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Joseph Jacobs
Indian Fairy Tales

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(Hapax - words occurring once)
casua-fabul | faces-langu | lap-puran | purbl-threa | three-zur

     Tale
501 StNote| therefore assume that they are casually connected, and the existence 502 StNote| other birds that cause the catastrophe: "O here is a brave sight, 503 Pre | by this book. The need of catering for the young ones has restricted 504 Magic | a sound beating; she is causing me to be ashamed before 505 Tortoi| where we live, at the Golden Cave on Mount Beautiful in the 506 Demon | bind him fast to life, and cease to be.~Thus the Teacher 507 StNote| natural. For one of the most celebrated metempsychoses of Buddha 508 Pre | and the humour both of the Celt and of the Hindoo. It is 509 GeNote| includes from 30 to 50 per cent. of the whole, and it is 510 GeNote| the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, became very popular, and 511 Tiger | himself for that deity's ceremonials. Ganesa made over the corpse 512 Tiger | observant of his religious ceremonies, went direct to the river 513 Prince| himself, "I must see this ceremony to-day." He went in and 514 GeNote| thing there is practical certainty; the fairy tales that are 515 Ivory | walked away, the vizier's son chaffing him because he bad missed 516 Raja | request, - ~Unloose these chains, and live for ever blest!"~ 517 StNote| purposes, by Rabbi Joshua ben Chananyah in a harangue to the Jews, 518 StNote| from India improves the chances of this also coming from 519 GeNote| from the Cingalese King Chandra Muka Siwa (obiit 52 A.D.) 520 Skin | their hands; and blowing chanks, and beating drums, they 521 StNote| at poisoning is perhaps characteristically Indian, and reads like a 522 Raja | saying:~"Fair Prince, on the charger so gray,~Turn thee back! 523 Punch | another: below the sixth chattee is a small cage which contains 524 Tortoi| king! those who are called chatter-boxes - people whose words have 525 Labam | flew back to their Raja, chattering. The prince was greatly 526 GeNote| Boccaccio's Decamerone, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, or even 527 Laili | red lips, blue eyes, red cheeks, red hair, and a white skin. 528 Laili | many years he grew more cheerful and happy, and began to 529 StNote| said to be the origin of chess.~Parallels. - Rev. C. Swynnerton, " 530 Goeth | dancers, were proudly seated chewing betel and tobacco. Meanwhile 531 Haris | father had given him in his childhood in sport, and, impelled 532 Haris | applause, because his speech chimed in so well with the object 533 StNote| surrounded by a wrapper. This Chinese ball arrangement is found 534 StNote| kids with "hair on their chinny chin chin." This brings 535 Boy | to marry one of us, but chooses that very poor man!" Her 536 StNote| Lingaet family settled and Christianised at Goa for three generations. 537 Pigeon| your ways! Let me be your chum, and let us feed together."~ 538 StNote| a duck, in a well, in a church, on an island, in a lake"; 539 StNote| rolling down hill in the churn and the Lambikin in the 540 GeNote| because Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, Blue Beard, Puss in Boots 541 GeNote| with a deputation from the Cingalese King Chandra Muka Siwa ( 542 GeNote| Stupas. Thus several of the circular figure designs on the reliefs 543 StNote| Buddhist Stupas. Under these circumstances, it may be of interest to 544 Punch | Balna's feet. It fell with a clang on the floor, and Balna, 545 Raja | I wot,~His armour will clatter.~As soon as I've eaten my 546 GeNote| 52 A.D.) to the Emperor Claudius about 50 A.D, and was done 547 Lion | friendship is not won~By the clearest good deed.~Better softly 548 GeNote| of the two works had been clearly explained. The largest,addition 549 Rupees| young men before me?" He clenched his sword with firm grip, 550 GeNote| these was the Disciplina Clericalis of Petrus Alphonsi, a Spanish 551 Punch | with him; and she spoke so cleverly, and pleased him so well 552 Ivory | the' vizier's son. "I will climb to the window, and see whether, 553 StNote| variant in South Africa clinches the matter, and gives us 554 Punch | which he rolled up in his cloak; while, as he mounted again 555 Punch | marry him, and she was so closely guarded that she saw no 556 Skin | the ass's back, he used to clothe him in a lion's skin, and 557 Ivory | elephants, and jewels and rich cloths, and bade them start for 558 Raja | beats fierce and loud,~The clouds rise thick in the west;~ 559 Demon | He struck him with his club - and that stuck too!