A Study of Fairy Tales - Part 25
Library

Part 25

REFERENCES

Century Co.: _St. Nicholas Magazine_, 1915; _St. Nicholas Fairy Stories Re-told_.

Gates, Josephine: "And Piped Those Children Back Again," (Pied Piper) _St. Nicholas_, Nov., 1914.

Hays, Ruth: "Greencap," _St. Nicholas_, June, 1915.

Hazlitt, William; _Essays_. ("Wit and Humor.") Camelot Series.

Scott.

Hooker, B.: "Narrative and the Fairy Tale," _Bookman_, 33: June and July, 1911, pp. 389-93, pp. 501-05.

_Ibid_: "Types of Fairy Tales," _Forum_, 40: Oct., 1908, pp.

375-84.

Martin, John: _John Martin's Book_ (Magazine), 1915

Meredith, George: _The Comic Spirit_. Scribners.

Moulton, Alice O'Grady, and Literature Committee: "Humorous Tales" _Kindergarten Review_, Dec, 1914.

Perry, Bliss: _A Study of Prose Fiction_. ("The Romantic" and "The Realistic") Houghton.

CHAPTER VI

SOURCES OF MATERIAL FOR FAIRY TALES: A LIST OF FAIRY TALES, PICTURES, PICTURE-BOOKS, POEMS, AND BOOKS

Shall we permit our children, without scruple, to hear any fables composed by any authors indifferently, and so to receive into their minds opinions generally the reverse of those which, when they are grown to manhood, we shall think they ought to entertain?--PLATO, in _The Republic_.

Any list of fairy tales for little children must be selected from those books which, as we have noted, contain the best collections of folk-lore, and from books which contain tales that rank as cla.s.sics.

An examination of the tales of Perrault, of Grimm, of Dasent, of Andersen, of Jacobs, of Harris, and of miscellaneous tales, to see what are suited to the little child, would result in the following lists of tales. Those most worthy of study for the kindergarten are marked with an asterisk and those suited to the first grade are marked "1." No attempt has been made to mention all the varied sources of a tale or its best version. The Boston Public Library issues a _Finding List of Fairy Tales and Folk Stories_, which may be procured easily, and the Carnegie Library at Pittsburg issues in its monthly bulletin for December, 1913, vol. 18, no. 10, a _List of Folk-Tales_, and other stories which may be dramatized. The Baker, Taylor Company, in 1914, issued a _Graded Guide to Supplementary Reading_, which contains a list of many of the best editions of folk and fairy tales suited to primary grades. A list of school editions is included in this book.

But one cannot fail to be impressed with the general low literary standard of many school editions of fairy tales when judged by the standards here applied to the tales themselves.--

I. A List of Fairy Tales and Folk Tales

Tales of Perrault:

* CINDERELLA.

1 LITTLE THUMB.

1 PUSS-IN BOOTS.

* RED RIDING HOOD.

1 SLEEPING BEAUTY.

1 THE THREE WISHES.

Tales of the Grimms:

1 BIRDIE AND LENA.

1 BRIAR ROSE.

* THE CAT AND THE MOUSE IN PARTNERSHIP.

1 CHANTICLEER AND PARTLET.

1. HOW THEY WENT TO THE HILLS TO EAT NUTS.

2. THE VISIT TO M KORBES.

3. THE DEATH OF PARTLETT.

* CINDERELLA.

* THE ELVES AND THE SHOEMAKER.

THE FOX AND THE GEESE.

1 THE HARE AND THE HEDGEHOG.

1 THE HOUSE IN THE WOOD.

* THE KING OF THE BIRDS.

1 LITTLE BROTHER AND SISTER 1 THE LITTLE LAMB AND THE LITTLE FISH.

* LITTLE RED-CAP.

1 LITTLE SNOW WHITE.

1 LITTLE TWO-EYES.

MOTHER HOLLE.

1 THE NOSE.

1 SNOW WHITE AND ROSE RED.

* THE SPARROW AND HIS FOUR CHILDREN.

STAR DOLLARS.

* THE SPIDER AND THE FLEA.

* THE STRAW, THE COAL, AND THE BEAN.

* THE TOWN MUSICIANS OF BREMEN.

THE WILLOW WREN AND THE BEAR.

* THE WOLF AND THE SEVEN KIDS.

* THE WONDERFUL PORRIDGE POT.

Norse Tales:

c.o.c.k AND HEN.

THE c.o.c.k AND HEN A-NUTTING.

THE c.o.c.k AND HEN THAT WENT TO THE DOVREFELL.

c.o.c.k, CUCKOO, AND BLACK c.o.c.k.

* DOLL I' THE GRa.s.s.

1 GERTRUDE'S BIRD.

1 KATIE WOODENCLOAK (read).

1 THE LAD WHO WENT TO THE NORTH WIND.

1 LORD PETER (read).

ONE'S OWN CHILDREN ABE ALWAYS PRETTIEST.

* THREE BILLY GOATS.

1 THUMBIKIN (read).

* WHY THE BEAR IS STUMPY-TAILED (pourquois).

English Tales, by Jacobs: