Showing posts with label European Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European Books. Show all posts

Myth-Folklore Book: Europa's Fairy Book

This book is part of the Europa's Fairy Book unit.

Europa's Fairy Book by Joseph Jacobs and illustrated by John Batten (1916).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Hathi Books
Sur La Lune

Other online sources:
Kindle eBook: $1.00


Table of Contents

I. Cinder-Maid
II. All Change
III. The King of the Fishes
IV. Scissors
V. Beauty and the Beast
VI. Reynard and Bruin
VII. The Dancing Water, Singing Apple, and Speaking Bird
VIII. The Language of Animals
IX. The Three Soldiers
X. A Dozen at a Blow
XI. The Earl of Cattenborough
XII. The Swan Maidens
XIII. Androcles and the Lion
XIV. Day Dreaming
XV. Keep Cool
XVI. The Master Thief
XVII. The Unseen Bridegroom
XVIII. The Master-Maid
XIX. A Visitor from Paradise
XX. Inside Again
XXI. John the True
XXII. Johnnie and Grizzle
XXIII. The Clever Lass
XXIV. Thumbkin
XV. Snowwhite


Myth-Folklore Book: The Fables of La Fontaine

This book is part of the La Fontaine unit.

The Fables of La Fontaine translated by Elizur Wright (1882).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Google Books
Hathi Books
Kindle eBook
Gold Scales

You can also find La Fontaine's French poems easily accessible at the French Wikipedia (Wikisource) website, with a listing of the fables by book or by title.




Myth-Folklore Book: Andersen's Fairy Tales

There are many translations and editions of the fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen online. The edition I used is this one:

Fairy Tales and Stories by Hans Christian Andersen, translated by H. P. Paull (1872).

You can find the Paull translation of Andersen at many websites, including the Gilead.org website created to honor the memory of Gilead Har’El. It is also available at Google Books and
Hathi Books.

There is a free audiobook at LibriVox; all but the Match-Seller are in the first volume, and the Match-Seller is in the second volume.




Myth-Folklore Book: Kalevala

This book is part of the Kalevala unit.

Kalevala, The Land of the Heroes (Volume One) by Elias Lönnrot, translated by W. F. Kirby (1907). The translation is in two volumes; the first volume contains runos 1-25.

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Google Books
Hathi Books
Kindle eBook

Available FREE audio:
LibriVox
Internet Archive

There are other English translations, too. For example, you can read John Martin Crawford's translation at Sacred Texts Archive.



Table of Contents

Runo I. After a preamble by the bard, he proceeds to relate how the Virgin of the Air descended into the sea, was tossed about by the winds and waves, modelled the earth, and brought forth the culture-hero Väinämöinen, who swims to shore.
Runo II. Väinämöinen clears and plants the country, and sows barley.
Runo III. The Laplander Joukahainen presumes to contend with Väinämöinen in singing, but is plunged by him into a [Pg. xi]swamp, till he pledges to him his sister Aino; after which he is released, and returns home discomfited. But Aino is much distressed at the idea of being obliged to marry an old man.
Runo IV. Väinämöinen makes love to Aino in the forest; but she returns home in grief and anger, and finally wanders away again, and is drowned while trying to swim out to some water-nymphs in a lake. Her mother weeps for her incessantly.
Runo V. Väinämöinen fishes up Aino in the form of a salmon; but she escapes him, and his mother advises him to seek a bride in Pohjola, the North Country, sometimes identified with Lapland, but apparently still further north.
Runo VI. While Väinämöinen is riding over the water on his magic steed, Joukahainen shoots the horse under him. Väinämöinen falls into the water, and is driven onwards by a tempest, while Joukahainen returns to his mother, who upbraids him for shooting at the minstrel.
Runo VII. Väinämöinen is carried by an eagle to the neighbourhood of the Castle of Pohjola, where the chatelaine, Louhi, receives him hospitably, and offers him her beautiful daughter if he will forge for her the talisman called the Sampo. He replies that he cannot do so himself, but will send his brother Ilmarinen, so Louhi gives him a sledge in which to return home.
Runo VIII. Väinämöinen, on his journey, finds the daughter of Louhi sitting on a rainbow weaving, and makes love to her. In trying to accomplish the tasks she sets him, he wounds himself severely, and drives away till he finds an old man who promises to stanch the blood.
Runo IX. The old man heals Väinämöinen by relating the origin of Iron, and by salving his wounds.
Runo X. Väinämöinen returns home, and as Ilmarinen declines to go to Pohjola to forge the Sampo, he causes a whirlwind to carry him to the castle. Ilmarinen forges the Sampo, but the maiden declines to marry him at present, and he returns home disconsolate.
Runos XI.-XV. These Runos relate the early adventures of Lemminkainen. He carries off and marries the beautiful Kyllikki, but quarrels with her, and starts off to Pohjola to woo the daughter of Louhi. Louhi sets him various tasks, and at [Pg. xii]length he is slain, cast into the river of Tuoni, the death-god, and is hewed to pieces; but is rescued and resuscitated by his mother.
Runos XVI.-XVII. Väinämöinen regrets having renounced the daughter of Louhi in favour of Ilmarinen, and begins to build a boat, but cannot complete it without three magic words, which he seeks for in vain in Tuonela, the death-kingdom, but afterwards jumps down the throat of the dead giant, Antero Vipunen, and compels him to sing to him all his wisdom.
Runos XVIII.-XIX. Väinämöinen and Ilmarinen travel to Pohjola, one by water and the other by land, and agree that the maiden shall make her choice between them. She prefers Ilmarinen, who is aided by his bride to perform all the tasks set him by Louhi.
Runos XX.-XXV. The wedding is celebrated at Pohjola, an immense ox being slaughtered for the feast; after which ale is brewed by Osmotar, "Kaleva's most beauteous daughter." Every one is invited, except Lemminkainen, who is passed over as too quarrelsome and ill-mannered. Before the bride and bridegroom leave, they have to listen to long lectures about their future conduct.

