Dasent, D.C.L.
IV. THE LAD AND THE DEIL
From "Popular Tales from the
Norse," by Sir George Webbe
Dasent, D.C.L.
V. ANANZI AND THE LION
From "Popular Tales from the
Norse," by Sir George Webbe
Dasent, D.C.L.
VI. THE GRATEFUL FOXES
From "Tales of Old Japan," by
A.B. Mitford.
VII. THE BADGER'S MONEY
From "Tales of Old Japan," by
A.B. Mitford.
VIII. WHY BROTHER BEAR HAS NO TAIL
From "Nights with Uncle Remus,"
by Joel Chandler Harris.
IX. THE ORIGIN OF RUBIES
From "Folk Tales of Bengal,"
by Rev. Lal Behari Day.
X. LONG, BROAD, AND SHARPSIGHT
Translated from the Bohemian
by A.H. Wratislaw, M.A., in
"Sixty Folk Tales, from Exclusively
Slavonic Sources."
XI. INTELLIGENCE AND LUCK
Translated from the Bohemian
by A.H. Wratislaw, M.A., in
"Sixty Folk Tales, from Exclusively
Slavonic Sources."
XII. GEORGE WITH THE GOAT
Translated from the Bohemian
by A.H. Wratislaw, M.A., in
"Sixty Folk Tales, from Exclusively
Slavonic Sources."
XIII. THE WONDERFUL HAIR
Translated from the Serbian by
A.H. Wratislaw, M.A., in "Sixty
Folk Tales, from Exclusively Slavonic
Sources."
XIV. THE DRAGON AND THE PRINCE
Translated from the Serbian
by A.H. Wratislaw, M.A., in
"Sixty Folk Tales, from Exclusively
Slavonic Sources."
XV. THE GOOD CHILDREN
A Little Russian story of Galicia.
Translated by A.H.
Wratislaw, M.A., in "Sixty
Folk Tales, from Exclusively
Slavonic Sources."
XVI. THE DUN HORSE
From "Pawnee Hero Stories
and Folk Tales," by George
Bird Grinnell.
XVII. THE GREEDY YOUNGSTER
From the Norwegian tale of
Peter Christen Asbjoernsen.
XVIII. HANS, WHO MADE THE PRINCESS LAUGH
From the Norwegian tale of
Peter Christen Asbjoernsen.
XIX. THE STORY OF TOM TIT TOT
An old Suffolk Tale, given in the
dialect of East Anglia. From
"Tom Tit Tot. An Essay on
Savage Philosophy in Folk
Tale," by Edward Clodd.
XX. THE PEASANT STORY OF NAPOLEON
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