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Fairy tales from Brazil

Fairy tales from BrazilNotes: Subtitled “How and why tales from Brazilian folk-lore”, this book contains 18 Brazilian folktales.
Author: Elsie Spicer Eells
Published: 1917
Publisher: Dodd, Mead and Company, Inc., Chicago

PREFACE

It is late afternoon in my Brazilian garden. The dazzling blue of sea and sky which characterises a tropical noonday has become subdued and already roseate tints are beginning to prepare the glory of the sunset hour. A lizard crawls lazily up the whitewashed wall. The song of the sabiá, that wonderful Brazilian thrush, sounds from the royal palm tree. The air is heavy with the perfume of the orange blossom. There is no long twilight in the tropics. Night will leap down suddenly upon my Brazilian garden from out of the glory of the sunset sky.

Theresa, the ama, stands before us on the terrace under the mango trees, and we, her yáyázinhas and yóyózinhos, know that the story hour has come. Theresa, daughter of the mud huts under the palm trees, ama in the sobrado of the foreign senhora, is a royal queen of story land. For her the beasts break silence and talk like humans. For her all the magic wonders of her tales stand forth as living truth. Her lithe body sways backwards and forwards to the rhythm of her words as she unfolds her tales to us. She is a picture to remember as she stands under the mango trees on our terrace. Her spotless white “camiza” is decorated with beautiful pillow lace, her own handiwork. Her skirt of stiffly starched cotton is red and purple in colour. A crimson flowered folded shawl hangs over her right shoulder and great strings of beads ornament the ebony of her neck and arms. To sit at the feet of Theresa, the ama, is to enter the gate of story land.

by Elsie Spicer Eells
1917

read more: TALES OF GIANTS FROM BRAZIL

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How Black Became White

How Night Came

How the Brazilian Beetles Got Their Gorgeous Coats

How the Monkey and the Goat Earned Their Reputations

How the Monkey Became a Trickster

How the Monkey Escaped Being Eaten

How the Monkey Got a Drink When He Was Thirsty

How the Monkey Got Food When He Was Hungry

How the Pigeon Became a Tame Bird

How the Rabbit Lost His Tail

How the Speckled Hen Got Her Speckles

How the Tiger Got His Stripes

How the Toad Got His Bruises

Why the Bananas Belong to the Monkey

Why the Lamb Is Meek

Why the Monkey Still Has a Tail

Why the Sea Moans

Why the Tiger and the Stag Fear Each Other

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Authors' fairy tales

Hans Christian Andersen
Ludwig Bechstein
Lewis Carroll
Brothers Grimm
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Homer
Charles Perrault
Pushkin Alexander
Oscar Wilde

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