 52 StNote| Fables of Bidpai" from India to Europe are well known 53 StNote| European folk-tales found in India. Unfortunately, the form 54 StNote| becomes "a great Paragone of India (of those that liue a hundredth 55 StNote| could probably trace back to India.~VIII. LOVING LAILI~Source. - 56 StNote| second is that current in India and represented by the story 57 StNote| beast-epic emanating from India improves the chances of 58 StNote| s Folk-Lore of Southern India, pt. ii., originally from 59 StNote| very widely spread from India (Wideawake Stories, pp. 60 StNote| story has been borrowed from India, there is no reason why 61 StNote| should not have arisen in India, and have been spread to 62 StNote| the Lion's Skin is from India. As Prof. Rhys-Davids remarks, 63 StNote| have collected in modern India what one cannot help thinking 64 StNote| European collections, found in India, and in a quarter, too, 65 StNote| a landing-stage between India and America. There can be 66 StNote| existence of the tale in India renders it likely enough