Indian Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs (best books to read for students TXT) ๐
Description
Although many readers might associate the term โfairy talesโ with the Germanic or Celtic folk tale traditionโlike in the stories collected by the Brothers Grimmโcountries like India have their own rich history of fairy tales. Many of these tales, infused with a local flavor, bear a striking structural and thematic similarity to those with which Western readers are accustomed: moral allegories, talking animals, gambling incidents, and the like. Joseph Jacobs has carefully selected 29 fairy tales from the Jatakas, the Fables of Bidpai, the Tales of the Sun, the Baluchi Folktales, the Folktales of Kashmir, and other Sanskrit sources. These stories are a humorous and imaginative showcase of Indiaโs rich fairy tale tradition.
Joseph Jacobs was an Australian folklorist who devoted most of his career to collecting fairy tales from around the world. His collections on English fairy tales have immortalized stories such as โJack and the Beanstalk,โ โGoldilocks and the Three Bears,โ โThe Three Little Pigs,โ โJack the Giant Killerโ and โThe History of Tom Thumb.โ
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- Author: Joseph Jacobs
Read book online ยซIndian Fairy Tales by Joseph Jacobs (best books to read for students TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Joseph Jacobs
The ogress waited another day before she asked to see the precious thing. Doubting nothing, the beautiful princess complied, when the ogress seized the ring, and reassuming the form of a bee flew away with it to the palace, where the prince was lying nearly on the point of death. โRise up. Be glad. Mourn no more,โ she said to him. โThe woman for whom you yearn will appear at your summons. See, here is the charm, whereby you may bring her before you.โ The prince was almost mad with joy when he heard these words, and was so desirous of seeing the beautiful princess, that he immediately spoke to the ring, and the house with its fair occupant descended in the midst of the palace garden. He at once entered the building, and telling the beautiful princess of his intense love, entreated her to be his wife. Seeing no escape from the difficulty, she consented on the condition that he would wait one month for her.
Meanwhile the merchantโs son had returned from hunting and was terribly distressed not to find his house and wife. There was the place only, just as he knew it before he had tried the charmed ring which Raja Indrasha had given him. He sat down and determined to put an end to himself. Presently the cat and dog came up. They had gone away and hidden themselves, when they saw the house and everything disappear. โO master!โ they said, โstay your hand. Your trial is great, but it can be remedied. Give us one month, and we will go and try to recover your wife and house.โ
โGo,โ said he, โand may the great God aid your efforts. Bring back my wife, and I shall live.โ
So the cat and dog started off at a run, and did not stop till they reached the place whither their mistress and the house had been taken. โWe may have some difficulty here,โ said the cat. โLook, the king has taken our masterโs wife and house for himself. You stay here. I will go to the house and try to see her.โ So the dog sat down, and the cat climbed up to the window of the room, wherein the beautiful princess was sitting, and entered. The princess recognised the cat, and informed it of all that had happened to her since she had left them.
โBut is there no way of escape from the hands of these people?โ she asked.
โYes,โ replied the cat, โif you can tell me where the charmed ring is.โ
โThe ring is in the stomach of the ogress,โ she said.
โAll right,โ said the cat, โI will recover it. If we once get it, everything is ours.โ Then the cat descended the wall of the house, and went and laid down by a ratโs hole and pretended she was dead. Now at that time a great wedding chanced to be going on among the rat community of that place, and all the rats of the neighbourhood were assembled in that one particular mine by which the cat had lain down. The eldest son of the king of the rats was about to be married. The cat got to know of this, and at once conceived the idea of seizing the bridegroom and making him render the necessary help. Consequently, when the procession poured forth from the hole squealing and jumping in honour of the occasion, it immediately spotted the bridegroom and pounced down on him. โOh! let me go, let me go,โ cried the terrified rat. โOh! let him go,โ squealed all the company. โIt is his wedding day.โ
โNo, no,โ replied the cat. โNot unless you do something for me. Listen. The ogress, who lives in that house with the prince and his wife, has swallowed a ring, which I very much want. If you will procure it for me, I will allow the rat to depart unharmed. If you do not, then your prince dies under my feet.โ
โVery well, we agree,โ said they all. โNay, if we do not get the ring for you, devour us all.โ
This was rather a bold offer. However, they accomplished the thing. At midnight, when the ogress was sound asleep, one of the rats went to her bedside, climbed up on her face, and inserted its tail into her throat; whereupon the ogress coughed violently, and the ring came out and rolled on to the floor. The rat immediately seized the precious thing and ran off with it to its king, who was very glad, and went at once to the cat and released its son.
As soon as the cat received the ring, she started back with the dog to go and tell their master the good tidings. All seemed safe now. They had only to give the ring to him, and he would speak to it, and the house and beautiful princess would again
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