Joseph Jacobs, ed., “The Lambton Worm,” More English Fairy Tales, Illustrated by John D. Batten (London: David Nutt, 1894), 202. |
Monday, October 31, 2016
At Last the Worm Uncoiled Itself, Snorted Its Last Foam of Blood and Fire, and Rolled Dying into the River, and Was Never Seen More (1894)
Thursday, October 6, 2016
“No,” Says the Bull Calf, “I’m Going across the Field, into the Wild-Wood Wilderness Country, Where There’ll Be Tigers, Leopards, Wolves, Monkeys, and a Fiery Dragon, and I’ll Kill Them All except the Fiery Dragon, and He’ll Kill Me.” (1894)
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
Sunday, October 2, 2016
In Order to Bring the Combat to a Speedy Conclusion, Bogoris Aimed a Powerful Stroke at the Heads of the Monster, Which Would Assuredly Have Separated Both from the Trunk, and so Have Extirpated the Sorcerer and All Remembrance of Him from the Earth, if the Sylant, at the Very Moment the Stroke Fell, Had Not Soared into the Air (1850)
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