E-Book Content
FRANCES JENKINS OLCOTT
Illustrations
LIBRARIES NY PUBLIC LIBRARY THE BRANCH
3
REFERENCE
,.,
3333 11040 3249
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6.
HE SAID, "LITTLE TABLE SET THYSELF!"
GRIMM'S FAIRY TALES EDITED BY
FRANCES JENKINS OLCOTT
By Rie Cramer
Illustrated
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA 1927
COPYRIGHT BY 9 2 * > THE PENN i
PUBLISHING
COMPANY
Grimm's Fairy Tale*
Printed in the U. S. A.
FOREWORD" our American boys and girls is offered this volume which is really Grimm's Fairy Tales, not an abridg-
TO
ment
superficial
and
colorless,
nor an insipid retelling
of the stories.
This edition tion
by the
is
based on the
folk-lorist,
Hunt
version, with
Andrew Lang.
an introduc-
The Hunt
version
is
considered a most accurate English translation.
From
the full collection, fifty-one stories suitable for children
have been selected.
Among
these are
famous
tales as well as
many delightful ones not usually included in children's volumes. Where the Hunt wording is too stilted, the text of the Hausmarchen itself has been followed. The very long sentences have been subdivided. translation, illustrated with
tributed
its
bit of folk
While
that quaint old-fashioned
woodcuts by Wehnert, has con-
phraseology.
The
Editor's desire
is
to restore to the children as large a collection as possible
of Grimm's Fairy Tales unmutilated in their literary perfection.
The
by the well-kxiovn Dutch artist, Mrs. Some of Rie Cramer's other fairy tale pictures
illustrations are
Rie Cramer.
published in England, are said by admiring critics there, to be
very charming, of exceptional merit, and to have high merit of their own.
Her
illustrations for
Grimm
artistic
are particularly harmonious in
[5]
FOREWORD color, while their quaint
one
lives
with them.
charm grows on one more and more as
They
are fanciful or humorous.
They
have the quality, rare in fairy tales, of actually illustrating their text. This will mean added pleasure to the children. Rie Cramer's
little
and graceful
The
black and white headings are particularly pretty
in outline.
tales are
presented here
in their original
form, with noth-
out of child-heartedness, humor, poetic feeling, and delicate sentiment and fancy. Indeed, it is all here the poesy ing
left
and purity which those profound and child-loving
scholars, the
Brothers Grimm, retained in the old folk-tales which, with so
much
pains, they gathered largely
from among the peasant-
folk themselves.
And
the Brothers explained, in their preface, that they had
planned the volume as an educational book as well as one for scholars; for which reason they had eliminated everything which they feared might harm the children. But since the Brothers issued their book, about a hundred years ago, educational re-
quirements of what is ethicalh' best for children have materially advanced. Therefore, in this book, a few other parts unsuitable for children -hiavs been 'oinittfedi:
So now this volume; of G-rimm's Fairy Tales is offered to our American boys a'nd- girls; and may they have continued