Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish PeasantryW. B. Yeats Open Road Media, 2017 M08 15 - 695 páginas The spirits of Ireland come alive in this nineteenth-century collection of stories, songs, and poems selected and edited by Nobel Prize winner W. B. Yeats. Lose yourself in these supernatural tales of mischievous fairies, changelings, mysterious merrows, solitary leprechauns, shape-changing pookas, wailing banshees, ghosts, dangerous witches, helpful fairy doctors, and massive giants! W. B. Yeats compiled sixty-four works from numerous Irish authors including William Allingham; Thomas Crofton Croker; William Carleton; Letitia Maclintock; Lady Wilde, mother of Oscar Wilde; and Yeats himself, resulting in a comprehensive and definitive collection. Each section features an introduction from Yeats to enlighten readers on the background of its mythical subjects and their role in Irish life and culture. Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry includes “The Fairies,” “Frank Martin and the Fairies,” “The Priest’s Supper,” “The Stolen Child,” “The Soul Cages,” “Far Darrig in Donegal,” “The Piper and the Puca,” “A Lamentation for the Death of Sir Maurice Fitzgerald,” “The Black Lamb,” “The Horned Women,” “The Phantom Isle,” and more. This ebook has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 26
Página
... milk on their doorstep for them. As to my own part in this book, I have tried to make it representative, as far as so few pages would allow, of every kind of Irish folk-faith. The reader will perhaps wonder that in all my notes I have ...
... milk on their doorstep for them. As to my own part in this book, I have tried to make it representative, as far as so few pages would allow, of every kind of Irish folk-faith. The reader will perhaps wonder that in all my notes I have ...
Página
... milk for them on the window - sill over night . On the whole , the popular belief tells us most about them , telling us how they fell , and yet were not lost , because their evil was wholly without malice . Are they " the gods of the ...
... milk for them on the window - sill over night . On the whole , the popular belief tells us most about them , telling us how they fell , and yet were not lost , because their evil was wholly without malice . Are they " the gods of the ...
Página
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Página
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Página
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
asked bad company began Bill Billy bird Bourke Bryan buried called Celt child Cluricaun Conn-eda corpse County Sligo cried Cucullin dance dead Dermod door Douglas Hyde dudeen eyes face fairy father fellow fire friends gave Giraldus Cambrensis girl give hand head heard heart horse Ireland Irish Jack Jack Rafferty Jamie Kavin king knew lady Lady Wilde lived look Lough Erne Lusmore Manachar Merrow milk moon morning mother neighbours never Nick night Oonagh ould Patrick piper pooka poor poteen priest prince Púca pudden queen replied road round saint says seen Shemus soul steed story sure Teig tell there's thing thought throut told Tom Moor took turn twas voice W. B. YEATS walked wife wild WILLIAM CARLETON wish witches word young وو