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THE FAIRY TALES OF CHARLES PERRAULT
2019-07-17 in Action and Adventure, bedtime story, children’s stories, Childrens Book, Eastern European Folklore, fables, Fairy Tales, Fiction, Folk Tales and Folklore, Folklore, Kings and Queens, legends, Moral Tales, Princes and Princesses, Russian Fairy and Folk Tales, Scandinavian Folklore and Fairy Tales | Tags: aged Countryman, beauty, black pudding, Blue Beard, Cendrillon, Charles Perrault, children’s stories, Cinderella, closet, colour of the moon, Crystal slipper, curiosity, donkey, fables, fairy tales, folklore, france, french, Glass Slipper, gown, happiness, illustrated, joy, Jupiter, key, keyhole, king, La Belle au Bois Dormant, laughter, Le Maistre Chat, Le Petit Chaperon Rouge, Le Petit Poucet, legends, Les Fées, Little, Little Thumb, Marquis, Master Cat, misfortune, moral tales, mother, myths, ornament, ou la Petite Pantoufle de Verre, ou le Chat Botté, prince, princess, Puss In Boots, queen, Red Riding-Hood, Ridiculous Wishes, Riquet, Riquet à la Houppe, Sauce, shoe, Skin, Sleeping Beauty, storyteller, The Fairy, thunderbolts, Tuft, woods, wriggle | Leave a comment
10 Illustrated Fairy Tales for Children
Translated and Retold by CHARLES PERRAULT – Illustrated By HARRY CLARKE
Herein you will find 10 illustrated classic children’s stories translated and retold by the famous Charles Perrault. The 10 stories in this volume are:
LITTLE RED RIDING-HOOD
THE FAIRY
BLUE BEARD
THE SLEEPING BEAUTY IN THE WOOD
THE MASTER CAT; OR, PUSS IN BOOTS
CINDERILLA; OR, THE LITTLE GLASS SLIPPER
RIQUET WITH THE TUFT
LITTLE THUMB
THE RIDICULOUS WISHES
DONKEY-SKIN
We invite you to download and enjoy these stories in eBook format for only US$1.99 using the link below. These are as close to the originals as you are ever likely to get. The 10 full page colour illustrations and 36 Pen and Ink illustrations by Irishman Harry Clarke (1889 – 1931) bring an added dimension to these lively stories.
Rest assured, once you read these to the younger members of your family, they will keep on coming back to you for more.
Charles Perrault ranks alongside Hans Christian Andersen and the Grimms as a master storyteller. Perhaps he is less well known because he had done in the late 1600,s what the Grimm Bros. did in the mid-1800’s, which overshadowed his earlier achievements. In fact the Grimm Bros. translated a lot of Perrault’s stories into German and rebranded them in their own volumes.
Like Dickens and Andersen in their time, during his own age Perrault (1628 – 1703) was one of the best-liked personages and has remained ever since a prime favourite. Everyone likes a man who enjoys life. Perrault was such a man and he was more. He was the cause of enjoyment to countless of his fellow countrymen, and his stories still promise enjoyment to countless more to come. We are fortunate in knowing a great deal about his varied life, deriving our knowledge mainly from D’Alembert’s history of the French Academy and from his own memoirs.
THE YOUNG CRAB AND HIS MOTHER
2012-04-21 in Fairy Tales, Folk Tales and Folklore, Folklore, Moral Tales | Tags: Æsop, Æsop’s fables, children, crow, curiosity, ducks, fairy tales, flew, flying, folk tales, folklore, fool, king, misfortune, moral tales, stock, tortoise, vanity | Leave a comment
THE YOUNG CRAB AND HIS MOTHER
“Why in the world do you walk sideways like that?” said a Mother Crab to her son. “You should always walk straight forward with your toes turned out.”
“Show me how to walk, mother dear,” answered the little Crab obediently, “I want to learn.”
So the old Crab tried and tried to walk straight forward. But she could walk sideways only, like her son. And when she wanted to turn her toes out she tripped and fell on her nose.
Moral: Do not tell others how to act unless you can set a good example.
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From the book ÆSOP FOR CHILDREN
To be published during the summer of 2012
The book will raise funds for CECILY’S FUND, a charity educating and supporting Zambian children orphaned by aids.
THE TORTOISE AND THE DUCKS from ÆSOP FOR CHILDREN
2012-04-12 in Fairy Tales, Folk Tales and Folklore, Folklore, Moral Tales | Tags: Æsop, Æsop’s fables, children, crow, curiosity, ducks, fairy tales, flew, flying, folk tales, folklore, fool, foolish words, king, misfortune, moral tales, short legs, stock, strange sight, tortoise, vanity, zambian children | Leave a comment
The Tortoise, you know, carries his house on his back. No matter how hard he tries, he cannot leave home. They say that Jupiter punished him so, because he was such a lazy stay-at-home that he would not go to Jupiter’s wedding, even when especially invited.
After many years, Tortoise began to wish he had gone to that wedding. When he saw how gaily the birds flew about and how the Hare and the Chipmunk and all the other animals ran nimbly by, always eager to see everything there was to be seen, the Tortoise felt very sad and discontented. He wanted to see the world too, and there he was with a house on his back and little short legs that could hardly drag him along.
One day he met a pair of Ducks and told them all his trouble.
“We can help you to see the world,” said the Ducks. “Take hold of this stick with your teeth and we will carry you far up in the air where you can see the whole countryside. But keep quiet or you will be sorry.”
The Tortoise was very glad indeed. He seized the stick firmly with his teeth, the two Ducks took hold of it one at each end, and away they sailed up toward the clouds.
Just then a Crow flew by. He was very much astonished at the strange sight and cried:
“This must surely be the King of Tortoises!”
“Why certainly——” began the Tortoise.
But as he opened his mouth to say these foolish words he lost his hold on the stick, and down he fell to the ground, where he was dashed to pieces on a rock.
Moral: Foolish curiosity and vanity often lead to misfortune.
– – – – – – – –
From the book ÆSOP FOR CHILDREN
To be published during the summer of 2012
The book will raise funds for CECILY’S FUND, a charity educating and supporting Zambian children orphaned by aids.