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The Little Red Hen. The Little Red Hen, 1918 title page. The Little Red Hen, illustrated by Florence White Williams. The Little Red Hen is an American fable first collected by Mary Mapes Dodge in St. Nicholas Magazine in 1874. [1] The story is meant to teach children the importance of hard work and personal initiative.
White bread, butter, Hundreds and Thousands, sprinkles. Media: Fairy bread. Fairy bread is sliced white bread spread with butter or margarine and covered with "Hundreds and Thousands", [1] often served at children's parties in Australia and New Zealand. [2][3][4] It is typically cut into triangles. [5]
Houles fairy. Houles fairies are fairies specific to the Channel coast, stretching from Cancale to Tréveneuc in Upper Brittany, to the Channel Islands, and known from a few fragments of stories in the Cotentin region. They live in coastal caves and caverns known as houles. Reputed to be magnificent, immortal and very powerful, they are ...
Illustration by Ivan Bilibin. Go I Know Not Whither and Fetch I Know Not What ( Russian: Пойди туда, не знаю куда, принеси то, не знаю что, translit. Poydi tuda, ne znau kuda, prinesi to, ne znau chto) is a Russian fairy tale collected by Alexander Afanasyev in Narodnye russkie skazki .
Synopsis. A goodhearted orphan girl has only her clothing and a loaf of bread that a kind soul has given her. She goes out into the countryside to see what might happen. She gives a hungry beggar her bread, and to three cold children she gives her winter hat, her jacket, and her dress. After wandering into a forest, she sees a naked child ...
The Brown Bear of the Green Glen. The King of England and his Three Sons. " The Water of Life " (German: Das Wasser des Lebens) is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, tale number 97. [1] It is Aarne-Thompson type 551. [2] John Francis Campbell noted it as a parallel of the Scottish fairy tale, The Brown Bear of the Green Glen.
George MacDonald 's The Princess and the Goblin (1872) Carlo Collodi 's The Adventures of Pinocchio (1883) L. Frank Baum 's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) J. M. Barrie 's Peter Pan (1904: play) (1911: novel) Lord Dunsany 's The King of Elfland's Daughter (1924) Lord Dunsany 's The Charwoman's Shadow (1926)
Feufollet are a Cajun legend that emerged along the bayou as early as the 1920s with a light (a ball of fire) that shot out into the sky, likely derived from the same natural phenomena as the will o' the wisp. The lights were known as fairies, spirits and sometimes the ghosts of loved ones. Fossegrim. Fuath.