Ep. 354 - Sun, Moon and Talia

Ep. 354 - Sun, Moon and Talia

It is a well-known fact that the cruel man is generally his own hangman; and he who throws stones at Heaven frequently comes off with a broken head. But the reverse of the medal shows us that innocence is a shield of fig-tree wood, upon which the sword of malice is broken, or blunts its point; so that, when a poor man fancies himself already dead and buried, he revives again in bone and flesh, as you shall hear in the story which I am going to draw from the cask of memory with the tap of my tongue.

There was once a great Lord, who, having a daughter born to him named Talia, commanded the seers and wise men of his kingdom to come and tell him her fortune; and after various counsellings they came to the conclusion, that a great peril awaited her from a piece of stalk in some flax. Thereupon he issued a command, prohibiting any flax or hemp, or such-like thing, to be brought into his house, hoping thus to avoid the danger.

 

Host Dan Scholz
Subscribe to The Folktale Project at http://folktaleproject.com/subscribe

Ep. 355 - The Wicked Prince

Ep. 355 - The Wicked Prince

Ep. 353 - Thirteenth

Ep. 353 - Thirteenth