Thomas Ingoldsby eBooks
eBooks di Thomas Ingoldsby di Formato Pdf
The Ingoldsby Legends. E-book. Formato PDF Thomas Ingoldsby - Forgotten Books, 2017 -
The papers in question having been written by different parties, and at various periods, I have thought it advisable to reduce the more ancient of them into a comparatively modern phraseology, and to make my collateral ancestor, Father John especially, 'deliver himself like a man of this world Mr. Maguire, indeed, is the only Gentleman who, in his account of the late Coronation, retains his own rich vernacular.
The Ingoldsby Legends, or Mirth and Marvels. E-book. Formato PDF Thomas Ingoldsby - Forgotten Books, 2017 -
The Lord of Thoulouse The Wedding-day; or, The Buccaneer's Curse, The Blasphemer's Warning The Brothers of Birehington The Knight and the Lady.
The Ingoldsby Legends / or Mirth and Marvels: (Illustrated Edition). E-book. Formato PDF Thomas Ingoldsby - Ionlineshopping.Com, 2019 -
The Ingoldsby Legends (full title: The Ingoldsby Legends, or Mirth and Marvels) is a collection of myths, legends, ghost stories and poetry written supposedly by Thomas Ingoldsby of Tappington Manor, actually a pen-name of an English clergyman named Richard Harris Barham. The legends were first printed during 1837 as a regular series in the magazine Bentley's Miscellany and later in New Monthly Magazine. They proved immensely popular and were compiled into books published in 1840, 1842 and 1847 by Richard Bentley. They remained popular during the 19th century, when they ran through many editions. They were illustrated by artists including John Leech, George Cruikshank, John Tenniel, and Arthur Rackham (1898 edition). As a priest of the Chapel Royal, with a private income, Barham was not troubled with strenuous duties and he had ample time to read and compose stories. Although based on real legends and mythology, chiefly Kentish, such as the "hand of glory", they are mostly deliberately humorous parodies or pastiches of medieval folklore and poetry. The best-known poem of the collection is the "Jackdaw of Rheims", about a jackdaw, who steals a cardinal's ring, and is made a saint. The village pub of Denton was renamed "The Jackdaw Inn" in 1963, after the story. The collection also contains one of the earliest transcriptions of the song "A Franklyn's Dogge", an early version of the modern children's song "Bingo". Barham introduced the collection with the grandiose statement that "The World, according to the best geographers, is divided into Europe, Asia, Africa, America and Romney Marsh".