Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings - Joel Chandler Harris - Book

Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings

CONTENTS

To Arthur Barbette Frost:
I am expected to supply a preface for this new edition of my first book—to advance from behind the curtain, as it were, and make a fresh bow to the public that has dealt with Uncle Remus in so gentle and generous a fashion. For this event the lights are to be rekindled, and I am expected to respond in some formal way to an encore that marks the fifteenth anniversary of the book. There have been other editions—how many I do not remember—but this is to be an entirely new one, except as to the matter: new type, new pictures, and new binding.
But, as frequently happens on such occasions, I am at a loss for a word. I seem to see before me the smiling faces of thousands of children—some young and fresh, and some wearing the friendly marks of age, but all children at heart—and not an unfriendly face among them. And out of the confusion, and while I am trying hard to speak the right word, I seem to hear a voice lifted above the rest, saying You have made some of us happy. And so I feel my heart fluttering and my lips trembling, and I have to how silently and him away, and hurry back into the obscurity that fits me best.
Phantoms! Children of dreams! True, my dear Frost; but if you could see the thousands of letters that have come to me from far and near, and all fresh from the hearts and hands of children, and from men and women who have not forgotten how to be children, you would not wonder at the dream. And such a dream can do no harm. Insubstantial though it may be, I would not at this hour exchange it for all the fame won by my mightier brethren of the pen—whom I most humbly salute.
Measured by the material developments that have compressed years of experience into the space of a day, thus increasing the possibilities of life, if not its beauty, fifteen years constitute the old age of a book. Such a survival might almost be said to be due to a tiny sluice of green sap under the gray bark. where it lies in the matter of this book, or what its source if, indeed, it be really there—is more of a mystery to my middle age than it was to my prime.

Joel Chandler Harris
Содержание

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PREFACE AND DEDICATION


TO THE NEW EDITION


DEAR FROST:


INTRODUCTION


J. C. H.


LEGENDS OF THE OLD PLANTATION


I. UNCLE REMUS INITIATES THE LITTLE BOY


II. THE WONDERFUL TAR BABY STORY


III. WHY MR. POSSUM LOVES PEACE


IV. HOW MR. RABBIT WAS TOO SHARP FOR MR. FOX


V. THE STORY OF THE DELUGE AND HOW IT CAME ABOUT


VI. MR. RABBIT GROSSLY DECEIVES MR. FOX


VII. MR. FOX IS AGAIN VICTIMIZED


VIII. MR. FOX IS "OUTDONE" BY MR. BUZZARD


IX. MISS COW FALLS A VICTIM TO MR. RABBIT


X. MR. TERRAPIN APPEARS UPON THE SCENE


XI. MR. WOLF MAKES A FAILURE


XII. MR. FOX TACKLES OLD MAN TARRYPIN


XIII. THE AWFUL FATE OF MR. WOLF


XIV. MR. FOX AND THE DECEITFUL FROGS


XV. MR. FOX GOES A-HUNTING, BUT MR. RABBIT BAGS THE GAME


XVI. OLD MR. RABBIT, HE'S A GOOD FISHERMAN


XVII. MR. RABBIT NIBBLES UP THE BUTTER


XVIII. MR. RABBIT FINDS HIS MATCH AT LAST


XIX. THE FATE OF MR. JACK SPARROW


XX. HOW MR. RABBIT SAVED HIS MEAT


XXI. MR. RABBIT MEETS HIS MATCH AGAIN


XXII. A STORY ABOUT THE LITTLE RABBITS


XXIII. MR. RABBIT AND MR. BEAR


XXIV. MR. BEAR CATCHES OLD MR. BULL-FROG


XXV. HOW MR. RABBIT LOST HIS FINE BUSHY TAIL


XXVI. MR. TERRAPIN SHOWS HIS STRENGTH


XXVII. WHY MR. POSSUM HAS NO HAIR ON HIS TAIL


XXVIII. THE END OF MR. BEAR


XXIX. MR. FOX GETS INTO SERIOUS BUSINESS


XXX. HOW MR. RABBIT SUCCEEDED IN RAISING A DUST


XXXI. A PLANTATION WITCH


XXXII. "JACKY-MY-LANTERN" *1


XXXIII. WHY THE NEGRO IS BLACK


XXXIV. THE SAD FATE OF MR. FOX


PLANTATION PROVERBS


HIS SONGS


I. REVIVAL HYMN


II. CAMP-MEETING SONG *


III. CORN-SHUCKING SONG


IV. THE PLOUGH-HANDS' SONG (JASPER COUNTY—1860.)


V. CHRISTMAS PLAY-SONG (MYRICK PLACE, PUTNAM COUNTY 1858.)


VI. PLANTATION PLAY-SONG (PUTNAM COUNTY—1856.)


VII. TRANSCRIPTIONS *1


1. A PLANTATION CHANT


2.A PLANTATION SERENADE


VIII. THE BIG BETHEL CHURCH


IX. TIME GOES BY TURNS


A STORY OF THE WAR


HIS SAYINGS


I. JEEMS ROBER'SON'S LAST ILLNESS


II. UNCLE REMUS'S CHURCH EXPERIENCE


III. UNCLE REMUS AND THE SAVANNAH DARKEY


IV. TURNIP SALAD AS A TEXT


V. A CONFESSION


VI. UNCLE REMUS WITH THE TOOTHACHE


VII. THE PHONOGRAPH


VIII. RACE IMPROVEMENT


IX. IN THE ROLE OF A TARTAR


X. A CASE OF MEASLES


XI. THE EMIGRANTS


XII. AS A MURDERER


UNCLE Remus met a police officer recently.


XIII. HIS PRACTICAL VIEW OF THINGS


XIV. THAT DECEITFUL JUG


XV. THE FLORIDA WATERMELON


XVI. UNCLE REMUS PREACHES TO A CONVERT


XVII. AS TO EDUCATION


XVIII. A TEMPERANCE REFORMER


XIX. AS A WEATHER PROPHET


XX. THE OLD MAN'S TROUBLES


XXI. THE FOURTH OF JULY

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2000-08-01

Темы

Remus, Uncle (Fictitious character) -- Literary collections; African Americans -- Folklore -- Literary collections; African American men -- Literary collections; Plantation life -- Literary collections; Animals -- Folklore -- Literary collections; Georgia -- Literary collections; African Americans -- Songs and music

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