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قراءة كتاب The Lilac Fairy Book
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THE LILAC FAIRY BOOK
THE FAIRY BOOK SERIES
EDITED BY ANDREW LANG
Crown 8vo. gilt edges
THE BLUE FAIRY BOOK. With 138 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE RED FAIRY BOOK. With 100 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE GREEN FAIRY BOOK. With 101 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE GREY FAIRY BOOK. With 65 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE YELLOW FAIRY BOOK. With 104 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE PINK FAIRY BOOK. With 67 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE BLUE POETRY BOOK. With 100 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE TRUE STORY BOOK. With 66 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE RED TRUE STORY BOOK. With 100 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE ANIMAL STORY BOOK. With 67 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE RED BOOK OF ANIMAL STORIES. With 65 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS ENTERTAINMENTS. With 66 Illustrations. $2.00.
THE VIOLET FAIRY BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 54 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE CRIMSON FAIRY BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 43 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE BROWN FAIRY BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 42 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE OLIVE FAIRY BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 43 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE ORANGE FAIRY BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 50 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE BOOK OF ROMANCE. With 8 Coloured Plates and 44 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE RED ROMANCE BOOK. With 8 Coloured Plates and 44 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE BOOK OF PRINCES AND PRINCESSES. By Mrs. Lang. With 8 Coloured Plates and 43 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE RED BOOK OF HEROES. By Mrs. Lang. With 8 Coloured Plates and 40 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
THE LILAC FAIRY BOOK. With 6 Coloured Plates and 46 other Illustrations. Net $1.60. By mail $1.75.
TALES OF TROY AND GREECE. By Andrew Lang. With 17 Illustrations by H. J. Ford, and a Map. Crown 8vo. Net $1.50. By mail $1.62.
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO., NEW YORK
THE
LILAC FAIRY BOOK
EDITED BY
ANDREW LANG

WITH 6 COLOURED PLATES AND
NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS BY H. J. FORD
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
FOURTH AVENUE & 30TH STREET, NEW YORK
LONDON, BOMBAY AND CALCUTTA
1910
Copyright, 1910
BY
Longmans, Green, and Co.
All rights reserved
THE • PLIMPTON • PRESS
[W • D • O]
NORWOOD • MASS • U • S • A
PREFACE
'What cases are you engaged in at present?' 'Are you stopping many teeth just now?' 'What people have you converted lately?' Do ladies put these questions to the men—lawyers, dentists, clergymen, and so forth—who happen to sit next them at dinner parties?
I do not know whether ladies thus indicate their interest in the occupations of their casual neighbours at the hospitable board. But if they do not know me, or do not know me well, they generally ask 'Are you writing anything now?' (as if they should ask a painter 'Are you painting anything now?' or a lawyer 'Have you any cases at present?'). Sometimes they are more definite and inquire 'What are you writing now?' as if I must be writing something—which, indeed, is the case, though I dislike being reminded of it. It is an awkward question, because the fair being does not care a bawbee what I am writing; nor would she be much enlightened if I replied 'Madam, I am engaged on a treatise intended to prove that Normal is prior to Conceptional Totemism'—though that answer would be as true in fact as obscure in significance. The best plan seems to be to answer that I have entirely abandoned mere literature, and am contemplating a book on 'The Causes of Early Blight in the Potato,' a melancholy circumstance which threatens to deprive us of our chief esculent root. The inquirer would never be undeceived. One nymph who, like the rest, could not keep off the horrid topic of my occupation, said 'You never write anything but fairy books, do you?' A French gentleman, too, an educationist and expert in portraits of Queen Mary, once sent me a newspaper article in which he had written that I was exclusively devoted to the composition of fairy books, and nothing else. He then came to England, visited me, and found that I knew rather more about portraits of Queen Mary than he did.
In truth I never did write any fairy books in my life, except 'Prince Prigio,' 'Prince Ricardo,' and 'Tales from a Fairy Court'—that of the aforesaid Prigio. I take this opportunity of recommending these fairy books—poor things, but my own—to parents and guardians who may never have heard of them. They are rich in romantic adventure, and the Princes always marry the right Princesses and live happy ever afterwards; while the wicked witches, stepmothers, tutors and governesses are never cruelly punished, but retire to the country on ample pensions. I hate cruelty: I never put a wicked stepmother in a barrel and send her tobogganing down a hill. It is true that Prince Ricardo did kill the Yellow Dwarf; but that was in fair fight, sword in hand, and the dwarf, peace to his ashes! died in harness.
The object of these confessions is not only that of advertising my own fairy books (which are not 'out of print'; if your bookseller says so, the truth is not in him), but of giving credit where credit is due. The fairy books have been almost wholly the work of Mrs. Lang, who has translated and adapted them from the French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Catalan, and other languages.
My part has been that of Adam, according to Mark Twain, in the Garden of Eden. Eve worked, Adam superintended. I also superintend. I find out where the stories are, and advise, and, in short, superintend. I do not write the stories out of my own head. The reputation of having written all the fairy books (an European reputation in nurseries and the United States of America) is 'the burden of an honour unto which I was not born.' It weighs upon and is killing me, as the general fash of being the wife of the Lord of Burleigh, Burleigh House by Stamford Town, was too much for the village maiden espoused by that peer.
Nobody really wrote most of the stories. People told them in all parts of the world long before Egyptian hieroglyphics or Cretan signs or Cyprian syllabaries, or alphabets were invented. They are older than reading and writing, and arose like



