TALES OF THE PALACE by Hauff Wilhelm

TALES OF THE PALACE by Hauff Wilhelm

Author:Hauff, Wilhelm
Language: eng
Format: epub, mobi, azw3
Tags: Wilhelm Hauff, Fantasy, Tales, German Literature, The Sheik’s Palace and His Slaves, The Dwarf Nosey, Abner the Jew Who Had Seen Nothing, The Young Englishman, The Story of Almansor
Publisher: Blu Duaine Press
Published: 1826-05-15T00:00:00+00:00


”I believe I perceive your meaning,” said the young writer; ”but continue.”

”After this fashion then is a fairy tale; fabulous, unusual, astonishing; and because it is untrue to the usual course of life, it is often located in foreign lands or referred to a period long since passed away. Every land, every tribe, has such tales; the Turks as well as the Persians, the Chinese as well as the Mongolians; and even in the country of the Franks there are many, at least so I was told by a learned Giaour; still they are not as fine as ours, for instead of beautiful fairies who live in splendid palaces, they have decrepit old women, whom they name witches—an ugly, artful folk, who dwell in miserable huts, and instead of riding in a shell wagon, drawn by griffins, through the blue skies, they ride through the mist astride of a broomstick. They also have gnomes and spirits of the earth, who are small, undersized people, and cause all kinds of apparitions. Such are the fairy tales; but of far different composition are the narratives commonly called stories. These are located in an orderly way on the earth, treat of the usual affairs of life, the wonderful part mostly made up of the links of fate drawn about a human being, who is made rich or poor, happy or unhappy, not by magic or the displeasure of fairies, as in the tale, but by his own action, or by a singular combination of circumstances.”

”Most true!” responded one of the young men; ”and such stories are also to be found in the glorious tales of Scheherazade called ’The Thousand and One Nights.’ Most of the events that befel King Haroun al Raschid and his vizier were of that nature. They go out disguised and see this and that very singular incident, which is afterwards solved in a natural manner.”

”And yet you must admit,” continued the old man ”that those stories did not constitute the least interesting part of ’The Thousand and One Nights.’ And still, how they differ in their motive, in their development and in their whole nature from the tales of a Prince Biribinker, or the three dervishes with one eye, or the fisher who drew from the sea the chest fastened with the seal of Salomo! But after all there is an original cause for the distinctive charms possessed by both styles—namely, that we live to experience manythings striking and unusual. In the fairy tales, this element of the unusual is supplied by the introduction of a fabulous magic into the ordinary life of mortals; while in the stories something happens that, although in keeping with the natural laws, is totally unexpected and out of the usual course of events.”

”Strange!” cried the writer, ”strange, that this natural course of events proves quite as attractive to us as the supernatural in the tales. What is the explanation of that?”

”That lies in the delineation of the individual mortal,” replied the old man.



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