Tales of the Sun or Folklore of Southern India. Collected by Howard Kingscote and Paṇḍit Naṭêsá Sástrî
Bibliografische Informationen
Titel: Tales of the Sun or Folklore of Southern India. Collected by Howard Kingscote and Paṇḍit Naṭêsá Sástrî
Zusatzinfo: Dieses Buch ist Teil der Mythenbibliothek und enthält Marginalien.
Ort, Verlag: London: W. H. Allen & Co.
Jahr: 1890
Seiten: XII, 308
Format: 19,6 x 13,8 cm
Sprache: englisch
Nachweis: https://permalink.obvsg.at/AC16126394
Signatur Bibliothek Volkskundemuseum Wien: 9705 N:10
Creative Commons: CC BY-NC
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Titelblatt
- Preface
- Contents
- Introduction
- I. The Story of the Three Deaf Men
- II. Why Brâhmaṇs cannot eat in the Dark
- III. The Soothsayer's Son
- IV. Raṇavîrasiṅg
- V. "Charity Alone Conquers"
- VI. Mr. Won't-Give and Mr. Won't-Leave
- VII. Mr. Mighty-of-his-Mouth and Mr. Mighty-of-his-Hands
- VIII. The Mother-in-law became an Ass
- IX. The Story of Appayya
- X. The Brâhmiṇ Girl that married a Tiger
- XI. The good Husband and the bad Wife
- XII. The good Wife and the bad Husband
- XIII. The Lost Camel and other Tales
- The Three Calamities
- The Honest but Rash Hunter and his Faithful Dog
- The Brâhmaṇ's Wife and the Mungoose
- The Faithless Wife and the ungrateful Blind Man
- The Wonderful Mango Fruit
- The Poisoned Food
- "Eating up the Protector"
- XIV. The Monkey with the Tom-tom
- XV. Pride goeth before a Fall
- XVI. Good will grow out of Good
- XVII. Light makes Prosperity
- XVIII. Chandralêkhâ and the Eight Robbers
- XIX. The Conquest of Fate
- XX. The Brâhmaṇ Priest who became an Amildâr
- XXI. The Gardener's Cunning Wife
- XXII. Keep it for the Beggar
- XXIII. Good Luck to the Lucky One
- XXIV. Retaliation–Palikkuppali
- XXV. The Beggar and the Five Muffins
- XXVI. The Brahmarâkshas and the Hair
- Notes