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¾ÆÀÏ·£µå ¾ÆµéÀÇ ¿Õ (The King of Ireland¡Çs Son) µéÀ¸¸é¼­ Àд ¿µ¾î ¸íÀÛ 626
¾ÆÀÏ·£µå ¾ÆµéÀÇ ¿Õ (The King of Ireland¡Çs Son) µéÀ¸¸é¼­ Àд ¿µ¾î ¸íÀÛ 626
  • ÀúÀÚÆеå¶óÀÍ ÄÝ·³ (Padraic Colum) Àú
  • ÃâÆÇ»çÀ¯ÆäÀÌÆÛ
  • ÃâÆÇÀÏ2016-12-06
  • µî·ÏÀÏ2017-07-18
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;The King of Ireland's Son is a children's novel published in Ireland in 1916 written by Padraic Colum, and illustrated by Willy Pogany. It is the story of the eldest of the King of Ireland's sons, and his adventures winning and then finding Fedelma, the Enchanter's Daughter, who after being won is kidnapped from him by the King of the Land of Mist. It is solidly based in Irish folklore, itself being originally a folktale.
;
;This is one of the classics of Irish children's literature, its magical stories winding in and out of each other from the start, when the careless son goes out,
;
;His hound at his heel,
;His hawk on his wrist,
;A brave steed to carry him whither he list,
;The blue sky above him,
;The green grass below him
;
;and meets an eccentric old man full of harmlessness and duplicity who invites him to a game of chess for whatever stake the winner might like. Characters like Flann, otherwise known as Gilly the Goat-Boy, the proud and heartless Lasarfhiona or Flame-of-Wine, the magical Spae-Woman and the vicious farmer who takes on Flann as a farmhand make this an entrancing, funny and always-remembered story.
;
;Written in the years before 1916 in America by Colum, a close friend and colleague of some of those who led the Easter Rising, this was the ultimate calling-up of Irish mythology and legend, and, paired with James Stephens' Irish Fairy Tales, made many happy hours for children curled up before glowing turf fires to read by the light of Tilley lamps in the long winter evenings of the new Ireland.
;
;Another evolution from the original folktale was written by Brendan Behan, published in Brendan Behan's Island, 1962, pp. 136?141.
;
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¡á The King of Ireland's Son
- Contents
FEDELMA, THE ENCHANTER'S DAUGHTER
WHEN THE KING OF THE CATS CAME TO KING CONNAL'S DOMINION
THE SWORD OF LIGHT
A Unique Tale
THE TOWN OF THE RED CASTLE
THE KING OF THE LAND OF MIST
THE HOUSE OF CROM DUV
THE SPAE-WOMAN
ÀúÀÚ »çÁø ¹× ÇÁ·ÎÇÊ
¡Ú º¸À̽º Àüü ´Ù¿î·Îµå ¹Þ´Â °÷ ¡Ú
¿Àµð¿ÀºÏÀ¸·Î ¿µ¾î¸¦ °øºÎÇϴ ¹æ¹ý: ¿Ïº®°¡À̵å
ÀÔü ÀüÀÚÃ¥ ½Ã¸®Áî ¼Ò°³
¢º ºÎ·Ï - ¿µ¹®ÇР¿ª»ç (ENGLISH LITERATURE)
ÀÛÇ° ¼³¸í
PREFACE
- CONTENTS
CHAPTER I  INTRODUCTION--THE MEANING OF LITERATURE
CHAPTER II  THE ANGLO-SAXON OR OLD-ENGLISH PERIOD (450-1050)
CHAPTER III  THE ANGLO-NORMAN PERIOD (1066-1350)
CHAPTER IV  THE AGE OF CHAUCER (1350-1400)
CHAPTER V  THE REVIVAL OF LEARNING (1400-1550)
CHAPTER VI  THE AGE OF ELIZABETH (1550-1620)
CHAPTER VII  THE PURITAN AGE (1620-1660)
CHAPTER VIII  PERIOD OF THE RESTORATION (1660-1700)
CHAPTER IX  EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY LITERATURE (1700-1800)
CHAPTER X  THE AGE OF ROMANTICISM (1800-1850)
CHAPTER XI  THE VICTORIAN AGE (1850-1900)
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
INDEX
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