Showing posts sorted by relevance for query padraic colum. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query padraic colum. Sort by date Show all posts

Colum. At the Gateways of the Day

Today's free book is At the Gateways of the Day by Padraic Colum. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Internet Archive and Hathi Trust.



The Boy Pu-nia and the King of the Sharks

The Seven Great Deeds of Ma-ui
How Ma-ui won a place for himself in the House
How Ma-ui lifted up the Sky
How Ma-ui fished up the Great Island
How Ma-ui snared the Sun and made Him go more slowly across the Heavens
How Ma-ui won fire for Men
How Ma-ui overcame Kuna Loa the Long Eel
The Search that Ma-ui's Brother made for his Sister Hina-of-the-Sea
How Ma-ui strove to win Immortality for Men

Au-ke-le the Seeker

Pi-ko-i: The Boy Who Was Good at Shooting Arrows

Paka: The Boy Who Was Reared in the Land that the Gods Have Since Hidden

The Story of Ha-le-ma-no and the Princess Kama

The Arrow and the Swing

The Daughter of the King of Ku-ai-he-lani

The Fish-Hook of Pearl

The Story of Kana, the Youth Who Could Stretch Himself Upwards

The Me-ne-hu-ne

The Story of Mo-e Mo-e: Also a Story about Po-o and about Kau-hu-hu the Shark-God, and about Mo-e Mo-e's Son, the Man Who Was Bold in His Wish

The Woman from Lalo-hana, the Country under the Sea

Hina, the Woman in the Moon

Colum. The Children of Odin

Today's free book is The Children of Odin: A Book of Northern Myths by Padraic Colum, with illustrations by Willy Pogany. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at the Baldwin Project, Project Gutenberg, Internet Archive, Sacred Texts, and Hathi Trust. There is also a free audiobook at LibriVox. You can get a free Kindle ebook from Amazon too!




Far Away and Long Ago
The Building of the Wall
How Loki Put the Gods in Danger
How Loki Wrought Mischief in Asgard
How Brock the Dwarf Brought Judgement on Loki
How Freya Gained Her Necklace
How Frey Won Gerda, the Giant Maiden
Heimdall and Little Hnossa
All-Father's Forebodings
Odin Goes to the Mimir's Well
Odin Faces an Evil Man
Odin Wins for Men the Magic Mead
Odin Tells to Vidar the Secret of His Doings
Thor and Loki in the Giants' City
How Thor and Loki Befooled Thrym the Giant
Ægir's Feast: How Thor Triumphed
The Dwarf's Hoard, and the Curse That It Brought
Foreboding in Asgard
Loki the Betrayer
Loki Against the Æsir
The Valkyrie
The Children of Loki
Baldur's Doom
Loki's Punishment
Sigurd's Youth
The Sword Gram and the Dragon Fafnir
The Dragon's Blood
The Story of Sigmund and Signy
The Story of Sigmund and Sinfiotli
Story of the Vengeance of the Volsungs
Brynhild in the House of Flame
Sigurd at the House of the Nibelungs
How Brynhild Was Won for Gunnar
The Death of Sigurd
The Twilight of the Gods

Colum. The Bright Islands (Hawaii)

Today's free book is The Bright Islands by Padraic Colum with illustrations by Juliette May Fraser, and published for the Hawaiian Legend and Folklore Commission. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi Trust.


I. Kings of the Islands 
Moi-keha the Voyager and the Sons of Moi-keha
Umi the Conqueror
Ka-welo: The Overthrower of the Giant Champion
Ka-meha-meha the Great

II. In the Bright Islands
The Story of Ta-whaki
The Story of Rata the Grandson of Tawhaki
How Hina Voyaged to the Island of the King of the Fishes
The Little People of Ao-tea-roa

III. The Princess of Pali-uli

IV. Skies, Lands, and Waters
Companion-in-Suffering-in-the-Glade
Le-pe the Bird-Maiden, and How Her Brother Kauilani Sought for Her and Found Her
When the Little Blond Shark Went Visiting
Kaulu, the World's Strongest Boy
How Kana Brought Back the Sun and Moon and Stars After They Had Been Taken Away


Colum. Arabian Nights

Today's free book is The Arabian nights: tales of wonder and magnificence by Padraic Colum (1923) and illustrated by Eric Pape. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available to read online at Hathi Trust (I have not checked other online sources).

