The Green Fairy Book
To Stella Margaret Alleyne the Green Fairy Book is dedicated
To The Friendly Reader
This is the third, and probably the last, of the Fairy Books of many colours. First there was the Blue Fairy Book; then, children, you asked for more, and we made up the Red Fairy Book; and, when you wanted more still, the Green Fairy Book was put together. The stories in all the books are borrowed from many countries; some are French, some German, some Russian, some Italian, some Scottish, some English, one Chinese. However much these nations differ about trifles, they all agree in liking fairy tales. The reason, no doubt, is that men were much like children in their minds long ago, long, long ago, and so before they took to writing newspapers, and sermons, and novels, and long poems, they told each other stories, such as you read in the fairy books. They believed that witches could turn people into beasts, that beasts could speak, that magic rings could make their owners invisible, and all the other wonders in the stories. Then, as the world became grown-up, the fairy tales which were not written down would have been quite forgotten but that the old grannies remembered them, and told them to the little grandchildren: and when they, in their turn, became grannies, they remembered them, and told them also. In this way these tales are older than reading and writing, far older than printing. The oldest fairy tales ever written down were written down in Egypt, about Joseph’s time, nearly three thousand five hundred years ago. Other fairy stories Homer knew, in Greece, nearly three thousand years ago, and he made them all up into a poem, the Odyssey, which I hope you will read some day. Here you will find the witch who turns men into swine, and the man who bores out the big foolish giant’s eye, and the cap of darkness, and the shoes of swiftness, that were worn later by Jack the Giant-Killer. These fairy tales are the oldest stories in the world, and as they were first made by men who were childlike for their own amusement, so they amuse children still, and also grown-up people who have not forgotten how they once were children.
Unknown
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THE GREEN FAIRY BOOK
Edited by Andrew Lang
THE BLUE BIRD
THE HALF-CHICK
THE STORY OF CALIPH STORK
THE ENCHANTED WATCH
ROSANELLA
SYLVAIN AND JOCOSA
FAIRY GIFTS
PRINCE NARCISSUS AND THE PRINCESS POTENTILLA
PRINCE FEATHERHEAD AND THE PRINCESS CELANDINE
THE THREE LITTLE PIGS
HEART OF ICE
THE ENCHANTED RING
THE SNUFF-BOX
THE GOLDEN BLACKBIRD
THE LITTLE SOLDIER
THE MAGIC SWAN
THE DIRTY SHEPHERDESS
THE ENCHANTED SNAKE
THE BITER BIT
KING KOJATA (From the Russian)
PRINCE FICKLE AND FAIR HELENA (From the German)
PUDDOCKY (From the German)
THE STORY OF HOK LEE AND THE DWARFS
THE STORY OF THE THREE BEARS
PRINCE VIVIEN AND THE PRINCESS PLACIDA
LITTLE ONE-EYE, LITTLE TWO-EYES, AND LITTLE THREE-EYES
JORINDE AND JORINGEL
ALLERLEIRAUH; OR, THE MANY-FURRED CREATURE
THE TWELVE HUNTSMEN
SPINDLE, SHUTTLE, AND NEEDLE
THE CRYSTAL COFFIN
THE THREE SNAKE-LEAVES
THE RIDDLE
JACK MY HEDGEHOG
THE GOLDEN LADS
THE WHITE SNAKE
THE STORY OF A CLEVER TAILOR
THE GOLDEN MERMAID
THE WAR OF THE WOLF AND THE FOX
THE STORY OF THE FISHERMAN AND HIS WIFE
THE THREE MUSICIANS
THE THREE DOGS