Ting-a-Ling Tales

by Frank R. Stockton

Hardcover, 1890

Status

Available

Publication

Ward and Downey (1890). 187p.

Description

When the King clapped his hands twice, in rushed twenty-four armed guards. "Bind me this dog!" quoth the King, pointing to the Prince. "Is this the way you treat a stranger?" cried the Prince. "Aye," said the King, merrily. "We will treat you royally! You are tired. So tonight and tomorrow you shall be lodged and feasted daintily. The day after, we will have a celebration -- when you shall be beaten with sticks, and shall fight a tiger, and be tossed by a bull, and be bowstrung, and beheaded, and drawn and quartered . . . and we will have the nicest time!" American humorist novelist Frank R. Stockton (1834-1902) wrote novels including the popular "Rudder Grange" -- yet it may have been in his delightful works for children that he struck his happiest literary notes.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member antiquary
Though Stockton is best known for The Lady or the TIger, and several of his other books are enjoyable, I personally consider this his best --I would give it 6 stars if I could. I am no doubt biased by having had it since I was a child, but even now after 50 years I find it stands up well to
Show More
rereading, especially Ting-a-ling and the Five Magicians and The Magical Music. The first story, "Ting-a-ling" troubled me as a child because Ting-a-ling's
sweetheart is drowned (by the tears of a princess) and the last story, "Ting-a-ling's Visit to Tur-il-ii-ra" though it has some strong suspense, has less of the delightful working out of elaborate detail than the others. Tin-a-ling is one of the few really little fairies I know whose lifestyle is nicely worked out --his people ride on insects in carriages of flowers, and his conversation with a fairy livery stable keeper reminds me of Butterbur at the Prancing Pony. His friend and champion is the amiable giant Tur-il-i-ra, who reminds me of the friendly giants in Narnia. In The Five Magicians, the fairy and the five mages must win their way into the castle of a wicked dwarf holding a princess captive, and the magicians gain places at the dwarf's feast by each in turn producing a more wonderful gift of food, lovingly described. The Magical Music has a powerful concept -- the right to a kingdom is decided by the ability to sing a piece of music written by the last king, whose family has married into the royalty of the sea (fully humanoid, not those nasty things with fishtails as one says contemptuously) so only someone with the sea in her blood can sing --but the rightful princess I being kept from her chance by the splendidly evil witch Mahbracca, with a face like a rotten Irish potato -- who dwells in an impressively sinister cavern, guarded by afreets and the dreadful pringhorned yahbooks (which as far as I know, Stockton invented) a sort of vampire monoceros that impales its victim on its horn and drinks the blood as it trickles down...There is a great deal more vivid invention, and a lot of humorous touches.
The line drawings in Arabian style add a great deal to the stories, though they are only very mildly arabesque otherwise.
Show Less
LibraryThing member raizel
There are two introductory essays: "Frank R. Stockton" by Alice Dalgliesh gives a brief history of the man and his work. Ting-a-Ling was first published in 1870 and then, as Ting-a-Ling Tales, in 1882. Both books were illustrated by E.B. Bensell. "To Grown-Ups" by Mary Rogers Reid, of the New York
Show More
Herald Tribune, who, along with many librarians, encouraged Charles Scribner, Jr., to republish the book for a new generation of readers.
The stories are "Ting-a-Ling," "Ting-a-Ling and the Five Magicians," "The Magical Music," and "Ting-a-ling's Visit to Tur-il-ra."
The stores are fine, but not enough for me to keep the book. Ting-a-Ling is a fairy and very small. He is good friends with the giant, Tur-il-ra. There are slaves, who are mentioned in passing as part of the background. A prince, to keep anyone from entering his room, devises a trap that beheads an intruder. (Times and attitudes change.)
I kept hoping that Ting-a-ling's "beautiful little sweetheart," Ling-a-ting would somehow get better from dropping a teardrop on her head and becoming "drenched and drowned." [p. 15] After all, one of the princess' servants loses her head (see above) and it is reattached. (Albeit backwards, but fortunately everyone knows that a kiss can turn a head and so all is well.) Alas, this is the last we see her.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Local notes

A collection of fairy tales.
Page: 0.4802 seconds