Runos XXVI.-XXX. Lemminkainen is enraged at not being invited to the wedding, forces his way into the Castle of Pohjola through the magical obstacles in his path, and slays the lord of the castle in a duel. He flies home, and his mother sends him to hide in a distant island where all the warriors are absent, and where he lives with the women till the return of the men, when he is again obliged to fly. He returns home, and finds the whole country laid waste, and only his mother in hiding. Against her advice, he persuades his old comrade Tiera to join him in another expedition against Pohjola, but Louhi sends the Frost against them, and they are driven back in great distress.
Runos XXXI.-XXXVI. A chief named Untamo lays waste the territory of his brother Kalervo, and carries off his wife. She gives birth to Kullervo, who vows vengeance against Untamo in his cradle. Untamo brings Kullervo up as a slave, but as he spoils everything he touches, sells him to Ilmarinen.  Ilmarinen's wife ill-treats him, and he revenges himself by giving her over to be devoured by wolves and bears, and escapes to the forests, where he rejoins his family. One of his sisters has been lost, and meeting her accidentally and without knowing her, he carries her off. She throws herself into a torrent, and he returns home. His mother advises him to go into hiding, but first he makes war on Untamo, destroys him and his clan, and again returns home. Here he finds all his people dead, and everything desolate; so he wanders off into the forest, and falls on his own sword.
Runos XXXVII.-XLIX. Ilmarinen forges himself a new wife of gold and silver, but cannot give her life or warmth, so he carries off another daughter of Louhi; but she angers him so much that he changes her into a seagull. Ilmarinen and Väinämöinen, who are afterwards joined by Lemminkainen, now undertake another expedition to Pohjola to carry off the Sampo. On the way, Väinämöinen constructs a kantele or harp of pikebone, and lulls Louhi and her people to sleep; but she pursues the robbers, and first the kantele is lost overboard, and then the Sampo is broken to pieces and lost in the sea. Väinämöinen saves enough to secure the prosperity of Kalevala, but Louhi only carries home a small and almost useless fragment. Väinämöinen then makes a new kantele of birchwood. Louhi brings pestilence on Kalevala, then sends a bear against the country, and lastly, steals away the sun and moon, hiding them in the stone mountain of Pohjola. Väinämöinen drives away the plagues, kills the bear, and renews fire from a conflagration caused by a spark sent down from heaven by the god Ukko. Ilmarinen then prepares chains for Louhi, and terrifies her into restoring the sun and moon to their original places.
Runo L. The virgin Marjatta swallows a cranberry, and brings forth a son, who is proclaimed King of Carelia. Väinämöinen in great anger quits the country in his boat, but leaves the kantele and his songs behind him for the pleasure of the people.

Myth-Folklore Book: The Heptameron of Margaret, Queen of Navarre

This book is part of the Heptameron unit.

The Heptameron of Margaret, Queen of Navarre, translated by Walter K. Kelly (1855).