~When 560 | Co 561 Pre | congratulate myself on the co-operation of my friend Mr. J. D. Batten 562 StNote| Mähr. No. 80), the seven co-queens are transformed into seven 563 StNote| was originally an envious co-wife. But there can be little 564 StNote| Negro Myths of the Georgia Coast (Uncle Remus is from S. 565 Tiger | Deccan avoiding both the coasts, and went on journeying 566 StNote| collection that Richard Coeur de Lion got the story, and 567 Tiger | but the papal-tree replied coldly, "What have you to complain 568 Tiger | well. He thought he could collect some water if he let down 569 Pre | kindness of the original collectors or their publishers. I have 570 StNote| where it occurs in Cape Colony (South African Folk-Lore 571 Magic | ill-will, and at length they combined together to oust her from 572 Punch | accustomed to have everything comfortable about them, and good food 573 Ring | and they both lived very comfortably till their master came again 574 Tiger | obtain your liberty." Thus comforting his protector in trouble, 575 Ivory | had been present from the commencement. "What examples for the 576 Goeth | the traders, who were now commencing to dance. So he took the 577 StNote| the story is told by the commentator (c. 400 AD) to illustrate 578 Pre | go, a large number of the commonest incidents in European folk-tales 579 StNote| FAKIR.~Source. - Kindly communicated by Mr. .M. L. Dames from 580 Ring | be going on among the rat community of that place, and all the 581 GeNote| to Europe for purposes of comparative folk-tales.~Can we go further 582 StNote| it may be of interest to compare with Mr. Batten's conception 583 StNote| of the ingratitude of man compared with the gratitude of beasts 584 GeNote| Somadeva, C. 1200 AD. in a huge compilation entitled Katha Sarit Sagara (" 585 Tiger | coldly, "What have you to complain about? Don't I give shade 586 Raja | and wailing to the palace, complaining to the King that a mighty 587 StNote| low," saunters out, and complains of Brer Rabbit that lie 588 StNote| the farmer's Son. Make a composite of the Phaedrine and Babrian 589 Haris | son-in-law rode. He placed it in concealment at some distance, and in 590 Money | blowing the conch in every conceivable way, he was obliged to give 591 Ring | know of this, and at once conceived the idea of seizing the 592 GeNote| 2), and the commentary concludes: "The Master having given 593 StNote| The similarity of the concluding episode with the finish 594 GeNote| even more valuable than the conclusions he draws from it as to the 595 StNote| proved most ingeniously and conclusively (Einl. i. 359) that the 596 StNote| Remarks. - We have here a concrete instance of the relation 597 GeNote| later date was entitled El Conde Lucanor (Eng. trans. by 598 StNote| Antiquary. I have considerably condensed and modified the somewhat 599 Sons | soon find them change their conduct towards you. Salaam. I will 600 Rupees| palace. At night he was conducted to the apartment of the 601 Queens| content on sweetmeats and confectionery.~Now the King was very fond 602 Tiger | reigned for a long time, conferring several benefits upon his 603 StNote| accidental; though, it must be confessed, the tale has undergone 604 Raja | Sarkap, seeing Rasalu's confident bearing, began to be afraid, 605 StNote| historic times, and is now confined to the Gir forest of Kathiáwar, 606 Tiger | had occurred. "How very confusing!" said the jackal, when 607 Pre | folk-tales.~I have again to congratulate myself on the co-operation 608 Money | simple farmer's house, and congratulated him on his good fortune, 609 GeNote| grew, a tendency arose to connect all the popular stories 610 GeNote| literary art. The idea of connecting a number of disconnected 611 StNote| lifetime, and generally he connects a good deal of primitive 612 Demon | Then the Teacher made the connexion, and gave the key to the 613 Raja | I come from afar,~Sworn conqueror in love and in war!~King 614 StNote| relic of the days of Aryan conquest, when the fair-skinned, 615 Rupees| and we cry at the terrible consequence of the marriage. What can 616 Kings | to be done?" After some consideration, be said to himself, "I 617 GeNote| is obvious from the above considerations.