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Brothers Grimm Grimmz’s Fairy Tales —— The Frog Prince 、Bearskin 、 The Elves and the Shoemaker 、
Snow White Hansel and Gretel 、The Golden Goose 、The Dancing Shoes 、Tom Thumb Rumplestiltskin 、 Little Red
Riding Hood 、 The Fisherman and his Wife Cinderella 、 The Little Tailor Grimm’s Fairy Tales were first
published in 1812 and were the work of two German brothers, founders of the modern science of comparative
linguistics. They traveled through Germany to study the popular dialect sand in doing so collected the folk
tales that for generations had been current among the largely illiterate peasant societies. These tales formed part
of the popular culture, which is now occupied by modern forms of entertainment such as television and
cinema and consequently would have been told to a mixed audience of both children and adults. It is
significant that fairies rarely feature in these tales, and although the content seems to come from a
childlike and fantastic imagination, a quick look at contemporary mass entertainment such as Superman and comic
strips will remind us that both adults and children respond to flights of the imagination. We can laugh
and cry, be frightened and reassured by events, which are far removed, from our everyday experiences. And
so it is with these stories. Although we no longer have an oral tradition of storytelling, the tales
in this collection have probably evolved and changed substantially over the generations and indeed different
versions
exist indifferent countries. They have been abridged, translated and altered to suit changing sensibilities so that
it is impossible to be sure which is the original version, indeed, the search for such a thing would
be contrary to the tradition of folk tales. The teller of a tale would embellish and exaggerate to
suit the audience, and this is no doubt one of the reasons for the enduring appeal of these stories...
But this is only part of the explanation. All these stories are set in unspecified places with
little concern for exact dates. There is timelessness to them, which is both reassuring (this couldn’t
possibly happen here) and disconcerting. Who, for example, has not come across someone like The Fisherman’s
Wife whose greed and ambition can never be satisfied? And who can listen to Hansel and Gretel and
not share their fear at being lost, and of the hidden perils of the dark forest? These are
universal tales, which strike a chord even at the end of the twentieth century, hundreds of years
since they were first told round the dying embers of a peasant hearth. We owe a great debt
to Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, whose painstaking research has left us with a collection of stories which
will continue to delight generations of listeners, and which could so easily have slipped into the mists
of time to be lost forever. Notes by Heather Godwin Laura Paton. A frequent reader on Naxos
AudioBooks, Laura Paton trained at LAMDA where she won the St. Phillip’s Prize for Poetry and
the Michael Warre Award. She has toured the UK extensively in productions as varied as The
Two Gentlemen of Verona and Oscar Wilde’s Salomé.