Forgotten Tales of Long Ago
Fourth Impression, July, 1931. PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN WELLS GARDNER, DARTON AND CO., LTD.
In the present volume will be found twenty stories from early writers for children, the period being roughly 1790 to 1830, with three later and more sophisticated efforts added. Having so recently made remarks on the character of these old books—in the preface last year to Old-Fashioned Tales , a companion volume to this—I have very little to say now, except that I hope the selection will be found to be interesting. If it is not, it is less my fault than that of the authors, who preferred teaching to entertaining, moral improvement to drama. The pendulum has now perhaps swung almost too far the other way; but such things come right.
My first story, 'Dicky Random,' is from a little book published in 1805, entitled The Satchel; or, Amusing Tales for Correcting Rising Errors in Early Youth, addressed to all who wish to grow in Grace and Favour . On the title-page is this motto:
'Put on the cap, if it will fit, And wiser grow by wearing it.'
There is no author's name. I do not consider the story of Dicky a very brilliant piece of work, but it has some pleasing incidents, not the least of which is the irreproachable behaviour of the gentlemen at dinner. Dicky's father comes out as hardly less foolish than his son, which is not common in these books. To call a doctor Hardheart seems to me to have been a courageous thing. The sentence, 'The boy's father, though a labouring man, had a generous mind,' would help us to date the story, even without the evidence of the title-page. It is astonishing for how long the poor had to play a degraded part in minor English literature.
In another story in the book, called 'Good Manners their own Reward,' I find this sentence, which contains an idea for a children's manual that certainly ought to be written, under the same title too: 'Master Goodly not long after this had the pleasure of seeing a small book printed and circulated among his juvenile acquaintance, called The Way to be Invited a Second Time. '
E. V. Lucas
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or
Good-nature is nothing without Good Conduct
The Months
Jemima Placid
or
The Advantage of Good Nature
Two Trials
Prince Life
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
The Farm-Yard Journal
The Fruits of Disobedience
or
The Kidnapped Child
The Rose's Breakfast
The Three Cakes
Amendment
Scourhill's Adventures
The Journal
Ellen and George
or
The Game at Cricket
Waste Not, Want Not
or
Two Strings to Your Bow
The Bunch of Cherries
The Fugitive
The Butcher's Tournament
Malleville's Night of Adventure
The Life and Adventures of Lady Anne
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Captain Murderer
Illustrated by A. G. Walker
A Book of Ballad Stories
Fairy Tales from Grimm
S. BARING GOULD
Fairy Tales from Hans Andersen
Stories from Froissart
HENRY NEWBOLT,
Children of the Dawn
Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims