
audiobook
The Legend of Perseus
NOTE
THE LEGEND OF PERSEUS
ENDNOTES - CHAPTER VIII NOTES
PRESS NOTICES
Delving into the rich tapestry of the Perseus legend, this volume explores the curious motif of the “life‑token”—a symbolic object that mirrors a hero’s fate. Drawing from a wide array of traditions, the author compares stories from Greece, Germany, Hungary, the Highlands and far‑off lands such as Bengal and Madagascar, showing how trees, flowers, and grains become living barometers of a protagonist’s wellbeing. The text unpacks both the deeply rooted, organic connections between hero and token and the more arbitrary, later‑added variations, revealing what these differences tell us about cultural attitudes toward destiny and survival.
The study reads like a guided tour through folklore archives, with vivid examples of rose‑trees sprouting from magical fish, golden lilies emerging from bone fragments, and barley plants entrusted to loyal followers. By tracing these recurring symbols, the work highlights the universal human impulse to externalize hope and fear in the natural world, inviting listeners to see familiar myths in a fresh, comparative light.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (802K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: David Nutt in the Strand, 1895.
Credits
an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer
Release date
2023-07-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1848–1927
A Victorian folklorist who treated old stories as clues to how people think, believe, and remember. His writing helped turn folklore into a more systematic field of study, while still keeping the wonder of legends and fairy tales alive.
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