~In the following Notes 618 StNote| aborigines, whose touch is considered polluting. The Santals are 619 StNote| the essence of the tale to consist in the conception of an 620 GeNote| literature. His introduction consisted of over 200 monographs on 621 Punch | find out what his power consists in, and whether he is immortal, 622 StNote| tone of the Jatakas must be conspicuous to all reading them. Why, 623 Rupees| evening there was great consternation in the palace, because the 624 Punch | the Malee's wife; after consultation with whom he determined 625 Fish | manner of trickery, were consulted. Nobody, however, could 626 GeNote| India, an examination of the contemporary folk-tales of the peninsula 627 GeNote| rest. M. Cosquin further contends that the whole of these 628 Raja | growing tall and strong, yet contented to remain playing with his 629 GeNote| source. The mere fact that contiguous countries have more similarities 630 StNote| trace its travels across the continents of Asia, Africa, and America. 631 StNote| those of Brazil (Romero, Contos do Brazil), and in the West 632 Pre | thence, after many days, to contribute their quota to the Elizabethan 633 GeNote| undoubtedly the most important contribution to the scientific study 634 StNote| 84. Majnun and Laili are conventional names for lovers, the Romeo 635 Magic | they began lovingly to hold converse with each other. When the 636 Ivory | into the room while she was conversing with the old woman; and 637 GeNote| AND JOSAPHAT tells of his conversion and much else besides, including 638 StNote| traditional mode of the Moon's conveyance of dinner to her mother 639 GeNote| not openly expressed his conviction that all folk-tales are 640 GeNote| in origin: he prefers to convince us non vi sed saepe cadendo. 641 StNote| explanations seem to me so convincing that I cannot avoid including 642 StNote| independently imagining such bizarre convolutions. They were borrowed from 643 Fish | anger should have somewhat cooled.~The young fellow, who was 644 Money | to the farmer, and said, coolly, "Look here; I've got your 645 Tiger | you now, for after being cooped up so long I am just terribly 646 StNote| foreheads, are given with some copiousness in Stokes, l. c., pp. 242 - 647 Fish | passed through a field of corn ready for the sickle, and 648 Fish | we were passing through a corn-field, when he asked me whether 649 StNote| Tale of Ivan," from the old Cornish, now extinct, and notes 650 StNote| the story better told in Cornwall than in the land of its 651 GeNote| were made, and at last a corpus of the ATAKAS, or Birth-Tales 652 Gold | speaking, it gave the Brahman a costly pearl and disappeared. But 653 Tiger | gave milk they fed me on cotton-seed and oil-cake, but now I 654 Broken| on the wall, placed his couch beneath, and looking intently 655 Ring | throat; whereupon the ogress coughed violently, and the ring 656 Tiger | what to do. They held their council, and decided to make an 657 Ring | he determined to seek the counsel of his aunt, who was an 658 StNote| 7. Our proverb, "Do not count your chickens before they 659 Punch | nevertheless, there were such countless thousands of them, that 660 StNote| three judges. Prof. K. Krohn counts the first the original form, 661 Tiger | advised him to pluck up courage, and took leave of him. 662 Tortoi| place, surrounded by his courtiers; and looking at the tortoise, 663 Pre | question is still before the courts, and one can only deal with 664 GeNote| and regarded beasts as cousins of men and stages of development 665 Goeth | assurance of having thoroughly cowed the traders, who were now 666 Boy | years old.~But this time the cowherd had followed Suri, and had 667 Crane | me tight enough; but we crabs have a famous grip. If you 668 Raja | hammered them so hard that they cracked to pieces.~Seeing this, 669 Punch | Princesses were eating the cream-cake, who should come by but 670 GeNote| afford material for artistic creation, and the fact that the higher 671 Pre | beautiful or amusing form to the creations of the folk fancy of the 672 StNote| got it from the Dialogus Creaturarum of Nicholaus Pergamenus, 673 GeNote| its initial stages. The credit of having begun the process 674 Fish | would have to go to his creditors."~"Yes, yes, yes, of course! 675 Gold | saw a great hooded snake creeping out of an ant-hill near 676 StNote| was only intended as a "crib" to the Pali. For the omitted 677 Tiger | times overheard Gangazara's cries, reported the matter to 678 Tiger | wept and wailed for his crime, asked a thousand pardons, 679 Haris | herself at my feet. Secret crimes manifest themselves by means 680 Tiger | stone walls, into which any criminal guilty of a capital offence 681 GeNote| question which we have very few criteria to decide. It should be 682 Pre | there, we have scarcely any criterion for judging; but as some 683 StNote| the ingrate animal is a crocodile, which asks to be carried 684 Money | the conch by hook or by crook, and as he was villain enough 685 Money | so dry that the farmer's crops withered for want of rain. 686 Prince| have laid me down at the cross-roads. My sins and offences have 687 Fish | just now, when we were crossing the stream, he waded through 688 Ivory | company, and passed by in the crowd. They came to see the tamasha.