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ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
[Native Children ready for a Story]Frontispiece
[The Bees flying into the Jar]30
[Again and again Anansi tried to climb the Tree]34
[A great Wave dashed Anansi back on the Beach]40
[The Princess picked up the Fruit]46
[“May I give you a little of this meat?”]52
[Wolf and Leopard discover the Flesh of the Antelope]56
[Mr Ant takes the Box from Anansi]66
[Egya Anansi built himself a very comfortable Hut]70
[The Bird calls to Adzanumee]78
[The wonderful Grinding-stone]82
[Anansi saw, rushing toward him, Beasts and Serpents of all Kinds]92
[Kweku Tsin played on the wonderful Fiddle]100
[Ohia cut down the Trees and prepared them]106
[The Hunter and the Tortoise]120
[The Princess changed into an Elephant]126
[Each received a large Helping except Kwofi]130
[Maku Mawu catches a Fish]136
[Young Leopard sprang toward the Stem and tore it][[10]]142
[They scattered in all Directions]152
[The Hunter and the Serpent]164
[He threw half the Cake to the Vulture]172
[How the Ants paid the Debt]178
[Mybrow’s Wife plucked one of the Yams] 182

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INTRODUCTION

In presenting to the public these stories based on the folk-lore of the Gold Coast peoples, it seems necessary to say something in general terms of the economic and social development of the colony in so far as that development is affecting the ‘lore’ of the folk.

Not until the civilization and industrialism of Europe began to penetrate into the districts of the Guinea Coast was any great attempt made to study the folk-lore of these peoples. It is obvious, therefore, that the student must find considerable admixture from outside sources which the absence of a native system of writing and consequent literature makes exceedingly difficult to detect. The difficulties increase with time, for we are getting farther and farther from the genuine folk-lore. Each year, from towns like Accra, Seccondee, and Cape Coast the tentacles of European civilization are slowly extending in all directions. Railways and roads are creeping [[12]]out, old-fashioned crudity is giving way to simpler and more expeditious methods; new industries, as rubber and cocoa, are being established.[1] All this must be borne in mind in studying the folk-lore as told by the native to-day. What is happening is, unfortunately, not an awakening, but a transformation. The negro is discarding his native cloth for a European suit of clothes.

“On all sides it is reported that the demand for European provisions, luxuries, and apparel is large and greatly increasing. The large imports of tinned provisions, flour, etc., is in part due to the scarcity of native food-stuffs in certain districts, but there is no doubt that the standard of living is changing and rising.

“There is a general desire not only in the colony, but in Ashanti, for better roads, better houses, cleaner villages, and the desire has been prompted by the example of the great sanitary improvements in the larger towns.…