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$ EH ANU HEARD
IN MANY PLACES
;s 1H a sf'aßonable question
jut! ( hristmns wcel —an ii -
; fr< in ft Ind, who w i iii - w ell
i I, , hud lieeb reading “G ini's
I'a'ea,” stating that he is
much puzzled about the
~ f,.iriea originated,” ami uek*
i iforinu'inn as to who “wrote
t fairy tide and who origin
the idea
tit
; query is by no means no
, mm to answer In refreshing
; r recollection on the subject
• i endeavoring to hunt up
acts, one becomes s'rong'y
,-u (| with the fact that the
,re of different countries ap
; > have a common busts
; xaetly what that, origin is no
: ! |>p"ar- to havu discovered.
1,4' as among savageand heath-
H L It s th- ro have been found
tract s' f trad tions strctigly like
( i ' > tl <■ story of creation as told
I , . , s t an men, so we find un-
d i.ices with fairv hgends
)!;i t ar ■ a'tnost identical with
i shat our children barn to
, •, at the mother s knee .Ini
■uages we find a strong s m
*' in the elfin tabs. Those
ar stories that a boys ai d
i ka >w by heart.
I ,ck nr Giant Killer.” “.Trek
i . s ilk” and “lb p-o’-My-j
)\ mi'.” have be' n boldly appi -
d ns English products and
■li ki'ppeniugv, although they
<’ ; onably of Grinau or
.i! I ' iug old-time T-nton'c
1 g.'i.di. In fact, most-!)'cur fairy'
. ii ca r i e traced to ither’hel
. . h <>r the anciei i Irish, but
■ire an iquarians vho give
i'. ‘it of their cr< alio to t : e
nvi i,i pigans : otlmrs who
. y ar>sv spontane tisly in
mtheageof the trooba-i
i
('■• r, ai d others stiH who claim I
I • ■ Spanish M >ors >nd the
i■< brought them ffoin thei
< I Hqu -stionably from all of
t s ,ju ces have contributions to
f v mythology been received, but
*l la swe know best come neith
n the T uto is nor the Celts,
tit
It has been no easy task to gath
e fro n various sources the names
by w ich the fairies have been
I- own in various couutiie st va
rms *im « The extent of the list
D; iv surprise you Tin se fount d
s '. ii''B, elfs, ell ito ks, lays,
if ■!, ouphes, ell-m.ii Is, el
•’ OM
I FJdLIM
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■JpmAr At anta lv| 6.15 am, 7.<>'am
except Sunday. $ Sunday only.
‘ ‘IiEEN. Gen Supt. Washington. D. O
) * \ V, LP Traf - Wa hlr.gton JI Q
( 1 J KK G. I’. A.. Washington, D. C,
1 - .NSCOT ER. a.g.p. a., Chattanooga,Tenn
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/wo" by TOM - hood. G. ♦ I / I y •
co,, M, nK . L'tuiltky. Music:, august wm. hoffmann. '<• -ry<ch - o of my heart, The bless - iag when 1 pray, 1
4 con anhna. Herzen tout's wte Ge-bet 'Und frown d<e Lip-pe sprietd, Ich
, t Voice. ~~ ~~ - -i— —— f * is the ver - diet of my eyes, A- midst the gay and young, 1
GmXmg. G 1 4 “ ’ -/ 9 ”| suc^ Sehnsucldalch) //i koi der Schwestern lieinn, Ich
l y I - —-- —•ZZZZZ*/zZj... ' most dear heat tol hearts thy proofs, That still those words en - hance, I
T H - '< delit E ./-/<■-wi/, Rehm,' ich mein Wort zu - ri'tck, Ich
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/ ' / h»vo ti; . I love thee, “I’is all that I can say.
( i ove fi.pp r i J, ,_. ~ He bedich, i lie - bedich, llchr sci ■ genkann ich nichl.
I lie - bedicli i,/, /■"’ '> o ? irl a I: 't I can say, love thee, 1 love thee, A thou-sand maids a mong.
i love tli ’ i i -‘edit/i, Mehr sa genkannich nicht, lie - bedich, ich lie - bedich Von Tern-sen-den al - lein.
lie bellih ; / 7 • , < v - ■ er on my tongue, ' love thee, 1 love thee, . What -
love ti\o i Z/ G ; meingan-zes Sein, lie - bedich, ich He -bedich, Du
\ 7i. /Irz •/ Thy bright and ha - zel glance, S
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» a tempo. — a ’ p roll. ' 1 u— —1
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It is the vis-ion in the right Uy dream - i.ig in the day, The f — 1 —
Dein hoi • des Bild umschwebtmichnachts,A.m Tag tele, Traum-ge - sicht, Im 11/ .7 pi '
In all my proudest po -e - sy< That cho -ms still is sung, It tI ?
