TO THE STORY-TELLER

This volume, though intended also for the children's own reading and for reading aloud, is especially planned for story-telling. The latter is a delightful way of arousing a gladsome holiday spirit, and of showing the inner meanings of different holidays. As stories used for this purpose are scattered through many volumes, and as they are not always in the concrete form required for story-telling, I have endeavored to bring together myths, legends, tales, and historical stories suitable to holiday occasions.

There are here collected one hundred and twenty stories for seventeen holidays—stories grave, gay, humorous, or fanciful; also some that are spiritual in feeling, and others that give the delicious thrill of horror so craved by boys and girls at Halloween time. The range of selection is wide, and touches all sides of wholesome boy and girl nature, and the tales have the power to arouse an appropriate holiday spirit.

As far as possible the stories are presented in their original form. When, however, they are too long for inclusion, or too loose in structure for story-telling purposes, they are adapted.

Adapted stories are of two sorts. Condensed: in which case a piece of literature is shortened, scarcely any changes being made in the original language. Rewritten: here the plot, imagery, language, and style of the original are retained as far as possible, while the whole is moulded into form suitable for story-telling. Some few stories are built up on a slight framework of original matter.

Thus it may be seen that the tales in this volume have not been reduced to the necessarily limited vocabulary and uniform style of one editor, but that they are varied in treatment and language, and are the products of many minds.

A glance at the table of contents will show that not only have selections been made from modern authors and from the folklore of different races, but that some quaint old literary sources have been drawn on. Among the men and books contributing to these pages are the Gesta Romanorum, Il Libro d'Oro, Xenophon, Ovid, Lucian, the Venerable Bede, William of Malmesbury. John of Hildesheim, William Caxton, and the more modern Washington Irving, Hugh Miller, Charles Dickens, and Henry Cabot Lodge; also those immortals, Hans Andersen, the Brothers Grimm, Horace E. Scudder, and others.

The stories are arranged to meet the needs of story-telling in the graded schools. Reading-lists, showing where to find additional material for story-telling and collateral reading, are added. Grades in which the recommended stories are useful are indicated.

The number of selections in the volume, as well as the references to other books, is limited by the amount and character of available material. For instance, there is little to be found for Saint Valentine's Day, while there is an overwhelming abundance of fine stories for the Christmas season. Stories like Dickens's “Christmas Carol,” Ouida's “Dog of Flanders,” and Hawthorne's tales, which are too long for inclusion and would lose their literary beauty if condensed, are referred to in the lists. Volumes containing these stories may be procured at the public library.

A subject index is appended. This indicates the ethical, historical, and other subject-matter of interest to the teacher, thus making the volume serviceable for other occasions besides holidays.

In learning her tale the story-teller is advised not to commit it to memory. Such a method is apt to produce a wooden or glib manner of presentation. It is better for her to read the story over and over again until its plot, imagery, style, and vocabulary become her own, and then to retell it, as Miss Bryant says, “simply, vitally, joyously.”


CONTENTS


[ GOOD STORIES FOR GREAT HOLIDAYS ]

[ THE FAIRY'S NEW YEAR GIFT ]

[ THE LITTLE MATCH GIRL ]

[ THE TWELVE MONTHS ]

[ THE MAIL-COACH PASSENGERS ]

[ LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY ]

[ HE RESCUES THE BIRDS ]

[ LINCOLN AND THE LITTLE GIRL ]

[ TRAINING FOR THE PRESIDENCY ]

[ WHY LINCOLN WAS CALLED “HONEST ABE” ]

[ A STRANGER AT FIVE-POINTS ]

[ A SOLOMON COME TO JUDGMENT ]

[ GEORGE PICKETT'S FRIEND ]

[ LINCOLN THE LAWYER ]

[ THE COURAGE OF HIS CONVICTIONS ]

[ MR. LINCOLN AND THE BIBLE ]

[ HIS SPRINGFIELD FAREWELL ADDRESS ]

[ SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY ]

[ A PRISONER'S VALENTINE ]

[ A GIRL'S VALENTINE CHARM ]

[ MR. PEPYS HIS VALENTINE ]

[ CUPID AND PSYCHE ]

[ THE TRIAL OF PSYCHE: ]

[ WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ]

[ I. THE CHERRY TREE ]

[ II. THE APPLE ORCHARD ]

[ III. THE GARDEN-BED ]

[ YOUNG GEORGE AND THE COLT ]

[ WASHINGTON THE ATHLETE ]

[ WASHINGTON'S MODESTY ]

[ WASHINGTON AT YORKTOWN ]

[ RESURRECTION DAY (EASTER) ]

[ A LESSON OF FAITH ]

[ A CHILD'S DREAM OF A STAR ]

[ THE LOVELIEST ROSE IN THE WORLD ]

[ MAY DAY ]

[ THE SNOWDROP [1] ]

[ THE THREE LITTLE BUTTERFLY BROTHERS ]

[ THE WATER-DROP ]

[ THE SPRING BEAUTY ]

[ THE FAIRY TULIPS ]

[ THE STREAM THAT RAN AWAY ]

[ THE ELVES ]

[ THE CANYON FLOWERS ]

[ CLYTIE, THE HELIOTROPE ]

[ HYACINTHUS ]

[ ECHO AND NARCISSUS ]

[ MOTHERS' DAY ]

