Front Matter
CONCERNING THESE STORIES
[4] THERE are numerous time-honored stories which have become so
incorporated into the literature and thought of our race that
a knowledge of them is an indispensable part of one's
education. These stories are of several different classes. To one
class belong the popular fairy tales which have delighted
untold generations of children, and will continue to delight
them to the end of time. To another class belong the limited
number of fables that have come down to us through many
channels frorn hoar antiquity. To a third belong the charming
stories of olden times that are derived from the literatures of
ancient peoples, such as the Greeks and the Hebrews. A fourth
class includes the half-legendary tales of a distinctly later
origin, which have for their subjects certain romantic episodes
in the lives of well-known heroes and famous men, or in the
history of a people.
It is to this last class that most of the fifty stories contained
in the present volume belong. As a matter of course, some of
these stories are better known, and therefore more famous, than
others. Some have a slight historical value; some are useful as
giving point to certain great moral truths; others are products
solely of the fancy, and are intended only to amuse. Some are
derived from very ancient sources, and are current in the
literature of many lands; some have come to us through the
ballads and folk tales of the English people; a few are of
quite recent origin; nearly all are the subjects of frequent
allusions in poetry and prose and in the conversation of educated
people. Care has been taken to exclude everything that is not
strictly within the limits of probability; hence there is here
no trespassing upon the domain of the fairy tale, the fable, or
the myth.
That children naturally take a deep interest in such stories,
no person can deny; that the reading of them will not only
give pleasure, but will help to lay the foundation for broader
literary studies, can scarcely be doubted. It is believed,
therefore, that the present collection will be found to possess
all educative value which will commend it as a supplementary
reader in the middle primary grades at school. It is also hoped
that the book will prove so attractive that it will be in demand
out of school as well as in.
Acknowledgments are due to Mrs. Charles A. Lane, by whom
eight or ten of the stories were suggested.
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