|
|||
Kellscraft
Studio Home Page |
Wallpaper
Images for your Computer |
Nekrassoff Informational Pages |
Web
Text-ures© Free Books on-line |
THE ELM-TREE FAIRY BOOK FAVORITE FAIRY TALES EDITED
BY CLIFTON
JOHNSON ILLUSTRATED
BY LEJAREN
HILLER LITTLE,
BROWN, & COMPANY 1908 INTRODUCTORY
NOTE IN the volumes that make up this series of fairy books are
to be found the favorite wonder tales of many nations in a version especially
suited for the home fireside. The interest, the charm and all the sweetness of
the stories have been retained, but savagery, distressing details and excessive
pathos have been dropped, and the books can be read aloud or placed in the
hands of children with entire confidence. The reasons for such changes as I have made in the stories
are perhaps self-evident. Surely, most parents and teachers will agree that our
little people are better off without some of the sentiments of the barbaric
past when the tales originated. We can well spare most of the spectacles of
falsehood, gluttony, drunkenness, torture and gore that are found in the usual
tellings, and we can get along without the cruel fathers and wicked
stepmothers. Civilization and culture have advanced vastly since the time when
the stories started. Our primal instincts are more controlled, and law,
education and ethics mean vastly more. The necessity therefore seems
clear for softening or changing the crude ideals and doubtful morals and
coarseness that have so often survived in the old stories. The tales are drawn from many sources, and usually are the
result of a comparison of several versions, and a combination of the best
features of these versions into a simple straightforward whole such as children
will read with understanding and pleasure. The plan I have indicated was begun with "The Oak-Tree
Fairy Book," the initial volume f this tree named series, and has been
consistently pursued in all the later volumes. CLIFTON JOHNSON.
HADLEY, MASS.
|