Page:Segnius Irritant or Eight Primitive Folk-lore Stories.pdf/94

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 * | ||  | Dead Winter. ||  | Frost bound Living Nature. ||  | Living Nature in waning Autumn. ||   | Aggressive Life of Nature in re-opening Spring. ||  | Gross, age-clotted, frozen Matter tempting to the knowledge of good and evil. ||  |  The Fates. ||  | Charon. ||  | The Sun.
 * | ||  | King—Father of the heroine. ||  | His daughter. ||  | The woodman—father of the hero. ||  | Hero, son of the woodman. ||  | Old man leaning on a staff; dead one being buried. ||  | The three fates—godmothers of the hero. ||  |  Ferryman over the black sea. ||  | As child, adult and old man.
 * | ||  | Lord of the Castle of Steel—father of the heroine. ||  | His daughter, dressed in white. Her white spectre is one of twelve seen by the prince in the tower. ||  | The old king—father of the hero.  ||   | The prince, son of the old king, and hero. ||  | The old woman who brings the serpent. ||  | Long, Broad, and Sharp-Eyes. ||  | Outskirts of a dense wood. ||
 * | ||  | King—father of Golden Locks. || | Golden Locks, one of twelve maidens; the only one with golden hair. ||  |  A king, Jirichek’s master. ||  | Jirichek, the king’s servant, and hero. ||  | The old woman who brings the serpent. ||  | The ants, the ravens, and a fish. A fly is added. ||  | Outskirts of a black forest. ||  |  In part Golden Locks.
 * | ||  | A king—father of the heroine, his cruel counsellor, and the executioner. ||  | His daughter, dumb from her twelfth year. ||  | A peasant cottage proprietor. ||  | Vanek, his son, the hero. ||  | Reason and Good Luck. ||  | A carver, tailor and the hero. ||  | Outskirts of a pine forest, with wolves. ||
 * | ||  | A king—father of the heroine. ||  | His daughter, who cannot laugh. ||  | A shepherd. ||  | George, his son, the hero. ||  | The goat. ||  | Long, Broad, and Sharp-Eyes. ||  |  ||  | The mayor looking out of the window.
 * | ||  | Lord of the Castle of Steel—father of the heroine. ||  | The third of the maidens who appear at the cleaving of the citrons. ||  | An old king—father of the hero. ||  | His son, the hero. ||  | Jezibaba, who incites the prince to go for the three citrons, and appears to him before the castles of lead, silver and gold. ||  | The three giants of the castles of lead, silver and gold, respectively. ||  | Three days before point of meeting with the twelve ravens. ||  | The giant of the castle of gold
 * | ||  | Mother-in-law of the three kings. ||  | A horse with a sun on its forehead. ||  | The king of the sunless kingdom. ||  | A seer, the hero. ||  | In part the mother in-law and the three queens, and the old man at the bridge. ||  | In part the servants and the old man leaning on a staff. ||  | Cottage of the seer. ||  |
 * | ||  | Father of the sick heroine (a princess). ||  | An invalid princess. ||  | A gamekeeper. ||  | His son, the hero. Also a gamekeeper. ||  | An old woman who points out the well. ||  |  ||  | Gallows and the three damned spirits. ||
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 * | ||  | A king—father of the heroine. ||  | His daughter, who cannot laugh. ||  | A shepherd. ||  | George, his son, the hero. ||  | The goat. ||  | Long, Broad, and Sharp-Eyes. ||  |  ||  | The mayor looking out of the window.
 * | ||  | Lord of the Castle of Steel—father of the heroine. ||  | The third of the maidens who appear at the cleaving of the citrons. ||  | An old king—father of the hero. ||  | His son, the hero. ||  | Jezibaba, who incites the prince to go for the three citrons, and appears to him before the castles of lead, silver and gold. ||  | The three giants of the castles of lead, silver and gold, respectively. ||  | Three days before point of meeting with the twelve ravens. ||  | The giant of the castle of gold
 * | ||  | Mother-in-law of the three kings. ||  | A horse with a sun on its forehead. ||  | The king of the sunless kingdom. ||  | A seer, the hero. ||  | In part the mother in-law and the three queens, and the old man at the bridge. ||  | In part the servants and the old man leaning on a staff. ||  | Cottage of the seer. ||  |
 * | ||  | Father of the sick heroine (a princess). ||  | An invalid princess. ||  | A gamekeeper. ||  | His son, the hero. Also a gamekeeper. ||  | An old woman who points out the well. ||  |  ||  | Gallows and the three damned spirits. ||
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 * | ||  | Father of the sick heroine (a princess). ||  | An invalid princess. ||  | A gamekeeper. ||  | His son, the hero. Also a gamekeeper. ||  | An old woman who points out the well. ||  |  ||  | Gallows and the three damned spirits. ||
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