~ 689 Ivory | little and threw it to some crows that were hopping about. 690 Sons | bear with much abuse and cruelty from his sons. Wretched, 691 Goeth | a span in breadth and a cubit in length.~The idea that 692 Goeth | large piece of cloth, six cubits long, and tied the hands 693 Ivory | dropped in the bottom of a cup in which she had given him 694 Rupees| rise and go, for she was cured.~In the evening there was 695 Tiger | sent for all the snake-bite curers. He promised half his kingdom 696 Tiger | It may also excite the curiosity of some robbers on the way. 697 Gold | pearl, and went back home, cursing the folly of his son.~ 698 StNote| of culture. But the most cursory examination of the sets 699 StNote| of advice to three, and curtailed somewhat.~Parallels - See 700 Ivory | once took the prince into custody on the charge of stealing 701 Ivory | When they reached the last custom-house the vizier's son overtook 702 StNote| also points out that it was customary for estates to be divided 703 StNote| existence of the primitive customs to be found ip it. The whole 704 StNote| wonder Brer Rabbit is so 'cute: he is nothing less than 705 Raja | day, before breakfast, he cuts off the heads of two or 706 Tiger | corpse was not forthcoming he cuttingly remarked, "Is this, after 707 StNote| becomes part of the Tristan cycle. There is, so far as I know, 708 Haris | ghee and flesh and other dainties, and get the same for his 709 Dinner| not forget her. Of every dainty dish that was brought round, 710 StNote| called after Karataka and Damanaka, the names of two jackals 711 Goeth | and the intentions of the dancers, were proudly seated chewing 712 StNote| striking example of the dangers of the anthropological met-hod 713 Rupees| going along the road to the darbar reading it, the king's son 714 Raja | arise,~Dim the sunlight and darken the day;~For the mother 715 GeNote| were Darwinists long before Darwin, and regarded beasts as 716 GeNote| done, for the Hindus were Darwinists long before Darwin, and 717 StNote| Asbjörnsen, No. 36, ap. Dasent, Pop. Tales, p. 55, "The 718 Prince| Then the Fakir made a dash at the King's son, thinking 719 StNote| á la Decameron, and she dashes herself over the rocks. 720 StNote| legs, but don't fling me in dat brier patch;" which, of 721 Labam | roof of her palace. In the daytime she never came out of her 722 Demon | his bow an arrow dipped in deadly poison, and let fly. The 723 StNote| anthropological met-hod of dealing with folk-tales before some 724 GeNote| with some remarks which dealt too much with sun-myths 725 Queens| saying, "May it please our dearest lord not to hunt towards 726 Tiger | A SOOTHSAYER when on his deathbed wrote out the horoscope 727 StNote| 103 seq., "Koschkei the Deathless," also in Mr. Lang's Red 728 Tiger | subjects of this kingdom. The deaths by snake-bite and tigers 729 GeNote| Arabian Nights, Boccaccio's Decamerone, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, 730 Ivory | morning in the name of her deceased uncle. It is saturated with 731 Crane | indeed, sharp-witted in deceit,~But only as the Crane here 732 Ring | princess was thoroughly deceived. She returned the ogress' 733 GeNote| carry as the popular voice decides. But the most famous collection 734 Tiger | promise to abide by the decision of the first three things 735 Demon | to powder!" Thus did he declare his resolve, and with a 736 Demon | Truths. At the end of the declaring of the Truths, this Brother 737 Prince| a Prince.~What fate had decreed came to pass in that country, 738 Demon | passed away according to his deeds.~And the Teacher, when this 739 Fish | he is, is no fool, as you deem him. He only wishes to know 740 Raja | and tell him that Rasalu deems it no act of bravery to 741 Pre | series. This has to some degree weakened the case for India 742 Ivory | that one of them had most deliberately aimed at her as she stood 743 Punch | day, whilst he was absent deliberating with his Ministers on the 744 Tiger | supplied him with. These delicacies had completely changed his 745 Boy | it was who could sing so deliciously. Then she put on her clothes, 746 Ring | gratitude to him for having delivered his son. He then returned. 