Favorite Fairy Tales

This is a collection of the fairy tales that children love best, told in simple language and lavishly illustrated. They are written by various authors, a selection of the best and most popular fairy stories, culled from many sources and here collected and presented in most attractive form, printed in large clear type, with many pictures, some of them colored.


By : Logan Marshall (1884 - )

01 - Little Snow White - Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm



02 - The Ugly Duckling - Hans Christian Andersen



03 - Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp



04 - The Sleeping Beauty - Charles Perrault



05 - Puss-in-Boots - Charles Perrault



06 - Adventures of Tom Thumb - Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm



07 - The Three Bears - Robert Southey



08 - The Little Match Girl - Hans Christian Andersen



09 - Beauty and the Beast - Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot Gallon Villeneuve



10 - The Story of Cinderella - Charles Perrault



11 - Jack the Giant Killer



12 - Jack and the Beanstalk - Joseph Jacobs



13 - Dick Whittington and His Cat - Thomas Heywood



14 - The Story of Bluebeard - Charles Perrault



15 - Little Red Riding-Hood - Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm



16 - Sindbad the Sailor



17 - Hansel and Gretel - Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm



18 - The Goose Girl - Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm


Jack was an idle, lazy boy who would do no work to support his widowed mother; and at last they both came to such poverty that the poor woman had to sell her cow to buy food to keep them from starving. She sent Jack to market with the cow, telling him to be sure and sell it for a good price.

As Jack was going along the road to market he met a butcher. The butcher offered to buy the cow in exchange for a hatful of colored beans. Jack thought the beans looked very pretty, and he was glad to be saved the long hot walk to market; so he struck the bargain on the spot and went back to his mother with the beans, while the butcher went off with the cow.

But the poor widow was very disappointed. She scolded her son for an idle, lazy, good-for-nothing boy, and flung the beans out of the window in a passion.

Now the beans were magic beans, and the next morning, when Jack awoke, he found some of them had taken root in the night and had grown so tall, that they reached right up into the sky.

Jack was full of wonder and curiosity; and, being fond of adventure and excitement, he set out at once to climb the beanstalk, to see what was up at the top of it.

And he climbed, and he climbed, and he climbed, and he climbed, and he climbed, and he climbed, and he climbed—until at last he climbed right up to the very tiptop of the beanstalk...

Comments

Random Post