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قراءة كتاب The Shepherd of Salisbury Plain, and Other Tales
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Transcriber's note
- Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired silently.
- Word errors have been corrected and a list of corrections can be found after the book.
The
Shepherd of Salisbury Plain,
and Other Tales.
By
Hannah More.
New York:
Derby & Jackson, 119 Nassau Street.
1859.
Stereotyped by
Thomas B. Smith,
82 & 84 Beckman Street.
Printed by
Geo. Russell & Co.
Beckman St.
CONTENTS
Tales for the Common People.
Page
- The Shepherd of Salisbury Plain 7
- The Two Shoemakers 41
- The History of Tom White, the Post Boy 119
- The Sunday School 152
- The History of Hester Wilmot, being the sequel to the Sunday School 166
- The History of Betty Brown, the St. Giles's Orange Girl; with some account of Mrs. Sponge, the Money-Lender 191
- Black Giles the Poacher; containing some account of a family who had rather live by their wits than their work 204
- Tawney Rachel, or the Fortune-Teller; with some account of Dreams, Omens, and Conjurers 230
Stories for Persons of Middle Rank.
Page
- The History of Mr. Fantom (the new-fashioned Philosopher), and his man William 245
- The Two Wealthy Farmers; or the History of Mr. Bragwell 276
- 'Tis all for the best 387
- A Cure for Melancholy 405
Allegories.
- The Pilgrims 423
- The Valley of Tears 437
- The Strait Gate and the Broad Way 444
- Parley the Porter 456
- The Grand Assizes; or General Jail Delivery 470
- The Servant Man turned Soldier, or the Fair-weather Christian 479
TALES
FOR THE COMMON PEOPLE.
"Religion is for the man in humble life, and to raise his nature, and to put him in mind of a state in which the privileges of opulence will cease, when he will be equal by nature, and may be more than equal by virtue."—Burke on the French Revolution.
Advertisement.
To improve the habits, and raise the principles of the common people, at a time when their dangers and temptations, moral and political, were multiplied beyond the example of any former period, was the motive which impelled the author of these volumes to devise and prosecute the institution of the "Cheap Repository." This plan was established with an humble wish not only to counteract vice and profligacy on the one hand, but error, discontent, and false religion on the other. And as an appetite for reading had, from a variety of causes, been increased among the inferior ranks in this country, it was judged expedient, at this critical period, to supply such wholesome aliment as might give a new direction to their taste, and abate their relish for those corrupt and inflammatory publications which the consequences of the French Revolution have been so fatally pouring in upon us.
The success of the plan exceeded the most sanguine expectations of its projector. Above two millions of the tracts were sold within the first year, besides very large numbers in Ireland; and they continue to be very extensively circulated, in their original form of single tracts, as well as in three bound volumes.
As these stories, though