747 Tiger | When you have become my deliverer I will never touch you. 748 Fish | the man must surely be demented!" thought the old farmer. " 749 StNote| was, however, included by Demetrius Phalereus, tyrant of Athens, 750 Sons | the day of the, old man's demise, when the bags were greedily 751 Gold | is surely full of golden denars; I'll kill the serpent, 752 Magic | to return it to him. They denied having taken it, so he had 753 StNote| will be reminded of the dénouement of Mr. Rider Haggard's She. 754 Goeth | Now there happened to be a dense forest near their village, 755 StNote| must have contained the denunciation of the magic fiddle of the 756 StNote| so striking that few will deny some historical relation 757 GeNote| question has taken a new departure with the researches of M. 758 Rupees| Brahman and his wife were dependent on their son for their subsistence. 759 Rupees| thieves, and saw where they deposited the things, and then returned.~" 760 StNote| annoyed at Brer Rabbit's depredations, fits up "a contrapshun, 761 Ivory | son was very reticent and depressed. The prince noticed this 762 Ivory | him, and then she would be deprived of him. She could not live 763 GeNote| brought to Europe with a deputation from the Cingalese King 764 Rupees| good and honest. He at once deputed him to the charge of this 765 StNote| Patzig, Zur Geschichte der Herzmare (Berlin, 1891). 766 GeNote| there is such a thing, derided as it may be. I have throughout 767 StNote| tales is also a secondary derivate.~X. THE SOOTHSAYER'S SON.~ 768 StNote| comes from Bonaventure des Periers, Contes et Nouvelles, 769 Ivory | displeasure of Heaven should descend on him, and so he placed 770 StNote| blue eyes of Prince Majnun deserve attention. They are possibly 771 StNote| children in his own lifetime deserves to be put to death with 772 GeNote| several of the circular figure designs on the reliefs from Amaravati, 773 Punch | roots, and did as the Ranee desired; and when some of the water 774 Ring | these words, and was so desirous of seeing the beautiful 775 Tiger | Reply to me, and henceforth desist from your ravages." Thus 776 Punch | from this, there lies a desolate country covered with thick 777 Fish | The old farmer left him in despair, and entered his house laughing.~" 778 Ring | leave it. He had fallen desperately in love with the woman whose 779 Ring | the snake reached their destination in safety; and information 780 Crane | is you that I am going to destroy. For you in your folly have 781 Punch | grow by the Ranee's grave destroyed, and yet the Princesses 782 Haris | will soon become the swift destroyer of your helpless self." 783 Ivory | in every direction, and destroying everything in their way.~ 784 StNote| before all are devoured destroys the Paragon, as in the Jataka, 785 Tiger | justice we will go on with our destruction."~The king heard, cursed 786 Tiger | again, not missing a single detail, and spinning as long a 787 StNote| metempsychoses of Buddha is that detailed in the Sasa Jataka (Fausböll, 788 Punch | His aunts, on learning his determination, were much alarmed, and 789 GeNote| should be enough material to determine the vexed question of the 790 StNote| s hole full of treasure determines to slay the snake. He strikes 791 GeNote| materials to go about in determining the extent of Indian influence 792 Haris | But the minister, named Devajnanin, whispered in the king's 793 StNote| worship of Buddha's foot developed in later Buddhism. No wonder 794 GeNote| cousins of men and stages of development in the progress of the soul 795 Tiger | leave it anywhere else the devils may snatch it, away when 796 Money | the fanner met a Jogi or devotee, and to him he gave a cake, 797 Demon | Demon, cruel, blood-bibbing, devourer of the flesh and gore of 798 Tiger | The elder brother was a devout worshipper of Ganesa. That 799 Tiger | grinned the jackal, as he dexterously shut the door, "and if you 800 Haris | drew all kinds of pretended diagrams, and said: "The horse has 801 StNote| Nouvelles, who got it from the Dialogus Creaturarum of Nicholaus 802 Ivory | letter at the vizier's son's dictation.~On reading the letter Gulizar' 803 Fish | was eaten or not."~"And didn't you know the meaning of 804 Ring | do not, then your prince dies under my feet."~"Very well, 805 Pre | and national characters differ; but fairy tales are the 806 Raja | help you when you are in difficulties." So Raja Rasalu put the 807 GeNote| literary collections could be dignified by the name of fairy tales, 808 Queens| have it, although he hunted diligently, he found no game. Nor had 809 Raja | cloud of thy going arise,~Dim the sunlight and darken 810 StNote| dissertation (" Die Kluge Dime," in Ausland, 1859, Nos. 811 StNote| of the Arabic Kalilah wa Dimnah, which was itself derived 812 Ivory | thankfulness.