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  2. The Enchanted Castle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Enchanted_Castle

    The enchanted castle of the title is a country estate in the West Country seen through the eyes of three children, Jerry, Jimmy, and Kathy, who discover it while exploring during the school holidays. The lake, groves and marble statues, with white towers and turrets in the distance, make a fairy-tale setting, and then in the middle of the maze ...

  3. The Love for Three Oranges (fairy tale) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Love_for_Three_Oranges...

    The prince asks the trolls where he can find the loveliest princess in the world, and the small creatures take him there. They reach a castle the prince enters alone; in a chamber, he meets three maidens that, frightened by his presence, become three silver citrons. The prince takes all three fruits and leaves the castle.

  4. The Glass Mountain (fairy tale) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Glass_Mountain_(fairy...

    The Polish story begins with: On a glass mountain grew a tree with golden apples. An apple would let the picker into the golden castle where an enchanted princess lived. Many knights had tried and failed, so that many bodies lay about the mountain. A knight in golden armor tried. One day, he made it halfway up and calmly went down again.

  5. Princess Wanda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_Wanda

    The first written record of the legend of Wanda was made by the Polish chronicler Wincenty Kadłubek, which historians believe to be an invented legend. [2] [3] In this version of the story Wanda ruled Poland after her father, when her lands were invaded by an "Alamann tyrant". Wanda led her troops out to meet him.

  6. Balladyna (drama) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balladyna_(drama)

    In the castle, a feast takes place, with the guests including Grabiec (dressed as the King of Bells [in English Diamonds], wearing the Hermit's/Popiel's crown), and the nymphs Skierka and Chochlik. Balladyna disavows her mother and exiles her from the castle. When hearing Chochlik's song detailing her felonies, Balladyna goes mad.

  7. The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Castles_of_Athlin_and...

    The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne is a gothic novel by Ann Radcliffe, first published in London by Thomas Hookham in 1789. In her introduction to the 1995 Oxford World Classic's edition of the text, Alison Milbank stated that the novel's plot "unites action of a specifically Scottish medieval nature with the characterization and morality of the eighteenth-century cult of sensibility."

  8. The Enchanted April - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Enchanted_April

    The Enchanted April is a 1922 novel by British writer Elizabeth von Arnim. The work was inspired by a month-long holiday to the Italian Riviera, and was probably the most widely read of her novels (as an English and American best seller in 1923 [1]). Von Arnim wrote and set the book in the 15th century Castello Brown.

  9. The Trumpeter of Krakow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Trumpeter_of_Krakow

    The Trumpet off Kraków in 1462, The Trumpeter of Krakow tells the fictional story of the family of Joseph Charnetski, [1] a Polish noble family from Kresy (modern day Ukraine), who fled to Kraków, Poland, in 1461 after their home is burned to the ground by the Cossack-Tatars of Bogdan Grozny, commonly known as "Peter of the Button Face" because of the button-shaped pockmark on his cheek.