Available FREE texts:
Internet Archive
Google Books
Hathi Books

There is also a lovely edition online as part of A Celebration of Women Writers at the University of Pennsylvania's Digital Library.

Other online sources:
Kindle eBook: $2.99

In addition, the translation by George Saintsbury is available at Project Gutenberg.The Saintsbury translation is the one available at Librivox.




Myth-Folklore Book: The Decameron by Boccaccio

This book is part of the Decameron unit.

The Decameron by Boccaccio, translated by J. M. Rigg (1903).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Google Books
Hathi Books
Kindle eBook

Available FREE audio:
LibriVox
Internet Archive

There is also an excellent presentation of this text at Brown University's Decameron Web.






Myth-Folklore Book: Italian Popular Tales

This book is part of the Italian Popular Tales unit.

Italian Popular Tales by Thomas Frederick Crane (1885).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Sacred Texts Archive
Google Books
Hathi Books
SurLaLune Fairy Tales
Kindle eBook



Table of Contents

The King of Love
Zelinda and the Monster
King Bean
The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird
The Fair Angiola
The Cloud
The Cistern
The Griffin
Cinderella
Fair Maria Wood
The Curse of the Seven Children
Oraggio and Bianchinetta
The Fair Fiorita
Bierde
Snow-White-Fire-Red
How the Devil Married Three Sisters
In Love with a Statue
Thirteenth
The Cobbler
Sir Fiorante, Magician
The Crystal Casket
The Stepmother
Water and Salt
The Love of the Three Oranges
The King Who Wanted a Beautiful Wife
The Bucket
The Two Humpbacks
The Story of Catherine and Her Fate
The Crumb in the Beard
The Fairy Orlanda
The Shepherd Who Made the King's Daughter Laugh
The Ass That Lays Money
Don Joseph Pear
Puss In Boots
Fair Brow
Lionbruno
The Peasant and the Master
The Ingrates
The Treasure
The Shepherd
The Three Admonitions
Vineyard I Was and Vineyard I Am
The Language of the Animals
The Mason and His Son
The Parrot: First Version
The Parrot: Second Version
The Parrot Which Tells Three Stories: Third Version
Truthful Joseph
The Man, the Serpent, and the Fox
The Lord, St. Peter, and the Apostles
The Lord, St. Peter, and the Blacksmith
In This World One Weeps and Another Laughs
The Ass
St. Peter and His Sisters
Pilate
The Story of Judas
Desperate Malchus
Malchus at the Column
The Story of Buttadeu
The Story of Crivoliu
The Story of St. James of Galicia
The Baker's Apprentice
Occasion
Brother Giovannone
Godfather Misery
Beppo Pipetta
The Just Man
Of a Godfather and a Godmother of
St. John Who Made Love
The Groomsman
The Parrish Priest of San Marcuola
The Gentleman Who Kicked a Skull
The Gossips of St. John
Saddaedda
Mr. Attentive
The Story of the Barber
Don Firriulieddu
Little Chick-Pea
Pitidda
The Sexton's Nose
The Cock and the Mouse
Godmother Fox
The Cat and the Mouse
A Feast Day
The Three Brothers
Buchettino
The Three Goslings
The Cock
The Cock and That Wished to Become Pope
The Goat and the Fox
The Ant and the Mouse
The Cook
The Thoughtless Abbot
Bastianelo
Christmas
The Wager
Scissors They Were
The Doctor's Apprentice
Firrazzanu's Wife and the Queen
Giufa and the Plaster Statue
Giufa and the Judge
The Little Omelet
Eat, My Clothes!
Giufa's Exploits
The Fool
Uncle Capriano
Peter Fullone and the Egg
The Clever Peasant
The Clever Girl
Crab

Pepper-Corn

Myth-Folklore Book: The Key of Gold

This book is part of the Czech Folktales unit.

The Key of Gold: Czech Folk Tales by Josef Baudis (1922). The name of the illustration is not provided on the title page, which says only "with illustrations."

Available FREE texts:
Internet Archive
Sacred Texts Archive
Hathi Books

Available FREE audio:
LibriVox
Internet Archive
Project Gutenberg

Other online sources:
Kindle eBook: $2.99





Myth-Folklore Book: Household Tales by Grimm (Hunt)

This book is part of the Brothers Grimm (Hunt) unit.