(illustrated by Eric Pape)


Table of Contents

Shahrazad
The Fisherman
The Young King of the Black Islands
Alnaschar
The Magic Horse
Abu-Mohammad the Lazy
The Voyages of Es-Sindibad
Bedr Basim and Jawharah, Daughter of the King of the Sea
Ala-ed-Din, or The Wonderful Lamp
Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves


Colum. Orpheus: Myths of the World

Today's free book is Orpheus: Myths of the World by Padraic Colum with illustrations by Boris Artzybasheff. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Sacred Texts and Hathi Trust.



Table of Contents

Egyptian
Osiris and Isis
Rê, His Going-Down and Uprising

Babylonian
In the Beginning
Gilgamish
The Story of Uta-Napishtim and of the Deluge that Destroyed All that was on the Earth
Ishtar's Descent into the World Below

Persian
Jamshīd the Resplendent

Jewish Post-Christian Period
The Angels and the Creation and Fall of Man
The Confounding of the Angel of Death

Greek
In the Beginning
Prometheus
Pandora
Demeter
Orpheus
Dionysos
Apollo
Herakles, Part I
Herakles, Part II

Roman
The Children of Mars, Part I
The Children of Mars, Part II
Numa the Law-Giver
The Sibyl
Pomona and Vertumnus
Cupid and Psyche. Part I
Cupid and Psyche, Part II

Irish
Midir and Etain
The Death of Conaire Mór, the King of Ireland, Part I
The Death of Conaire Mór, the King of Ireland, Part II
The Voyage of Bran to the Land of the Immortals

Welsh
Pwyll, Prince of Dyfed and His Visit to Annwfn, the Realm of Faërie
Math, the Son of Mathonwy: Part I. The Treachery of Gwydion and Gilvaethwy
Math, the Son of Mathonwy: Part II. The Transformations of Gwydion and Gilvaethwy
Math, the Son of Mathonwy: Part III. Gwydion and Arianrhod
Math, the Son of Mathonwy: Part IV. The Maiden Made of Flowers

Finnish
Lemminkainen, His Destruction and His Restoration to Life

Icelandic
In the Beginning
The Building of the Wall
Mimir
Baldr
Loki's Punishment
The Children of Loki
Ragna Rök, the Fate of the Gods

Indian
The Heavenly Nymph and her Mortal Husband
The Churning of the Ocean
The Birth of the Ganges
Sāvitrī and the Lord of the Dead
Damayantī's Choice

Buddhist
Gotama's Attainment

Chinese
In the Beginning
The Weaver Maiden and the Herdsman

Japanese
The Sun Goddess and the Storm God and the Strife there was Between Them
The First People

Polynesian
In the Beginning
How Ma-Ui Strove to Win Immortality For All Creatures
Pe-le, Hawaii's Goddess Of Volcanic Fire, Part I
Pe-le, Hawaii's Goddess Of Volcanic Fire, Part II
Pe-le, Hawaii's Goddess Of Volcanic Fire, Part III

Peruvian
Viracocha
The Llama-Herder and the Virgin of the Sun

Central American and Mexican
In the Beginning
The Twin Heroes and the Lords of Xibalba
Quetzalcoatl
Quetzalcoatl's Enemy
The Gods of the Azteca
The Azteca

Zuñi

Paíyatuma and the Maidens of the Corn


Colum. The voyagers

Today's free book is The voyagers, being legends and romances of Atlantic discovery by Padraic Colum (1925), with pictures by Wilfred Jones. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi Trust (I have not checked for other online sources).


