Copyright, 1912
By P. F. COLLIER & SON
Copyright, 1918
By P. F. COLLIER & SON
Acknowledgments of permission given by authors and
publishers for the use of copyright material
appear in Volume 10
MANUFACTURED IN U. S. A.
TC
CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
| Note | [8] | |
| Stories from Northern Sagas | ||
| The Northmen’s Story of How All Things Began | E. M. Wilmot-Buxton | [9] |
| How the Queen of the Sky Gave Gifts to Men | E. M. Wilmot-Buxton | [17] |
| The Dwarfs and the Fairies | A. and E. Keary | [21] |
| How Thor Went to Jötunheim | A. and E. Keary | [26] |
| How Thor’s Hammer Was Lost and Found | E. M. Wilmot-Buxton | [40] |
| Iduna’s Apples of Youth | A. and E. Keary | [51] |
| How the Fenris Wolf Was Chained | E. M. Wilmot-Buxton | [72] |
| The Story of Balder the Beautiful | E. M. Wilmot-Buxton | [80] |
| The Wonderful Quern Stones | Julia Goddard | [91] |
| The Story of Brunhilda and Siegfried | ||
| Brunhilda and the Magic Sword | Constance Maud | [99] |
| Brunhilda’s Sleep Guarded by Loki’s Fiery Arm | Constance Maud | [107] |
| How Siegfried Killed the Dragon | Constance Maud | [115] |
| How Siegfried Finds Brunhilda | Constance Maud | [133] |
| The Story of Lohengrin | ||
| The Plot Against the Beautiful Elsa of Brabant | Constance Maud | [141] |
| The Knights of the Holy Grail | Constance Maud | [148] |
| Lohengrin the Champion of Elsa of Brabant | Constance Maud | [150] |
| Ortruda Plots for Revenge | Constance Maud | [158] |
| The Departure of Lohengrin | Constance Maud | [162] |
| The Wooing of the Daughter of the King of Ireland | From the Gudrun Lay | [171] |
| Three Tales of the Rhine | ||
| The Lady of Kynast | Xavier B. Saintine | [180] |
| The Guardian Angel | Xavier B. Saintine | [183] |
| The Giant Who Laughed at a Dwarf | Xavier B. Saintine | [185] |
| The Legend of Saint Christopher | Lillian M. Gask | [187] |
| Prince Ivan and the Gray Wolf | Lillian M. Gask | [195] |
| King Robert of Sicily | Henry W. Longfellow | [213] |
| Myths of Greece and Rome | ||
| The Riddle of the Sphinx | Elsie F. Buckley | [222] |
| The Gift of Athene | Sir George W. Cox | [250] |
| Daphne, Child of the Morning | Sir George W. Cox | [253] |
| The Vengeance of Apollo | Sir George W. Cox | [255] |
| The Story of Arion | Sir George W. Cox | [261] |
| The Battle of the Frogs and the Mice | Sir George W. Cox | [267] |
| Orpheus the Sweet Singer | Sir George W. Cox | [273] |
| Niobe, a Victim of Latona’s Jealousy | Thomas Bulfinch | [278] |
| The Sad Story of Pyramus and Thisbe | Thomas Bulfinch | [282] |
| The Twelve Labors of Hercules | Thomas Bulfinch | [286] |
| Hercules’s Search for the Apples of Hesperides | Nathaniel Hawthorne | [292] |
| The Story of Cupid and Psyche | Thomas Bulfinch | [318] |
| How Phaëton Drove the Sun | Thomas Bulfinch | [330] |
| Baucis and Philemon Changed into Two Trees | Thomas Bulfinch | [339] |
| The Paradise of Children | Nathaniel Hawthorne | [342] |
| Two Tales of the Hudson | ||
| Rip Van Winkle | Washington Irving | [364] |
| The Legend of Sleepy Hollow | Washington Irving | [386] |
| Some Animal Myths of Various Lands | ||
| The Hare Who Thought the World Had Come to an End A Hindoo Tale translated from the Jataka | H. N. Francis | [430] |
| The Watering of the Saplings A Hindoo Tale translated from the Jataka | Rev. W. H. D. Rouse | [433] |
| The Old Hare and the Elephants A Hindoo Tale translated from the Hitopadeca | Sir Edwin Arnold | [434] |
| The Elephant Has a Bet With the Tiger A Tale from the Malay Peninsula | Walter Skeat | [436] |
| How the Tortoise Out-Ran the Deer A Tale from the Amazon River | C. F. Hartt | [441] |
| Which was the Stronger, the Tortoise, the Tapir, or the Whale? A Tale from the Amazon River | C. F. Hartt | [444] |
| How the Turtle Got His Shell A Tale from New Guinea | Annie Ker | [446] |
| The Legend of Rata A Maori Myth | Sir George Grey | [450] |
| Why the Hippopotamus Lives in the Water A West African Myth | Elphinstone Dayrell | [455] |
| Why the Elephant Has Small Eyes A West African Myth | Elphinstone Dayrell | [457] |
| The Boy Who Set a Snare for the Sun An American Indian Myth | H. R. Schoolcraft | [460] |
| The Bird Lover | Cornelius Mathews | [465] |
| Wunzh, the Father of Indian Corn | Cornelius Mathews | [479] |
| When Brer Wolf Have His Corn Shucking A Tale told by the Georgia Negroes | Anonymous | [487] |
| Brer Rabbit’s Cool Air Swing A Tale told by the Georgia Negroes | Anonymous | [490] |
| Three Stories of the Seasons | ||
| The Four Seasons | Lillian M. Gask | [493] |
| The Three Lemons | Lillian M. Gask | [500] |
| The Winter-Spirit and His Visitor | Cornelius Mathews | [512] |