Household Tales by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, translated by Margaret Hunt (1884).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Hathi Books
Sur La Lune Fairy Tales
Kindle eBook

Here is the banner from the wonderful presentation of this edition at Sur La Lune:


Table of Contents

1 The Frog King, or Iron Henry
2 Cat and Mouse in Partnership
3 Our Lady's Child
4 The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was
5 The Wolf and the Seven Young Kids
6 Faithful John
7 The Good Bargain
8 The Wonderful Musician
9 The Twelve Brothers
10 The Pack of Ragamuffins
11 Little Brother and Little Sister
12 Rapunzel
13 The Three Little Men in the Forest
14 The Three Spinning Women
15 Hansel and Grethel
16 The Three Snake-Leaves
17 The White Snake
18 The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean
19 The Fisherman and His Wife
20 The Valiant Little Tailor
21 Cinderella
22 The Riddle
23 The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage
24 Mother Holle
25 The Seven Ravens
26 Little Red-Cap
27 The Bremen Town Musicians
28 The Singing Bone
29 The Devil with the Three Golden Hairs
30 The Louse and the Flea
31 The Girl Without Hands
32 Clever Hans
33 The Three Languages
34 Clever Elsie
35 The Tailor in Heaven
36 The Wishing-table, the Gold-ass, and the Cudgel in the Sack
37 Thumbling
38 The Wedding of Mrs. Fox
39 The Elves
40 The Robber Bridegroom
41 Herr Korbes
42 The Godfather
43 Frau Trude
44 Godfather Death
45 Thumbling as Journeyman
46 Fitcher's Bird
47 The Juniper-Tree
48 Old Sultan
49 The Six Swans
50 Little Briar-Rose
51 Foundling-Bird
52 King Thrushbeard
53 Little Snow-White
54 The Knapsack, the Hat, and the Horn
55 Rumpelstiltskin
56 Sweetheart Roland
57 The Golden Bird
58 The Dog and the Sparrow
59 Frederick and Catherine
60 The Two Brothers
61 The Little Peasant
62 The Queen Bee
63 The Three Feathers
64 The Golden Goose
65 Allerleirauh
66 The Hare's Bride
67 The Twelve Huntsmen
68 The Thief and His Master
69 Jorinde and Joringel
70 The Three Children of Fortune
71 How Six Men Got On in the World
72 The Wolf and the Man
73 The Wolf and the Fox
74 Gossip Wolf and the Fox
75 The Fox and the Cat
76 The Pink
77 Clever Grethel
78 The Old Man and His Grandson
79 The Water-Nix
80 The Death of the Little Hen
81 Brother Lustig
82 Gambling Hansel
83 Hans in Luck
84 Hans Married
85 The Gold-Children
86 The Fox and the Geese
87 The Poor Man and the Rich Man
88 The Singing, Springing Lark
89 The Goose-Girl
90 The Young Giant
91 The Gnome
92 The King of the Golden Mountain
93 The Raven
94 The Peasant's Clever Daughter
95 Old Hildebrand
96 The Three Little Birds
97 The Water of Life
98 Dr. Know-All
99 The Spirit in the Bottle
100 The Devil's Sooty Brother
101 Bearskin
102 The Willow-Wren and the Bear
103 Sweet Porridge
104 Wise Folks
105 Stories about Snakes
106 The Poor Miller's Boy and the Cat
107 The Two Travellers
108 Hans the Hedgehog
109 The Shroud
110 The Jew Among Thorns
111 The Skilful Huntsman
112 The Flail from Heaven
113 The Two Kings' Children
114 The Cunning Little Tailor
115 The Bright Sun Brings It to Light
116 The Blue Light
117 The Wilful Child
118 The Three Army Surgeons
119 The Seven Swabians
120 The Three Apprentices
121 The King's Son Who Feared Nothing
122 Donkey Cabbages
123 The Old Woman in the Wood
124 The Three Brothers
125 The Devil and His Grandmother
126 Ferdinand the Faithful
127 The Iron Stove
128 The Lazy Spinner
129 The Four Skilful Brothers
130 One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes
131 Fair Katrinelje and Pif Paf Poltrie
132 The Fox and the Horse
133 The Shoes that Were Danced to Pieces
134 The Six Servants
135 The White Bride and the Black One
136 Iron John
137 The Three Black Princesses
138 Knoist and His Three Sons
139 The Maid of Brakel
140 Domestic Servants
141 The Lambkin and the Little Fish
142 Simeli Mountain
143 Going A-Travelling
144 The Donkey
145 The Ungrateful Son
146 The Turnip
147 The Old Man Made Young Again
148 The Lord's Animals and the Devil's
149 The Beam
150 The Old Beggar-Woman
151 The Three Sluggards
151 (A) The Twelve Idle Servants
152 The Shepherd Boy
153 The Star-Money
154 The Stolen Farthings
155 Brides on Their Trial
156 Odds and Ends
157 The Sparrow and His Four Children
158 The Story of Schlauraffen Land
159 The Ditmarsh Tale of Wonders
160 A Riddling Tale
161 Snow-White and Rose-Red
162 The Wise Servant
163 The Glass Coffin
164 Lazy Harry
165 The Griffin
166 Strong Hans
167 The Peasant in Heaven
168 Lean Lisa
169 The Hut in the Forest
170 Sharing Joy and Sorrow
171 The Willow-Wren
172 The Sole
173 The Bittern and Hoopoe
174 The Owl
175 The Moon
176 The Duration of Life
177 Death's Messengers
178 Master Pfriem
179 The Goose-Girl at the Well
180 Eve's Various Children
181 The Nixie of the Mill-Pond
182 The Little Folks' Presents
183 The Giant and the Tailor
184 The Nail
185 The Poor Boy in the Grave
186 The True Sweetheart
187 The Hare and the Hedgehog
188 The Spindle, the Shuttle, and the Needle
189 The Peasant and the Devil
190 The Crumbs on the Table
191 The Sea-Hare
192 The Master Thief
193 The Drummer
194 The Ear of Corn
195 The Grave Mound
196 Old Rinkrank
197 The Crystal Ball
198 Maid Maleen
199 The Boot of Buffalo Leather
200 The Golden Key
Legend 1 St. Joseph in the Forest
Legend 2 The Twelve Apostles
Legend 3 The Rose
Legend 4 Poverty and Humility Lead to Heaven
Legend 5 God's Food
Legend 6 The Three Green Twigs
Legend 7 Our Lady's Little Glass
Legend 8 The Aged Mother
Legend 9 The Heavenly Wedding
Legend 10 The Hazel Branch







