Myths, Fairytales and Legends

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Myths, Fairytales and Legends’

73
Heracles and the Birds of Lake Stymphalia Clay Lane

Our hero is sent to deal with some man-eating birds, but cannot reach their lakeside refuge.

Still working off his debt to the gods after killing his children in a blind rage, Heracles is now despatched by his envious cousin King Eurystheus to rid a village of some man-eating birds. However, not everyone is against him.

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74
The Tragedy of King Oedipus Clay Lane

Oedipus flees home in an attempt to escape a dreadful prophecy, unware that it is following at his heels.

One of the great myths of ancient Greece, the tragedy of Oedipus tells how the King of Thebes and a shepherd boy each tried to evade their destinies, and how their destinies refused to be changed.

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75
The Peasant, the Penny and Marko the Rich Clay Lane

Marko adopts drastic measures to get out of repaying the loan of a penny.

Marko the Rich and his daughter Anastasia enter into other Russian folk-tales, in which he is not necessarily as amiable as he is in this one. On this occasion, he goes to extreme lengths to sidle out of a negligible debt.

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76
Heracles and the Augean Stables Clay Lane

Heracles shows his capacity for thinking outside the box, but spoils it by trying to be just a little bit too clever.

Heracles has murdered his children in a fit of anger, and is performing a series of ‘Labours’ for his cousin King Eurystheus, to work off his guilt. Eurystheus would be just as happy if Heracles perished in his Labours, and in sending him now to clean out the stables of Augeas, King of Elis, appears to hope he can disgust him to death.

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77
The Legend of Pollard’s Lands Clay Lane

An enterprising knight rids the Bishop of Durham of a troublesome boar, but the price comes as a shock to his lordship.

The Pollards were gentry with land near Auckland Castle, seat of the Bishops of Durham. By tradition, each new Bishop of Durham was presented by the Pollards with a handsome falchion (a kind of sword), accompanied by a speech recalling how an ancestor ‘slew of old a mighty boar, and by performing this service we hold our lands.’

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78
Heracles and the Erymanthian Boar Clay Lane

Snaring a wild boar turns out to be much less dangerous than keeping centaurs away from their wine.

Heracles is performing a series of ‘Labours’ for King Eurystheus, who regards his cousin as a rival and would not be sorry to see him dead. But ever since Heracles came back wearing the pelt of the Nemean Lion, Eurystheus’s nerves have been jangling and he now keeps a capacious wine-jar, half buried in the ground, as a place of refuge.

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