AI Content Chat (Beta) logo

143 Joseph Jacobs II. THE THREE SILLIES. Source .—From Folk-Lore Journal , ii. 40-3; to which it was communicated by Miss C. Burne. Parallels .—Prof. Stephens gave a variant from his own memory in Folk-Lore Record , iii. 155, as told in Essex at the beginning of the century. Mr. Toulmin Smith gave another version in The Constitutional , July 1, 1853, which was trans- lated by his daughter, and contributed to Mélusine , t. ii. An Oxfordshire version was given in Notes and Queries , April 17, 1852. It occurs also in Ireland, Kennedy, Fireside Stories , p. 9. It is Grimm’s Kluge Else , No. 34, and is spread through the world. Mr. Clouston devotes the seventh chapter of his Book of Noodles to the Quest of the Three Noodles. III. THE ROSE TREE. Source .—From the first edition of Henderson’s Folk-Lore of Northern Counties , p. 314, to which it was communicated by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould. Parallels .—This is better known under the title, “Orange and Lemon,” and with the refrain: “My mother killed me, My father picked my bones, My little sister buried me, Under the marble stones.” I heard this in Australia. Mr. Jones Gives part of it in Folk Tales of the Magyars , 418-20, and another version occurs in 4 Notes and Queries , vi. 496. Mr. I. Gollancz informs me he remembers a version entitled “Pepper, Salt, and Mustard,” with the refrain just given. Abroad it is Grimm’s “Juniper Tree” (No. 47), where see further parallels. The German rhyme is sung by Margaret in the mad scene of Goethe’s “Faust.”

English Fairy Tales Collected by Joseph - Page 143 English Fairy Tales Collected by Joseph Page 142 Page 144