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Front Matter
Preface
Perhaps
no other stories have ever been
told so often or listened to
with so much pleasure as the classic
tales of ancient Greece. For many
ages they have been a source of delight
to young people and old, to the
ignorant and the learned, to all who
love to hear about and contemplate
things mysterious, beautiful, and grand.
They have become so
incorporated into our language and
thought, and so interwoven with our
literature, that we could not do away
with them now if we would. They
are a portion of our heritage from the
distant past, and they form
perhaps as important a part of our
intellectual life as they did of that
of the people among whom they
originated.
That many of these tales should be read
by children at an early age no
intelligent person will deny. Sufficient
reason for this is to be found
in the real pleasure that every child
derives from their perusal: and in
the preparation of this volume no other
reason has been considered. I
have here attempted to tell a few
stories of Jupiter and his mighty
company and of some of the old Greek
heroes, simply as stories,
nothing more. I have carefully avoided
every suggestion of
interpretation. Attempts at analysis and
explanation will always prove
fatal to a child's appreciation and
enjoyment of such stories. To
inculcate the idea that these tales are
merely descriptions of certain
natural phenomena expressed in narrative
and poetic form, is to deprive
them of their highest charm; it is like
turning precious gold into
utilitarian iron: it is changing a
delightful romance into a dull
scientific treatise. The wise teacher
will take heed not to be guilty of
such an error.
It will be observed that while each of
the stories in this volume is
wholly independent of the others and may
be read without any knowledge
of those which precede it, there is
nevertheless a certain continuity
from the first to the last, giving to
the collection a completeness like
that of a single narrative. In order
that the children of our own
country and time may be the better able
to read these stories in the
light in which they were narrated long
ago, I have told them in simple
language, keeping the supernatural
element as far as possible in the
background, and nowhere referring to
Jupiter and his mighty company as
gods. I have hoped thus to free the
narrative still more from everything
that might detract from its interest
simply as a story.
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