Myth-Folklore Book: Brothers Grimm (LibriVox)

This particular English version of the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm is a bit confusing in terms of bibliography. I chose it because it is the free audiobook version at LibriVox. The LibriVox recording is in turn based on a Project Gutenberg publication. Unfortunately, however, that Project Gutenberg version is an amalgam of different sources that are not clearly indicated. It includes translations from Marian Edwardes and from Edgar Taylor, without indicating which story come from which source and, as near as I can tell, there is no printed book which matches the edition offered at Project Gutenberg.

Of course, there are many translations of the Brothers Grimm in English, so I am not going to worry too much about the oddness of the Project Gutenberg edition. The main thing is that all the stories in the Gutenberg edition are available at LibriVox for your listening pleasure! You can also consult books by Marian Edwardes and by Edgar Taylor online as follows:

Fairy Tales by the Brothers Grimm, translated by Edgar Taylor and Marian Edwardes, with illustrations by R. Anning Bell (1912). Available at Wikisource. The stories from Edwardes appear to be the following: The Frog Prince, Briar Rose, and The Mouse, The Bird, and The Sausage.

Grimm's Goblins: Grimm's Household Stories, translated by E. Taylor, with illustrations by George Cruikshank (1876). Available at Internet Archive.
(See also the edition published under the title German Popular Stories, also available at Internet Archive.)

You can find additional online editions of the Brothers Grimm in English at Dan Ashliman's very helpful bibliography of online editions of Brothers Grimm in English (although he does not include the Marian Edwardes book, which is oddly hard to find; the Wikisource version is the only one I know).

If you are doing research on Brothers Grimm, the English translation online that I would recommend you consult is by Dan Ashliman! It is not complete, but it does have all the most famous of the stories, and it is the most reliable edition you will find online: The Grimm Brothers' Children's and Household Tales.





Myth-Folklore Book: Household Stories by the Brothers Grimm (Crane)

This book is part of the Brothers Grimm (Crane) unit.

Household Stories by the Brothers Grimm, translated by Lucy Crane and illustrated by Walter Crane (1886).

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Hathi Books
Kindle eBook




Myth-Folklore Book: Fables in Rhyme for Little Folks

This book is part of the La Fontaine unit.

Fables in Rhyme for Little Folks by W. T. Larned (adapted from La Fontaine), illustrated by John Rae, 1918.

Available FREE texts:
Project Gutenberg
Internet Archive
Kindle eBook

Available FREE audio:
LibriVox
Internet Archive

Other online sources:
YouTube videobook