The Russian Garland
The Russian Garland is a collection of Russian folk tales gathered and anthologized by British scholar Robert Steele. The stories were taken from miscellaneous chapbooks from around 1830, according to the book’s introduction by the editor. The Russian Garland was printed in the face of censorship, for the people Steele called “a class of severe and incorruptible critics,” children. As he writes, some of the stories are strictly Russian, while others are the work of a Russian interpretation of a German theme. Steele was a scholar and medievalist known for editing Roger Bacon’s Opera hactenus inedita, and also wrote Early English Music Printing and The Art of the Russian Icon. He died in 1944.
Fairy tales by The Russian Garland
- Story of the Duck with Golden Eggs
- Story of the Knight Yaroslav Lasarevich and the Princess Anastasia
- Sila Tsarevich and Ivashka with the White Smock
- Story of Prince Peter with the Golden Keys, and the Princess Magilene
- Story of a Shoemaker and his Servant Prituitshkin
- Story of Prince Malandrach and the Princess Salikalla
- Story of Bulat the Brave Companion
- Story of Lyubim Tsarevich and the Winged Wolf
- Story of the Golden Mountain
- Story of Ivan, the Peasant's Son
- The Seven Brothers Simeon
- Story of the Most Noble Self-Playing Harp
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