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The Chinese Fairy Book

The Chinese Fairy BookNotes: The Chinese Fairy Book contains 74 Chinese folktales, sorted into several categories.
Author: Various
Editor: Dr. R. Wilhelm
Published: 1921
Publisher: Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York

PREFACE

The fairy tales and legends of olden China have in common with the “Thousand and One Nights” an oriental glow and glitter of precious stones and gold and multicolored silks, an oriental wealth of fantastic and supernatural action. And yet they strike an exotic note distinct in itself. The seventy-three stories here presented after original sources, embracing “Nursery Fairy Tales,” “Legends of the Gods,” “Tales of Saints and Magicians,” “Nature and Animal Tales,” “Ghost Stories,” “Historic Fairy Tales,” and “Literary Fairy Tales,” probably represent the most comprehensive and varied collection of oriental fairy tales ever made available for American readers. There is no child who will not enjoy their novel color, their fantastic beauty, their infinite variety of subject. Yet, like the “Arabian Nights,” they will amply repay the attention of the older reader as well. Some are exquisitely poetic, such as “The Flower-Elves,” “The Lady of the Moon” or “The Herd Boy and the Weaving Maiden”; others like “How Three Heroes Came By Their Deaths Because Of Two Peaches,” carry us back dramatically and powerfully to the Chinese age of Chivalry. The summits of fantasy are scaled in the quasi-religious dramas of “The Ape Sun Wu Kung” and “Notscha,” or the weird sorceries unfolded in “The Kindly Magician.” Delightful ghost stories, with happy endings, such as “A Night on the Battlefield” and “The Ghost Who Was Foiled,” are paralleled with such idyllic love-tales as that of “Rose of Evening,” or such Lilliputian fancies as “The King of the Ants” and “The Little Hunting Dog.” It is quite safe to say that these Chinese fairy tales will give equal pleasure to the old as well as the young. They have been retold simply, with no changes in style or expression beyond such details of presentation which differences between oriental and occidental viewpoints at times compel. It is the writer’s hope that others may take as much pleasure in reading them as he did in their translation.

Fredrick H. Martens.

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A Legend of Confucius

Dschang Liang

Fox-Fire

Giauna the Beautiful

Help in Need

How Greed for a Trifling Thing Led a Man to Lose a Great One

How Molo Stole the Lovely Rose-Red

How the Five Ancients Became Men

How the River God’s Wedding Was Broken Off

How Three Heroes Came By Their Deaths Because of Two Peaches

King Mu of Dschou

Laotsze

Notscha

Old Dragonbeard

Old Dschang

Retribution

Rose of Evening

Sky O’Dawn

The Ancient Man

The Ape Sun Wu Kung

The Bird with Nine Heads

The Cave of the Beasts

The Constable

The Dangerous Reward

The Disowned Princess

The Dragon After His Winter Sleep

The Dragon-Princess

The Eight Immortals (I)

The Eight Immortals (II)

The Favorite of Fortune and the Child of Ill Luck

The Fire-God

The Flower-Elves

The Flying Ogre

The Fox and the Raven

The Fox and the Tiger

The Frog Princess

The Ghost Who Was Foiled

The Girl with the Horse’s Head or the Silkworm Goddess

The God of War

The Golden Canister

The Great Flood

The Halos of the Saints

The Heartless Husband

The Herd Boy and the Weaving Maiden

The Kindly Magician

The King of Huai Nan

The King of the Ants

The Kingdom of the Ogres

The Lady of the Moon

The Little Hunting Dog

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