~When it was dinner-time he took the saucepan of 813 Tiger | religious ceremonies, went direct to the river to bathe.~How 814 Ivory | where he is."~The prince directed the kotwal and the policeman 815 StNote| probably derived it from the Directorium Humanae Vita of John of 816 Demon | monition he told him the disadvantage of the five kinds of wickedness, 817 Dinner| hot weather is still so disagreeable.)~But to Moon she said, " 818 Ring | the house and everything disappear. "O master!?' they said, " 819 Rupees| great was his grief and disappointment when he knew the facts of 820 Ivory | frowned slightly in token of disapproval; but the prince was tired, 821 Haris | horse quickly, praising the discernment of Harisarman. Then Harisarman 822 Sons | must pretend that I came to discharge a long-standing debt with 823 GeNote| selection of these was the Disciplina Clericalis of Petrus Alphonsi, 824 GeNote| of connecting a number of disconnected stories familiar to us from 825 GeNote| last thousand years have discountenanced these beliefs has not been 826 Punch | I pray you not to be discouraged; I will return soon, and 827 Demon | the Demon in various ways, discoursing to him until he subdued 828 Ivory | other officials for not discovering the presence in his country 829 StNote| dish. The usual form of discovery of the thieves is for the 830 Demon | When he came to years of discretion, and had attained the measure 831 Goeth | trade.~When two traders discuss the price of an article 832 Tiger | hold of it, and without discussing he lifted up the poor animal 833 Demon | my hands, as the moon is disgorged from the jaws of Rahu after 834 Punch | befriend him, and advised his disguising himself lest the Magician 835 Haris | specimen of the way he makes a dishonest livelihood, by having a 836 Ivory | on hearing this answer. "Dismiss the people. Their presence 837 Raja | he came to the river, he dismounted, and, going into the water, 838 Rupees| she will frown on him and disown him. Thirdly, If a man has 839 Punch | all-powerful, and if any one displeases him he can turn them into 840 Ivory | anger, lest peradventure the displeasure of Heaven should descend 841 Tiger | you can carry with you and dispose of in your own country." 842 Haris | that I am treated with such disrespect here; so I will pretend 843 StNote| addition of his to Ralph Disset),Hist. Major,ed. Luard, 844 Punch | much alarmed, and tried to dissuade him, saying, "We have lost 845 GeNote| definite set of folk-tales as distinctive as its flora and fauna is 846 StNote| the ancients themselves distinguished from the Aesopic Fables. 847 Raja | before Rasalu, so as to distract his attention from the game. 848 Ring | his father, was in great distress about the matter, and did 849 Fish | praying beside a grave and distributing chapatis and kulchas to 850 Fish | noticed that something had disturbed her.~"Are you indisposed?" 851 Ivory | window-hole. "Below there is a ditch surrounded by a high wall. 852 Ring | you will come with me and dive into that spring, we shall 853 Ring | away." On saying this, he dived into the water and was lost 854 Haris | all due to knowledge of divination, was highly delighted, and 855 Demon | Brahmans who had skill in divining from such marks beheld the 856 GeNote| Unfortunately, there is a Divorce Court atmosphere about the 857 StNote| the Arabian Nights (the Djinn and the bottle) and European 858 StNote| afforded by the Grimms' "Doctor Aliwissend" (No. 98), which 859 GeNote| influence of his life and doctrines grew, a tendency arose to 860 Crane | would be capital; but if he doesn't - then I'll cut his throat, 861 Prince| my simurgs, tigers, and dogs, and horses; they will all 862 Broken| she, distracted by some domestic work, does not hear me. 863 StNote| certain kind of rice land; Doms and Hadis are low-caste 864 Ivory | pass through the narrow doorway like pieces of cloth, and 865 Raja | will be forfeit to-day!~Dost love life? then, stranger, 866 Ring | see the precious thing. Doubting nothing, the beautiful princess 867 GeNote| practically unexplored. There are doubtless many collections still unpublished. 868 Broken| beautiful daughter, with a large dowry. She will have a son, and 869 Gold | shadow of a tree to have a doze. Suddenly he saw a great 870 StNote| Kathiáwar, where only a dozen specimens exist, and are 871 StNote| Busk, p. 164); in Albania (Dozon, p. 132 seq.); in Transylvania ( 872 Punch | So the poor Princess was dragged away, without any power 873 StNote| being swallowed up by a Dragon or Demon. May not, asks 874 GeNote| than the conclusions he draws from it as to the relations 875 Rupees| apartment of the princess. "Dread hour!" thought he; "am I 876 Fish | Impossible! You must be dreaming."