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قراءة كتاب Half a Hundred Hero Tales of Ulysses and The Men of Old

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Half a Hundred Hero Tales
of Ulysses and The Men of Old

Half a Hundred Hero Tales of Ulysses and The Men of Old

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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HALF A HUNDRED
HERO TALES
OF ULYSSES AND THE MEN OF OLD

EDITED BY
FRANCIS STORR
EDITOR OF "THE JOURNAL OF EDUCATION," LONDON

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
FRANK C. PAPÉ

NEW YORK
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
1913


Copyright, 1911,
by

HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY

Published January, 1911

THE QUINN & BODEN CO. PRESS
RAHWAY, N. J.


PREFACE

The apology offered for adding yet another book of Classical Stories to the endless existing versions, ancient and modern, in verse and in prose, is the plea that Vivien offers to Merlin for her "tender rhyme":

"It lives dispersedly in many hands,
And every minstrel sings it differently."

"You Greeks," said the Egyptian priest to Herodotus, "are always children," and Greece will never lose the secret of eternal youth. The tale of Troy divine, of Thebes and Pelops' line, the song of sweet Colonus, the most cruel death of Pyramus and Thisby, Dido with a willow in her hand—these old stories of Homer and Sophocles, of Virgil and Ovid, have not lost their gloss and freshness. "The innocent brightness of a new-born day is lovely yet." They have been sung or said by Wace and Caxton, by Chaucer and Wordsworth, by Keats and William Morris; they have been adapted for young readers by Fénelon, by Niebuhr, by Kingsley, by Hawthorne, and yet the last word has not been said. Each new editor makes his own selection, chooses some new facet, or displays the jewel in a new light. As Sainte-Beuve remarks of "Don Quixote" and other world classics, "One can discover there something more than the author first of all tried to see there, and certainly more than he dreamed of putting there."

The present collection of Fifty Stories (there might well have been five hundred) makes no pretense either of completeness or of uniformity. Some of the contributors have followed closely the texts, others have given free play to their fancy, but in every case the myths have been treated simply as stories and no attempt has been made either to trace their origin or to indicate their religious or ethical significance. Most of the stories point their own moral, and need no more commentary than Jack the Giant-killer or the Sleeping Beauty. Young readers of to-day resent the sermons even of a Kingsley. From "Tanglewood Tales," a book that was the joy of our childhood, we have borrowed ten stories, and have taken the liberty of dividing into chapters and slightly abridging the longest of Hawthorne's Tales. All but one of the remaining forty are original versions.


CONTENTS

  PAGE
Pluto and Proserpine 1
By H. P. Maskell
 
Pan and Syrinx 5
By Mrs. Guy E. Lloyd
 
The Story of Phaeton 13
By M. M. Bird
 
Arethusa 19
By V. C. Turnbull
 
The Story of Daphne 24
By M. M. Bird
 
Deucalion and Pyrrha 28
By M. M. Bird
 
Epimetheus and Pandora 33
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
 
Europa and the God-Bull 50
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
 
Cadmus and the Dragon's Teeth 65
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
 
Orpheus and Eurydice 83
By V. C. Turnbull
 
Hercules and the Golden Apples 89
I. Hercules and the Old Man of the Sea
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
 
Hercules and the Golden Apples 98
II. Hercules and Atlas
By Nathaniel Hawthorne
 
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