Nights with Uncle Remus

001

Table of Contents

 

Title Page

Copyright Page

Introduction

 

I - Mr. Fox and Miss Goose

II - Brother Fox Catches Mr. Horse

III - Brother Rabbit and the Little Girl

IV - How Brother Fox Was Too Smart

V - Brother Rabbit’s Astonishing Prank

VI - Brother Rabbit Secures a Mansion

VII - Mr. Lion Hunts for Mr. Man

VIII - The Story of the Pigs

IX - Mr. Benjamin Ram and His Wonderful Fiddle

X - Brother Rabbit’s Riddle

XI - How Mr. Rooster Lost His Dinner

XII - Brother Rabbit Breaks up a Party

XIII - Brother Fox, Brother Rabbit, and King Deer’s Daughter

XIV - Brother Terrapin Deceives Brother Buzzard

XV - Brother Fox Covets the Quills

XVI - How Brother Fox Failed to Get His Grapes

XVII - Mr. Fox Figures as an Incendiary

XVIII - A Dream and a Story

XIX - The Moon in the Mill-Pond

XX - Brother Rabbit Takes Some Exercise

XXI - Why Brother Bear Has No Tail

XXII - How Brother Rabbit Frightened His Neighbors

XXIII - Mr. Man Has Some Meat

XXIV - How Brother Rabbit Got the Meat

XXV - African Jack

XXVI - Why the Alligator’s Back Is Rough

XXVII - Brother Wolf Says Grace

XXVIII - Spirits, Seen and Unseen

XXIX - A Ghost Story

XXX - Brother Rabbit and His Famous Foot

XXXI - “In Some Lady’s Garden”

XXXII - Brother ’Possum Gets in Trouble

XXXIII - Why the Guinea-Fowls Are Speckled

XXXIV - Brother Rabbit’s Love-Charm

XXXV - Brother Rabbit Submits to a Test

XXXVI - Brother Wolf Falls a Victim

XXXVII - Brother Rabbit and the Mosquitoes

XXXVIII - The Pimmerly Plum

XXXIX - Brother Rabbit Gets the Provisions

XL - “Cutta Cord-La!”

XLI - Aunt Tempy’s Story

XLII - The Fire-Test

XLIII - The Cunning Snake

XLIV - How Brother Fox Was Too Smart

XLV - Brother Wolf Gets in a Warm Place

XLVI - Brother Wolf Still in Trouble

XLVII - Brother Rabbit Lays in His Beef Supply

XLVIII - Brother Rabbit and Mr. Wildcat

XLIX - Mr. Benjamin Ram Defends Himself

L - Brother Rabbit Pretends to Be Poisoned

LI - More Trouble for Brother Wolf

LII - Brother Rabbit Outdoes Mr. Man

LIII - Brother Rabbit Takes a Walk

LIV - Old Grinny-Granny Wolf

LV - How Wattle Weasel Was Caught

LVI - Brother Rabbit Ties Mr. Lion

LVII - Mr. Lion’s Sad Predicament

LVIII - The Origin of the Ocean

LIX - Brother Rabbit Gets Brother Fox’s Dinner

LX - How the Bear Nursed the Little Alligator

LXI - Why Mr. Dog Runs Brother Rabbit

LXII - Brother Wolf and the Horned Cattle

LXIII - Brother Fox and the White Muscadines

LXIV - Mr. Hawk and Brother Buzzard

LXV - Mr. Hawk and Brother Rabbit

LXVI - The Wise Bird and the Foolish Bird

LXVII - Old Brother Terrapin Gets Some Fish

LXVIII - Brother Fox Makes a Narrow Escape

LXIX - Brother Fox’s Fish-Trap

LXX - Brother Rabbit Rescues Brother Terrapin

LXXI - The Night Before Christmas

001

NIGHTS WITH UNCLE REMUS

JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS was born in Eatonton, Georgia, in 1845. Setting type and learning to write under Joseph Addison Turner’s mentoring at nearby Turnwold Plantation, Harris later worked for newspapers in Macon and Forsyth. He served as Associate Editor for the Savannah Morning News (1870-1876) and for the Atlanta Constitution (1876-1900). Harris earned reputations as a literary comedian, a talented and resourceful amateur folklorist, a local-color fiction writer, a children’s author, and a major New South journalist. He wrote 185 Uncle Remus tales, seven volumes of short fiction, four novels and six collections of children’s stories. Harris’s portraits of poor whites and his socio-logically and rhetorically complex Brer Rabbit trickster stories have influenced generations of writers, from Mark Twain to Zora Neale Hurston, William Faulkner, Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, and Julius Lester. Harris’s creation of highly animated, believably anthropomorphic animal characters also helped reinvent the modern children’s story, from Rudyard Kipling’s jungle tales to Beatrix Potter’s Peter Rabbit stories. Brer Rabbit and the Tar Baby have also become popular culture icons. Harris died in 1908.

 

JOHN T. BICKLEY earned his B.A. in Literature from Florida State University and his M.A. in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is currently working as a fiction editor and completing his Ph.D. in Medieval English Literature, with a minor in Film, at Florida State.