[ CORNELIA'S JEWELS ]

[ QUEEN MARGARET AND THE ROBBERS ]

[ THE REVENGE OF CORIOLANUS ]

[ THE WIDOW AND HER THREE SONS ]

[ MEMORIAL DAY ]

[ BETSY ROSS AND THE FLAG ]

[ THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER ]

[ THE LITTLE DRUMMER-BOY ]

[ A FLAG INCIDENT ]

[ TWO HERO-STORIES OF THE CIVIL WAR ]

[ II. THE BRAVERY OF RICHARD KIRTLAND ]

[ THE YOUNG SENTINEL ]

[ THE COLONEL OF THE ZOUAVES ]

[ GENERAL SCOTT AND THE STARS AND STRIPES ]

[ INDEPENDENCE DAY ]

[ THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE ]

[ THE SIGNING OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE ]

[ THE BOSTON TEA-PARTY ]

[ A GUNPOWDER STORY ]

[ THE CAPTURE OF FORT TICONDEROGA ]

[ WASHINGTON AND THE COWARDS ]

[ LABOR DAY ]

[ THE SMITHY ]

[ THE NAIL ]

[ THE ELVES AND THE SHOEMAKER ]

[ THE HILLMAN AND THE HOUSEWIFE ]

[ HOFUS THE STONE-CUTTER ]

[ ARACHNE ]

[ THE METAL KING ]

[ THE CHOICE OF HERCULES ]

[ THE SPEAKING STATUE ]

[ THE CHAMPION STONE-CUTTER ]

[ BILL BROWN'S TEST ]

[ COLUMBUS DAY ]

[ COLUMBUS AND THE EGG ]

[ COLUMBUS AT LA RABIDA ]

[ THE MUTINY ]

[ THE FIRST LANDING OF COLUMBUS IN THE NEW WORLD ]

[ HALLOWEEN ]

[ SHIPPEITARO ]

[ HANSEL AND GRETHEL ]

[ BURG HILL'S ON FIRE ]

[ THE KING OF THE CATS ]

[ THE STRANGE VISITOR ]

[ THE BENEVOLENT GOBLIN ]

[ THE PHANTOM KNIGHT OF THE VANDAL CAMP ]

[ THANKSGIVING DAY ]

[ THE FIRST HARVEST-HOME IN PLYMOUTH ]

[ THE MASTER OF THE HARVEST ]

[ SAINT CUTHBERT'S EAGLE ]

[ THE EARS OF WHEAT ]

[ HOW INDIAN CORN CAME INTO THE WORLD ]

[ THE NUTCRACKER DWARF ]

[ THE PUMPKIN PIRATES ]

[ THE SPIRIT OF THE CORN ]

[ THE HORN OF PLENTY ]

[ CHRISTMAS DAY ]

[ THE STRANGER CHILD ]

[ SAINT CHRISTOPHER ]

[ THE CHRISTMAS ROSE ]

[ THE WOODEN SHOES OF LITTLE WOLFF ]

[ THE PINE TREE ]

[ THE CHRISTMAS CUCKOO ]

[ THE CHRISTMAS FAIRY OF STRASBURG ]

[ THE THREE PURSES ]

[ THE THUNDER OAK ]

[ THE CHRISTMAS THORN OF GLASTONBURY ]

[ THE THREE KINGS OF COLOGNE ]

[ THE CHILD ]

[ HOW THEY CAME TO COLOGNE ]

[ ARBOR DAY ]

[ THE LITTLE TREE THAT LONGED FOR OTHER LEAVES ]

[ WHY THE EVERGREEN TREES NEVER LOSE THEIR LEAVES ]

[ WHY THE ASPEN QUIVERS ]

[ THE WONDER TREE ]

[ THE PROUD OAK TREE ]

[ BAUCIS AND PHILEMON ]

[ THE UNFRUITFUL TREE ]

[ THE DRYAD OF THE OLD OAK ]

[ DAPHNE ]

[ BIRD DAY ]

[ THE OLD WOMAN WHO BECAME A WOODPECKER ]

[ THE BOY WHO BECAME A ROBIN ]

[ THE TONGUE-CUT SPARROW ]

[ THE QUAILS—A LEGEND OF THE JATAKA ]

[ THE MAGPIE'S NEST ]

[ THE GREEDY GEESE ]

[ THE KING OF THE BIRDS ]

[ THE DOVE WHO SPOKE TRUTH ]

[ THE BUSY BLUE JAY ]

[ BABES IN THE WOODS ]

[ THE PRIDE OF THE REGIMENT ]

[ THE MOTHER MURRE ]

[ THE END ]

[ REFERENCE LISTS FOR STORY-TELLING AND COLLATERAL READING ]

[ REFERENCE LISTS FOR STORY-TELLING AND COLLATERAL READING ]

[ NEW YEAR'S DAY ]

[ LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY ]

[ SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY ]

[ WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ]

[ RESURRECTION DAY (EASTER) ]

[ MAY DAY ]

[ MOTHERS' DAY ]

[ MEMORIAL AND FLAG DAYS ]

[ INDEPENDENCE DAY ]

[ LABOR DAY ]

[ COLUMBUS DAY ]

[ HALLOWEEN ]

[ THANKSGIVING DAY ]

[ CHRISTMAS DAY ]

[ ARBOR DAY ]

[ BIRD DAY ]


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