Table of Contents

The Tower Above the Ocean 
The Legend of Atlantis 
The Voyage of Maelduin 
The First Islands in the Boundless Ocean 
The Precipitous Island, the Island of the Strange Beast, and the Island of the Fiery Swine 
The Island of the Little Cat 
The Island with the Bridge of Glass 
The Shouting Birds, the Pedestal, and the Island of the Mill 
The Island of the Mourning Folk, and the Island of the Laughing Folk 
The Island of the Eagle 
The Island of the Women 
The Sea of Glass and the Sea of Mist 
The Silver Column in the Sea, and the Island of the Flaming Rampart
The Islands in the Seas of Home 
The Voyages of Saint Brendan 
The First Voyage to the Inaccessible Island 
Brendan Prepares for His Second Voyage 
The Island of the Sheep 
The Island of the Cat 
Some Wonders of the Ocean 
The Soul That Was Permitted to Revisit the Earth
The Island of the Smiths and the Fragrant Island
The Paradise of Birds 
The Island of the Anchorites 
The Radiant Land 
The Children of Eric the Red 
Leif the Lucky 
Thorwald, Eric's Second Son 
Thorstein, Eric's Third Son 
Gudrid the Fair 
On the Tower 
The Great Admiral 
The Course Westward 
The Mask of Gold 
The Islands 
King Guacanagari 
The Voyage Back 
The Fountain of Youth
Virginia
The Naming of the Land 

Colum. The Golden Fleece

Today's free book is The Golden Fleece and the Heroes Who Lived Before Achilles by Padraic Colum (1921). For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

Available at the Baldwin ProjectProject Gutenberg, Internet Archive, Hathi Trust, Google Books, and LibriVox. There is also a free Kindle ebook.





TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. The Voyage to Colchis
The Youth Jason
King Pelias
The Golden Fleece
The Assembling of the Heroes
The Argo
The Beginning of Things
Polydeuces’ Victory and Heracles’ Loss
King Phineus
King Phineus’s Counsel
Landing in Lemnos
The Lemnian Maidens
Demeter and Persephone
Atalanta’s Race
The Departure from Lemnos
The Golden Maid
The Passage of the Symplegades
The Mountain Caucasus
Prometheus

II. The Return to Greece
King Æetes
Medea the Sorceress
The Winning of the Golden Fleece
The Slaying of Apsyrtus
Medea Comes to Circe
In the Land of the Phæacians
They Come to the Desert Land
The Carrying of the Argo.
The Story of Perseus
Near to Iolcus Again

III. The Heroes of the Quest
Atalanta the Huntress
Peleus and His Bride from the Sea
Theseus and the Minotaur
The Life and Labors of Heracles
The Battle of the Frogs and Mice
Admetus
Orpheus the Minstrel
Jason and Medea

Colum. Odysseus and the Tale of Troy

Today's free book is The Adventures of Odysseus and the Tale of Troy by Padraic Colum with illustrations by Willy Pogany. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Sacred Texts, Project Gutenberg, Internet Archive, Hathi Trust, and Google Books. There is also a free audiobook at LibriVox. You can get a free Kindle ebook from Amazon too!

(Circe)

Part I
How Telemachus the Son of Odysseus Was Moved to Go on a Voyage in Search of His Father and How He Heard From Menelaus and Helen the Tale of Troy

Part II
How Odysseus Left Calypso's Island and Came to the Land of the Phaeacians; How He Told He Fared With the Cyclopes and Went Past the Terrible Scylla and Charybdis and Came to the Island of Thrinacia Where His Men Slaughtered the Cattle of the Sun; How He Was Given a Ship by the Phaeacians and Came to His Own Land; How He Overthrew the Wooers Who Wasted His Substance and Came to Reign Again as King of Ithaka.

Colum. The Forge in the Forest

Today's free book is The Forge in the Forest  by Padraic Colum (1925), with illustrations by Boris Artzybasheff. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi (I have not checked for other online sources).


Table of Contents

THE BEGINNING :
The Forge in the Forest
Phaethon
Old King Fork-Beard and the Scarf That He Gave
The Story of Ys
King Fergus and the Water-Horse
The Seven Sleepers
King Solomon and the Servitor of the Lord of Earth
Saint Martin and the Honest Man
Bellerophon
THE END :
The Horse


Swift. Gulliver's Travels

Today's free book is Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift (1917), edited by Padraic Colum, with illustrations by Willy Pogany. For the table of contents, check at the bottom of this post below the image.

