Europa's Fairy Book
Do tell us a fairy tale, ganpa.
Well, will you be good and quiet if I do?
Of course we will; we are always good when you are telling us fairy tales.
Well, here goes.—Once upon a time, though it wasn't in my time, and it wasn't in your time, and it wasn't in anybody else's time, there was a——
But that would be no time at all.
That's fairy tale time.
My Dear Little Peggy:—
Many, many, many years ago I wrote a book for your Mummey—when she was my little May—telling the fairy tales which the little boys and girls of England used to hear from their mummeys, who had heard them from their mummeys years and years and years before. My friend Mr. Batten made such pretty pictures for it—but of course you know the book—it has Tom, Tit, Tot and The little old woman that went to market, and all those tales you like. Now I have been making a fairy-tale book for your own self, and here it is. This time I have told, again the fairy tales that all the mummeys of Europe have been telling their little Peggys, Oh for ever so many years! They must have liked them because they have spread from Germany to Russia, from Italy to France, from Holland to Scotland, and from England to Norway, and from every country in Europe that you will read about in your geography to every other one. Mr. Batten, who made the pictures for your mummey's book, has made some more for yours—isn't it good of him when he has never seen you?
Though this book is your very, very own, you will not mind if other little girls and boys also get copies of it from their mummeys and papas and ganmas and ganpas, for when you meet some of them you will, all of you, have a number of common friends like The Cinder-Maid, or The Earl of Cattenborough, or The Master-Maid, and you can talk to one another about them so that you are old friends at once. Oh, won't that be nice? And when one of these days you go over the Great Sea, in whatever land you go, you will find girls and boys, as well as grown-ups, who will know all of these tales, even if they have different names. Won't that be nice too?
Joseph Jacobs
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RESTORED AND RETOLD BY
JOSEPH JACOBS
DONE INTO PICTURES BY
JOHN D. BATTEN
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
The Knickerbocker Press
JOSEPH JACOBS
MARGARET HAYS
I. CINDER-MAID
II. ALL CHANGE
III. KING OF THE FISHES
IV. SCISSORS
V. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
VI. REYNARD AND BRUIN
VII. DANCING WATER
VIII. LANGUAGE OF ANIMALS
IX. THE THREE SOLDIERS
X. DOZEN AT ONE BLOW
XI. 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. CLEVER LASS
XXIV. THUMBKIN
XXV. SNOWWHITE
Chosen by
Louey Chisholm
Amy Steedman
G. P. Putnam's Sons
Old Favorites
G. P. Putnam's Sons
Injun Babies
Maynard Dixon
G. P. Putnam's Sons