Und stolz uill ich den schbn-sten Pung Bur del - m Lieb reiz ueih'n, Mein 2 1,,
The mel - low lute up -on those lips Whose ten -d r tones en - trance, But ''-ev -er be thy chance!
Der zar-ten Lip ■pe su ■ sser Lant Ent-schei -c e mein Ge - schick, Dock mei • ncs Her-zens Gluck!
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Copyright, IM7. by Musical Xf'Ws Co ,by permission ol Augiist Wm. . trniaiin. 1 Love Thee. 2 <•
War MrawaaMarMva*
worn *n, dwaifs. trolls, nor- 1 , nis.j
sea, kobo ds, duende, browning,
necks, fates, little w ights, uudin s. |
s uamiinders, g -blin, hobgoblins, |
!pr u'tes, bail'd) l ’^8, kelpies, Jpixe, i
inns people, g-od people, g< od 1
i neighboas. n,m of peace, w'ldj
■ comm, white ladies, pens, genii'
1 tnd g.iomn.
Y- u no ic, of course, fnat thej
word fuiiy ’s u- d in its broadest |
sense, placii g in this category all
presumably dispossessed spirits
which 0 ice inhabited human bod
ies, but are not considered meet
to dwell with the “saints in light”
In nur sry talesthe fairy is almost
invariably a peronifieafion of 1 to
vidence, bu' in the wider domain
of romantic literature the term is
applicable to a large class of
mythological known by all the
various nam is mentioned.
L warfs and elv?8 were little peo*
pie who figure much in Scandina
vian, literature, the form r being
often violent and malignant and
the latter sportive, mischievous,
but u«eful and visibe on y to
(children born on Sundays. The
[wholes were the domestic fairies
>f Germany, s ; mi ar to the kelpies
,f Scotland and the niss- s < f Nor
ray.
They were a ' ekil'ed in mush
..nd dancing, and were fond of
frolicking by moonlight. Necks
!V d etroir.karls inhabited tlv
rivers and lakes of Northern
E iropo a. d were similar to ths
tii -rnien and mermaids of a less
i-enioto superstition. The nixies
~re also of this c’ass, and figure
laigfiy in German folklore Pre
vious to the death of a peison by
drowping they can be seen—so t.u
legci|ds say —dancing on the sur
face of the water.
The female bean the semblance
of a beautiful mud u, and she
conv-ys mortals to a beautiful
subnpu'ons abode, where they
meet the male, vho has green
teeth and always wears a green hat
Fated are Italian fairies. The
duemle, or trasgo, is the most
Ireqti'nlly inentio >ed Spanish
f rt ,ry. Ihe “white ladies” wrie
Norman furies
Here is an ancient descript o
of the dress of the fairer “1t e v
1 wei r a red conical cap, a manti'
of green cloth inlaid with wild
flowers, gr e-i pantaloons,buttoned
j with bibs of silk, ami silver
|Shoon.Tl ey carry qu versos
( arro v-slough and bows made of
I the ribs of a man buried where
‘three lairds’ lands meet’ their
arrows are made of bebweed tipped
(With white flints and dipped in
i the dew of hamlocks they ride on
| steeds whose hoofs would not dash
the dew from the cup of a hire-
I bell.”
If!
It is impossible now to say who
wrote “the first fairy tale.”
Reference to the fays which was
the term most generally used to
describe th m are frequent in the
literature of the twelfth century
appearirg first in the Nibelungen
and the romances of chivalry.
But they were referred to simply
incidentally It must be born in
mind that ths “first fairy tale”
was not written.
It was 'he result of some imagin
ative fellow's fancy—unquestion
ably an Irishman or moro prob
ab'y ancient Celt —and finally it
became a tradition in the m-igh
norhoed. Then it spread further
expanding as it traveled and
others like it were created. N< xt
references to these legei ds were
ma ein writings of the day and
fi lally somei ne pu s oi.c of them
in the fo*m of a wriLUn etciy.
The fust colb ci'.ei. of European
fairy stories in prose was the
Italian “Netti I’iaoeroli of Strap
arolu” (Venice 1550).
The best fa : ries we have now
adays ar*- those wl o wi'h earing
eyes and gaping mouth listen to
■ their mothers’ repe ition of old
time legendary lore—the tales ol
the *■lves.
? Fiom these we get many of our
s dreams. Megaegee.
1 —Philadelphia Ti nea.
r At Rome Business College.
The spring term of Romo. Busi
3 nest College will begin Monday,
t January 3, 1893. All who w 11 ar
: range this week to begin on .thal
e day will be given lib ra reduc
tion on tuition. Please call at th*
college office corner Broad s'reel
v! and Fifth avenue.
ej H. S. Shockley.
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