In the fables of the East, and especially of India, there is one peculiarity, namely, that craft and cunning are more generally rewarded than virtue, and stupidity is condemned. This book of tales of Southern India is as varied as any other, either Eastern or European. The stories show that supernatural phenomena play a great role, but are usually assisted by the powers of the gods. This small collection of tales will throw light on Indian tradition and bring forward?the?natural?peculiarities?of?Hindus.
In the fables of the East, and especially of India, there is one peculiarity, namely, that craft and cunning are more generally rewarded than virtue, and stupidity is condemned. This book of tales of Southern India is as varied as any other, either Eastern or European. The stories show that supernatural phenomena play a great role, but are usually assisted by the powers of the gods. This small collection of tales will throw light on Indian tradition and bring forward?the?natural?peculiarities?of?Hindus.
Chapter I. The Three Deaf Meni. II Why Brahmans Cannot Eat In The Dark 5 III. The Soothsayer'S Son IV, Ranaivrasing 36 V. Charity Alone Conquers 65 VI. Mr. Won'T Give And Mr. Won'T Leave 86 VII. Mr. Mighty-Of-His-Mouth 93 VIII. The Mother-In-Law Became An Ass 102 IX. The Story Of Appayya 107 X. The Brahmin Girl That Married A Tiger 119 XI. The Good Husband And The Bad Wife 131 XII. The Good Wife And The Bad Husband 135 XIII. The Lost Camel 140 The Three Calamities 143 The Honest But Rash Hunter 155 The Brahman'S Wife And The Mun-Goose 162 XIII. The Faithless Wife And The Un-(Continued.) Grateful Blind Man 165 The Wonderful Mango Fruit 171 The Poisoned Food 179 Eating Up The Protector 184 XIV. The Monkey With The Tom-Tom 187 XV. Pride Goeth Before A Fall 190 XVI. Good Will Grow Out Of Good 194 XVII. Light Makes Prosperity 202 XVIII. Chandralekha And The Eight Robbers 210 XIX. The Conquest Of Fate 230 XX. The Brahman Priest Who Became An Amildar 248 XXI. The Gardener'S Cunning Wife 257 XXII. Keep It For The Beggar 262 XXIII. Good Luck To The Lucky One 267 XXIV. Retaliation 274 XXV. The Beggar And The Five Muffins 280 XXVI. The Brahmarakshars And The Hair 285 Notes 290
Chapter I. The Three Deaf Meni. II Why Brahmans Cannot Eat In The Dark 5 III. The Soothsayer'S Son IV, Ranaivrasing 36 V. Charity Alone Conquers 65 VI. Mr. Won'T Give And Mr. Won'T Leave 86 VII. Mr. Mighty-Of-His-Mouth 93 VIII. The Mother-In-Law Became An Ass 102 IX. The Story Of Appayya 107 X. The Brahmin Girl That Married A Tiger 119 XI. The Good Husband And The Bad Wife 131 XII. The Good Wife And The Bad Husband 135 XIII. The Lost Camel 140 The Three Calamities 143 The Honest But Rash Hunter 155 The Brahman'S Wife And The Mun-Goose 162 XIII. The Faithless Wife And The Un-(Continued.) Grateful Blind Man 165 The Wonderful Mango Fruit 171 The Poisoned Food 179 Eating Up The Protector 184 XIV. The Monkey With The Tom-Tom 187 XV. Pride Goeth Before A Fall 190 XVI. Good Will Grow Out Of Good 194 XVII. Light Makes Prosperity 202 XVIII. Chandralekha And The Eight Robbers 210 XIX. The Conquest Of Fate 230 XX. The Brahman Priest Who Became An Amildar 248 XXI. The Gardener'S Cunning Wife 257 XXII. Keep It For The Beggar 262 XXIII. Good Luck To The Lucky One 267 XXIV. Retaliation 274 XXV. The Beggar And The Five Muffins 280 XXVI. The Brahmarakshars And The Hair 285 Notes 290
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