The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

  • Dark Fairy Tale Short “Red”

    • 30 Mar 2012
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    • Fairy Tales Film Shorts March 30 2012
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    "Red is a retelling of Little Red Riding Hood that avoids the cliches and delivers a dark little tale told mostly via silhouettes. Created by Jorge Jaramillo and Carlo Guillot, with music composed by Manuel Borda, Red is a stylish adult fairy tale that’s bloody good fun to watch."
    via neatorama.com

     

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  • How Fairytales Really End

    • 31 Aug 2011
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    • 30August11 Fairy Tales Posters humor
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    (download)
    Click here to download:
    how-fairytales-really-end-IDsadaIhEmEhCzhHqmve.zip (609 KB)

     

    As Told by John...Thanks ! 

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  • Mother West Wind, McGuffeys Reader and about Chocolate Milk

    • 18 Jul 2011
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    • 17July11 Children Education Fairy Tales Historical Literature
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    Media_httpia600308usa_cfuat

    by
    Thornton Burgess

    Old Mother West Wind, published in 1910, the reader meets many of the characters found in later books and stories. These characters include Peter Cottontail, Jimmy Skunk, Sammy Jay, Bobby Raccoon, Little Joe Otter, Grandfather Frog, Billy Mink, Jerry Muskrat, Spotty the Turtle and of course, Old Mother West Wind and her Merry Little Breezes. 
    click on image or link to view online via archive.org

     

    Media_httpia700308usa_baqgs

    "McGuffey Readers were a series of graded primers that were widely used as textbooks in American schools from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century, and are still used today in some private schools and in homeschooling.

    It is estimated that at least 120 million copies of McGuffey's Readers were sold between 1836 and 1960, placing its sales in a category with the Bible and Webster's Dictionary. Since 1961 they have continued to sell at a rate of some 30,000 copies a year. No other textbook bearing a single person's name has come close to that mark."

    click on image or link to view online via archive.org

      click link to view online via archive.org

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  • The Old Man and His Grandson : The Wooden Bowl

    • 29 Nov 2010
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    • 11.29.10 Fairy Tales Stories
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    The Old Man and his Grandson { The Wooden Bowl } is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm, Jacob 1785-1863 - Wilhelm 1786-1859, in Grimm's Fairy Tales as tale number 78
     
    There was once a very old man, whose eyes had become dim, his ears dull of hearing, his knees trembled, and when he sat at table he could hardly hold the spoon, and spilt the broth upon the table-cloth or let it run out of his mouth. His son and his son's wife were disgusted at this, so the old grandfather at last had to sit in the corner behind the stove, and they gave him his food in an earthenware bowl, and not even enough of it. And he used to look towards the table with his eyes full of tears. Once, too, his trembling hands could not hold the bowl, and it fell to the ground and broke. The young wife scolded him, but he said nothing and only sighed. Then they bought him a wooden bowl for a few half-pence, out of which he had to eat.  
    They were once sitting thus when the little grandson of four years old began to gather together some bits of wood upon the ground. "What are you doing there?" asked the father. "I am making a little trough," answered the child, "for father and mother to eat out of when I am big."

    The man and his wife looked at each other for a while, and presently began to cry. Then they took the old grandfather to the table, and henceforth always let him eat with them, and likewise said nothing if he did spill a little of anything.

    Oldmanandgrandson_rackham
     

    via youtube.com

    Suggested by Mark...Thanks !

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