~"I am not a fool. I speak 877 Queens| for we have dreamt bad dreams, and fear lest evil should 878 Queens| north to-day, for we have dreamt bad dreams, and fear lest 879 Raja | night passed on, dark and dreary, while Rasalu sat in the 880 Raja | them all. Then the women, drenched with water, went weeping 881 StNote| forget the blow. ...~Phaed. Dressl. VII. 28 (Rom. II. xi.)~~ 882 Magic | bring water, it suddenly dried up before her, and she began 883 Punch | girl watching us? Let us drive her away, or hide the pomeloes, 884 Magic | deep that she felt herself drowning, then she cried aloud:~" 885 Magic | liquor. Of the latter he drunk so freely that he presently 886 StNote| Barlow, who, like Alice's Duchess, ended all his tales with: " 887 Tiger | of evening, Gangazara sat dumb for a moment, and thought 888 Tiger | was assembled, just at the dusk of evening, Gangazara sat 889 Haris | his house, performing the duty of an attendant. One day 890 Rupees| a king, saying that his dwelling was the open air, and that 891 Ivory | said the prince, who had eagerly listened to every word. " 892 Laili | and trembling with age and eagerness; but this only frightened 893 Pigeon| the kitchen, in order to earn merit by it. A greedy Crow, 894 Laili | such a long time, and so earnestly, to bring the wicked Raja 895 StNote| moon. It is well known that Easterns explain an eclipse of the 896 GeNote| Popular Tales and Fictions (Edinburgh, 2 vols., 1887) and Book 897 Demon | The lad departed and was educated by this teacher; he received 898 Demon | son, go and complete your education."~"Who shall be my teacher?" 899 Punch | away, without any power of effecting an escape or of letting 900 StNote| cannot insult another more effectually than by calling him a black 901 Ring | may the great God aid your efforts. Bring back my wife, and 902 StNote| played by two players with eight men, each on a board in 903 StNote| 397, flourishing in the eighth or ninth century. There 904 GeNote| in the annotations to the eighty-tour tales which he has collected 905 StNote| No. 323), and Avian, ed. Eilis, 5, whence it came into 906 StNote| ingeniously and conclusively (Einl. i. 359) that the Indian 907 StNote| multitudinous offshoots (see Benfey, Einleilung, § 6o) among others in the 908 GeNote| later date was entitled El Conde Lucanor (Eng. trans. 909 StNote| Punchkin," and still more elaborately in the section, "The External 910 Ivory | of the dark fortnight had elapsed, when the prince and the 911 StNote| youthful wives behave to elderly husbands. He gives her her 912 StNote| larger proportion of Eastern elements than Phaedrus. There can 913 Tiger | thought several times of the eloquent way in which the tiger spoke, 914 StNote| libation. One day he had to go else-where, and he sent his son with 915 | elsewhere 916 StNote| folk-tales of the beast-epic emanating from India improves the 917 GeNote| with the researches of M. Emanuel Cosquin in his Contes populaires 918 Magic | a bamboo growing on the embankment of the tank in which she 919 StNote| matter of fact, it is a very embarrassing addition to it, since the 920 Pre | It is no slight thing to embody, as be has done, the glamour 921 Ring | She returned the ogress's embrace, and invited her to come 922 Crane | thought sharp enough in any emergency, afloat or ashore.~Him the 923 GeNote| Siwa (obiit 52 A.D.) to the Emperor Claudius about 50 A.D, and 924 StNote| confidence of the method employed to venture on that most 925 Haris | in evil case for want of employment, and he had very many children, 926 StNote| on that most hazardous of employments, scientific prophecy. I 927 Queens| determined not to go home empty-handed, he forgot all about his 928 StNote| wolf, as the ingrate, which enables us to decide on the Indian 929 Queens| round the thicket, and so encircle the hind; then, gradually 930 Ivory | woman led the way out of the enclosure by a secret door.~"But where 931 Ivory | When the prince beard these encouraging words he felt much comforted, 932 Punch | entreating him on no account to endanger his life by trying to rescue 933 Punch | willing to marry him. Then endeavour to find out what his power 934 Tortoi| themselves took the two ends in their teeth, and flew 935 Ivory | fakir with his eyes shut and engaged in prayer. Presently, when 936 Punch | ring on which her name was engraved, and she had put it on her 937 Tiger | this happiness is, is an enigma to me."