Hindu Tales from the Sanskrit

Translated by
S. M. Mitra

Adapted by
Mrs. Arthur Bell

1919


Contents

[INTRODUCTORY NOTE]
[1. The Magic Pitcher]
[2. The Story of a Cat, a Mouse, a Lizard and an Owl]
[3. A Royal Thief-Catcher]
[4. The Magic Shoes and Staff]
[5. The Jewelled Arrow]
[6. The Beetle and the Silken Thread]
[7. A Crow and His Three Friends]
[8. A Clever Thief]
[9. The Hermit’s Daughter]

INTRODUCTORY NOTE.

Thanks to Mr. S. M. Mitra, the well-known Hindu psychologist and politician, who has done so much to draw more closely together the land of his birth and that of his adoption, I am able to bring within reach of English children a number of typical Hindu Tales, translated by him from the Sanskrit, some of them culled from the ancient classics of India, others from widely separated sources. The latter have hitherto been quite inaccessible to western students, as they are not yet embodied in literature, but have been transmitted orally from generation to generation for many centuries.

These tales are not only of a kind to enchain the attention of children. They also illustrate well the close affinity between the two chief branches of the great Aryan race, and are of considerable ethical value, reflecting, as they do, the philosophy of self-realisation which lies at the root of Hindu culture. They have been used from time immemorial by the best teachers of India as a means of building up the personalities of the young and maintaining the efficiency of the adult. They serve in fact as text-books of the unique system of Mind-Training which has been in use in India from remote Vedic times, the root principle of which is as simple as it is effective.