Tales of the Enchanted Islands of the Atlantic
THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED, IN TOKEN OF KINDRED AND OF OLD FAMILY FRIENDSHIPS, CORDIALLY PRESERVED INTO THE PRESENT GENERATION THESE LEGENDS UNITE THE TWO SIDES OF THE ATLANTIC AND FORM A PART OF THE COMMON HERITAGE OF THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING RACE
CONTENTS
Hawthorne in his Wonder Book has described the beautiful Greek myths and traditions, but no one has yet made similar use of the wondrous tales that gathered for more than a thousand years about the islands of the Atlantic deep. Although they are a part of the mythical period of American history, these hazy legends were altogether disdained by the earlier historians; indeed, George Bancroft made it a matter of actual pride that the beginning of the American annals was bare and literal. But in truth no national history has been less prosaic as to its earlier traditions, because every visitor had to cross the sea to reach it, and the sea has always been, by the mystery of its horizon, the fury of its storms, and the variableness of the atmosphere above it, the foreordained land of romance.
In all ages and with all sea-going races there has always been something especially fascinating about an island amid the ocean. Its very existence has for all explorers an air of magic. An island offers to us heights rising from depths; it exhibits that which is most fixed beside that which is most changeable, the fertile beside the barren, and safety after danger. The ocean forever tends to encroach on the island, the island upon the ocean. They exist side by side, friends yet enemies. The island signifies safety in calm, and yet danger in storm; in a tempest the sailor rejoices that he is not near it; even if previously bound for it, he puts about and steers for the open sea. Often if he seeks it he cannot reach it. The present writer spent a winter on the island of Fayal, and saw in a storm a full-rigged ship drift through the harbor disabled, having lost her anchors; and it was a week before she again made the port.
Thomas Wentworth Higginson
TALES OF THE ENCHANTED ISLANDS OF THE ATLANTIC
PREFACE
I — THE STORY OF ATLANTIS
II — TALIESSIN OF THE RADIANT BROW
III — THE SWAN-CHILDREN OF LIR
IV — USHEEN IN THE ISLAND OF YOUTH
V — BRAN THE BLESSED
VI — THE CASTLE OF THE ACTIVE DOOR
VII — MERLIN THE ENCHANTER
VIII — SIR LANCELOT OF THE LAKE
IX — THE HALF-MAN
X — KING ARTHUR AT AVALON
XI — MAELDUIN'S VOYAGE
XII — THE VOYAGE OF ST. BRANDAN
XIII — KIRWAN'S SEARCH FOR HY-BRASAIL
XIV — THE ISLE OF SATAN'S HAND
XV — ANTILLIA, THE ISLAND OF THE SEVEN CITIES
XVI — HARALD THE VIKING
XVII — THE SEARCH FOR NORUMBEGA
XVIII — THE GUARDIANS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE
XIX — THE ISLAND OF DEMONS
XX — BIMINI AND THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
NOTES
PREFACE
A Full account of the rediscovery of the Canaries in 1341 will be found
I. ATLANTIS
II. TALIESSIN
III. CHILDREN OF LIR
IV. USHEEN
V. BRAN
VI. THE CASTLE OF THE ACTIVE DOOR
VIII. MERLIN
VIII. LANCELOT
IX. THE HALF-MAN
X. ARTHUR
XI. MAELDUIN
XII. ST. BRANDAN
SAINT BRANDAN
XIII. HY-BRASAIL
HY-BRASAIL, THE ISLE OF THE BLEST
XIV. ISLAND OF SATAN'S HAND
XV. ANTILLIA
XVI. HARALD THE VIKING
XVII. NORUMBEGA
SIR HUMPHREY GILBERT
XVIII. GUARDIANS OF THE ST. LAWRENCE
XIX. ISLAND OF DEMONS
LXVII NOUVELLE