The book is available at Hathi Trust (I have not checked for other online sources).


Table of Contents

PART I.  A VOYAGE TO LILLIPUT.
CHAPTER I.
The author gives some account of himself and family.  His first inducements to travel.  He is shipwrecked, and swims for his life.  Gets safe on shore in the country of Lilliput; is made a prisoner, and carried up the country.
CHAPTER II.
The emperor of Lilliput, attended by several of the nobility, comes to see the author in his confinement.  The emperor’s person and habit described.  Learned men appointed to teach the author their language.  He gains favour by his mild disposition.  His pockets are searched, and his sword and pistols taken from him.
CHAPTER III.
The author diverts the emperor, and his nobility of both sexes, in a very uncommon manner.  The diversions of the court of Lilliput described.  The author has his liberty granted him upon certain conditions.
CHAPTER IV.
Mildendo, the metropolis of Lilliput, described, together with the emperor’s palace.  A conversation between the author and a principal secretary, concerning the affairs of that empire.  The author’s offers to serve the emperor in his wars.
CHAPTER V.
The author, by an extraordinary stratagem, prevents an invasion.  A high title of honour is conferred upon him.  Ambassadors arrive from the emperor of Blefuscu, and sue for peace.  The empress’s apartment on fire by an accident; the author instrumental in saving the rest of the palace.
CHAPTER VI.
Of the inhabitants of Lilliput; their learning, laws, and customs; the manner of educating their children.  The author’s way of living in that country.  His vindication of a great lady.
CHAPTER VII.
The author, being informed of a design to accuse him of high-treason, makes his escape to Blefuscu.  His reception there.
CHAPTER VIII.
The author, by a lucky accident, finds means to leave Blefuscu; and, after some difficulties, returns safe to his native country.

PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
CHAPTER I.
A great storm described; the long boat sent to fetch water; the author goes with it to discover the country.  He is left on shore, is seized by one of the natives, and carried to a farmer’s house.  His reception, with several accidents that happened there.  A description of the inhabitants.
CHAPTER II.
A description of the farmer’s daughter.  The author carried to a market-town, and then to the metropolis.  The particulars of his journey.
CHAPTER III.
The author sent for to court.  The queen buys him of his master the farmer, and presents him to the king.  He disputes with his majesty’s great scholars.  An apartment at court provided for the author.  He is in high favour with the queen.  He stands up for the honour of his own country.  His quarrels with the queen’s dwarf.
CHAPTER IV.
The country described.  A proposal for correcting modern maps.  The king’s palace; and some account of the metropolis.  The author’s way of travelling.  The chief temple described.
CHAPTER V.
Several adventurers that happened to the author.  The execution of a criminal.  The author shows his skill in navigation.
CHAPTER VI.
Several contrivances of the author to please the king and queen.  He shows his skill in music.  The king inquires into the state of England, which the author relates to him.  The king’s observations thereon.
CHAPTER VII.
The author’s love of his country.  He makes a proposal of much advantage to the king, which is rejected.  The king’s great ignorance in politics.  The learning of that country very imperfect and confined.  The laws, and military affairs, and parties in the state.
CHAPTER VIII.
The king and queen make a progress to the frontiers.  The author attends them.  The manner in which he leaves the country very particularly related.  He returns to England.
PART III.  A VOYAGE TO LAPUTA, BALNIBARBI, LUGGNAGG, GLUBBDUBDRIB, AND JAPAN.
CHAPTER I.
The author sets out on his third voyage.  Is taken by pirates.  The malice of a Dutchman.  His arrival at an island.  He is received into Laputa.
CHAPTER II.
The humours and dispositions of the Laputians described.  An account of their learning.  Of the king and his court.  The author’s reception there.  The inhabitants subject to fear and disquietudes.  An account of the women.
CHAPTER III.
A phenomenon solved by modern philosophy and astronomy.  The Laputians’ great improvements in the latter.  The king’s method of suppressing insurrections.
CHAPTER IV.
The author leaves Laputa; is conveyed to Balnibarbi; arrives at the metropolis.  A description of the metropolis, and the country adjoining.  The author hospitably received by a great lord.  His conversation with that lord.
CHAPTER V.
The author permitted to see the grand academy of Lagado.  The academy largely described.  The arts wherein the professors employ themselves.
CHAPTER VI.
A further account of the academy.  The author proposes some improvements, which are honourably received.
CHAPTER VII.
The author leaves Lagado: arrives at Maldonada.  No ship ready.  He takes a short voyage to Glubbdubdrib.  His reception by the governor.
CHAPTER VIII.
A further account of Glubbdubdrib.  Ancient and modern history corrected.
CHAPTER IX.
The author returns to Maldonada.  Sails to the kingdom of Luggnagg.  The author confined.  He is sent for to court.  The manner of his admittance.  The king’s great lenity to his subjects.
CHAPTER X.
The Luggnaggians commended.  A particular description of the Struldbrugs, with many conversations between the author and some eminent persons upon that subject.
CHAPTER XI.
The author leaves Luggnagg, and sails to Japan.  From thence he returns in a Dutch ship to Amsterdam, and from Amsterdam to England.
PART IV.  A VOYAGE TO THE COUNTRY OF THE HOUYHNHNMS.
CHAPTER I.
The author sets out as captain of a ship.  His men conspire against him, confine him a long time to his cabin, and set him on shore in an unknown land.  He travels up into the country.  The Yahoos, a strange sort of animal, described.  The author meets two Houyhnhnms.
CHAPTER II.
The author conducted by a Houyhnhnm to his house.  The house described.  The author’s reception.  The food of the Houyhnhnms.  The author in distress for want of meat.  Is at last relieved.  His manner of feeding in this country.
CHAPTER III.
The author studies to learn the language.  The Houyhnhnm, his master, assists in teaching him.  The language described.  Several Houyhnhnms of quality come out of curiosity to see the author.  He gives his master a short account of his voyage.
CHAPTER IV.
The Houyhnhnm’s notion of truth and falsehood.  The author’s discourse disapproved by his master.  The author gives a more particular account of himself, and the accidents of his voyage.
CHAPTER V.
The author at his master’s command, informs him of the state of England. The causes of war among the princes of Europe.  The author begins to explain the English constitution.
CHAPTER VI.
A continuation of the state of England under Queen Anne.  The character of a first minister of state in European courts.
CHAPTER VII.
The author’s great love of his native country.  His master’s observations upon the constitution and administration of England, as described by the author, with parallel cases and comparisons.  His master’s observations upon human nature.
CHAPTER VIII.
The author relates several particulars of the Yahoos.  The great virtues of the Houyhnhnms.  The education and exercise of their youth.  Their general assembly.
CHAPTER IX.
A grand debate at the general assembly of the Houyhnhnms, and how it was determined.  The learning of the Houyhnhnms.  Their buildings.  Their manner of burials.  The defectiveness of their language.
CHAPTER X.
The author’s economy, and happy life, among the Houyhnhnms.  His great improvement in virtue by conversing with them.  Their conversations.  The author has notice given him by his master, that he must depart from the country.  He falls into a swoon for grief; but submits.  He contrives and finishes a canoe by the help of a fellow-servant, and puts to sea at a venture.
CHAPTER XI.
The author’s dangerous voyage.  He arrives at New Holland, hoping to settle there.  Is wounded with an arrow by one of the natives.  Is seized and carried by force into a Portuguese ship.  The great civilities of the captain.  The author arrives at England.
CHAPTER XII.
The author’s veracity.  His design in publishing this work.  His censure of those travellers who swerve from the truth.  The author clears himself from any sinister ends in writing.  An objection answered.  The method of planting colonies.  His native country commended.  The right of the crown to those countries described by the author is justified.  The difficulty of conquering them.  The author takes his last leave of the reader; proposes his manner of living for the future; gives good advice, and concludes.