~Thus thought he, 938 Dinner| home for you. I went out to enjoy myself with my friends - 939 Dinner| her a share in your own enjoyment, from henceforth, you shall 940 GeNote| their sacred books, and enlist on their side the tale-telling 941 GeNote| used by monks and friars to enliven their sermons as EXEMPLA. 942 Ivory | is there that entertains enmity against you?"~"The Princess 943 GeNote| as we now have them, are enshrined in a commentary on the gathas, 944 Fish | know if you can afford to entertain him."~"Oh! of course," replied, 945 Ivory | thing? Who is there that entertains enmity against you?"~"The 946 Demon | departed out of it.~At the entrance of the forest he told all 947 Ivory | time you go to see her, I entreat you to take some snow with 948 Ring | princess of his intense love, entreated her to be his wife. Seeing 949 Punch | better do; at the same time entreating him on no account to endanger 950 Lion | withdraw from him,~Neither envying nor abushing."~And having 951 Kings | that the ages of both were equal. Then he inquired about 952 Kings | kingdom with righteousness and equity. He gave judgments without 953 Raja | saying:~"Oh! son who ne'er gladdened mine eyes,~Let 954 Ring | shall soon accomplish my errand." When she had been in the 955 GeNote| curious phenomenon in his erudite edition of the Exempla of 956 GeNote| contended with enormous erudition that the majority of folk-tale 957 Ivory | little company of soldiers escorted the prince out of the city. 958 StNote| Migration of Fables" (Selected Essays, i. 500 - 76), which is 959 StNote| and Mr. Frazer regard the essence of the tale to consist in 960 StNote| pp. 242 - 3. This is an essentially Indian trait; almost all 961 Demon | made him self-denying, and established him in the five kinds of 962 Tiger | leaving the whole of his estate to his eldest son. The second 963 StNote| that it was customary for estates to be divided and surrendered 964 StNote| abstract of the Jataka in Prof. Estlin Carpenter's sermon, Three 965 Ivory | has happened to suddenly estrange you from me? A little while 966 StNote| Bonaventure des Periers, Contes et Nouvelles, who got it from 967 StNote| given by Campbell in Trans. Ethnol. Soc., ii. p. 336; an Anglo-Latin 968 Queens| prepared against the coming event throughout the length and 969 Ring | hovered over the lamb, and eventually pounced down on it to carry 970 Ivory | the commencement. "What examples for the people! Let them 971 Crane | verse:~"The villain, though exceeding clever,~Shall prosper not 972 Demon | from such marks beheld the excellence of his, and made answer:~" 973 Tortoi| slew.~"Behold him then,~O excellent by strength!~And speak wise 974 Laili | just such an old woman, excepting her teeth, as she had been 975 Tiger | in my bundle. It may also excite the curiosity of some robbers 976 StNote| such a minute point as his exclamation, "Ach, ich armer Krebs," 977 Ivory | for they both had been excused from obeying this order) 978 Ivory | return. Now fear not to execute these instructions, because 979 StNote| introduces a method of folk-lore exegesis which has been overdriven 980 GeNote| in England collected with exemplary industry a large number 981 Ivory | as a princess, came and exhumed a body that had been buried 982 Ivory | lived together, we will be exiled together, and we will die 983 Fish | now almost dead from the expectation of death, was at once carried 984 Tiger | his hunters on a hunting expedition. All of a sudden the tiger-king 985 Ring | shooting and on other such-like expeditions, and might lose it. Accordingly 986 Sons | only a needless trouble and expense. And they let the poor old 987 Rupees| abundance of money for the expenses of the way and as presents 988 Fish | for he had had sufficient experience of the King to know that 989 Ring | one another all they had experienced since they had last seen 990 GeNote| two works had been clearly explained. The largest,addition to 991 StNote| starts abruptly, without explaining why the serpent had killed 992 StNote| folk-lorist's mouth - but his explanations seem to me so convincing 993 Ivory | sent back his salaam and expressions of thankfulness.~When it 994 StNote| strengthened the case for less extensive travels of other tales. 995 StNote| from the old Cornish, now extinct, and notes ibid. Mr. Clouston 996 StNote| century, and the Fabulae Extravagantes of the thirteenth or fourteenth: 997 StNote| skin me, scratch out my eyeballs, tar out my years by the 998 StNote| he may "drown me as deep ez you please, skin me, scratch 999 StNote| Temple, Analysis, III. vi. f. p. 418). Readers will be 1000 StNote| twelfth century, and the Fabulae Extravagantes of the thirteenth


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