Old Greek Folk Stories Told Anew

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OLD GREEK FOLK STORIES TOLD ANEW ***

E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Tonya Allen, and Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders

OLD GREEK FOLK STORIES

TOLD ANEW

BY

JOSEPHINE PRESTON PEABODY

1897

PUBLISHERS' NOTE.

Hawthorne, in his _Wonder-Book_ and _Tanglewood Tales_, has told, in a manner familiar to multitudes of American children and to many more who once were children, a dozen of the old Greek folk stories. They have served to render the persons and scenes known as no classical dictionary would make them known. But Hawthorne chose a few out of the many myths which are constantly appealing to the reader not only of ancient but of modern literature. The group contained in the collection which follows will help to fill out the list; it is designed to serve as a complement to the _Wonder-Book_ and _Tanglewood Tales_, so that the references to the stories in those collections are brief and allusive only. In order to make the entire series more useful, the index added to this number of the _Riverside Literature Series_ is made to include also the stories contained in the other numbers of the series which contain Hawthorne's two books. Thus the index serves as a tolerably full clue to the best-known characters in Greek mythology.

_Once upon a time, men made friends with the Earth. They listened to all that woods and waters might say; their eyes were keen to see wonders in silent country places and in the living creatures that had not learned to be afraid. To this wise world outside the people took their joy and sorrow; and because they loved the Earth, she answered them._

_It was not strange that Pan himself sometimes brought home a shepherd's stray lamb. It was not strange, if one broke the branches of a tree, that some fair life within wept at the hurt. Even now, the Earth is glad with us in springtime, and we grieve for her when the leaves go. But in the old days there was a closer union, clearer speech between men and all other creatures, Earth and the stars about her._

_Out of the life that they lived together, there have come down to us these wonderful tales; and, whether they be told well or ill, they are too good to be forgotten._

CONTENTS.

THE WOOD-FOLK

THE JUDGMENT OF MIDAS

PROMETHEUS

THE DELUGE

ORPHEUS AND EURYDICE

ICARUS AND DAEDALUS

PHAETHON

NIOBE

ADMETUS AND THE SHEPHERD

ALCESTIS

APOLLO'S SISTER

I. DIANA AND ACTAEON II. DIANA AND ENDYMION

THE CALYDONIAN HUNT

ATALANTA'S RACE

ARACHNE

PYRAMUS AND THISBE

PYGMALION AND GALATEA

OEDIPUS

CUPID AND PSYCHE

THE TRIAL OF PSYCHE

STORIES OP THE TROJAN WAR

I. THE APPLE OF DISCORD II. THE ROUSING OF THE HEROES III. THE WOODEN HORSE

THE HOUSE OF AGAMEMNON

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