Joseph Jacobs
Guā-māu
Joseph Jacobs (1854 nî 8 goe̍h 29 – 1916 nî 1 goe̍h 30) sī 1 ê chin gâu siá-chok ê Yehudi le̍k-sú-ha̍k-ka. I ū chham-ú phian-siá Yehudi Pek-kho-choân-su (Jewish Encyclopaedia); mā sī ū-miâ ê bîn-sio̍k-ha̍k-chiá (folklorist), phian-siá kúi-lō chi̍p ê gín-á-kó͘.
Chok-phín
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- Panchatantra Kià-ì Kò͘-sū Siāng Chá ê Eng-gí Pán (Earliest English Version of the Fables of Bidpai) (1888 nî)
- Aisōpos Kià-ì Kò͘-sū (Fables of Aesop) (1889 nî)
- Eng-gí Gín-á-kó͘ (English Fairy Tales) (1890 nî), pau-hâm
- Tom Tit Tot
- The Three Sillies
- The Rose-Tree
- The Old Woman and Her Pig
- How Jack Went to Seek his Fortune
- Mr Vinegar
- Nix Nought Nothing
- Jack Hannaford
- Binnorie
- Mouse and Mouser
- Cap O' Rushes
- Teeny-Tiny
- Jack and the Beanstalk
- The Story of the Three Little Pigs
- The Master and His Pupil
- Titty Mouse and Tatty Mouse
- Jack and His Golden Snuff-Box
- The Story of the Three Bears
- Jack the Giant Killer
- Henny-Penny
- Childe Rowland
- Molly Whuppie
- The Red Ettin
- The Golden Arm
- The History of Tom Thumb
- Mr Fox
- Lazy Jack
- Johnny-Cake
- Earl Mar's Daughter
- Mr Miacca
- Whittington and His Cat
- The Strange Visitor
- The Laidly Worm of Spindleston Heugh
- The Cat and the Mouse
- The Fish and the Ring
- The Magpie's Nest
- Kate Crackernuts
- The Cauld Lad of Hilton
- The Ass, The Table and the Stick
- Fairy Ointment
- The Well of the World's End
- Master of all Masters
- The Three Heads of the Well
- Plantagenêt Eng-tē ê Yehudi-lâng (The Jews of Angevin England) (1893 nî)
- Eng-gí Gín-á-kó͘ Sio̍k-chi̍p (More English Fairy Tales) (1894 nî), pau-hâm
- The Pied Piper
- Hereafterthis
- The Golden Ball
- Goá Ka-tī (My Own Self)
- Black Bull of Norroway
- Yallery Brown
- Three Feathers
- Sir Gammer Vans
- Tom Hickathrift
- The Hedley Kow
- Gobborn Seer
- Lawkamercyme
- Tattercoats
- The Wee Bannock
- Johnny Gloke
- Coat o' Clay
- The Three Cows
- The Blinded Giant
- Scrapefoot
- The Pedlar of Swaffham
- The Old Witch
- The Three Wishes
- The Buried Moon
- A Son of Adam
- The Children in the Wood
- The Hobyahs
- A Pottle o' Brains
- The King of England and his Three Sons
- King John and the Abbot of Canterbury
- Rushen Coatie
- The King o' the Cats
- Tamlane
- The Stars in the Sky
- Siau-sit! (News!)
- Puddock, Mousie and Ratton
- The Little Bull-Calf
- The Wee, Wee Mannie
- Habetrot and Scantlie Mab
- Old Mother Wiggle-Waggle
- Catskin
- Stupid's Cries
- The Lambton Worm
- The Wise Men of Gotham
- Princess of Canterbury
- Celtic Gín-á-kó͘ (1892 nî)
- Connla and the Fairy Maiden
- Guleesh
- The Field of Boliauns
- Hoat-kak ê Kúi-pô (The Horned Women)
- Conall Yellowclaw
- Hudden and Dudden and Donald O'Neary
- The Shepherd of Myddvai
- Hoa̍t-phoat ê Chhâi-hông-sai (The Sprightly Tailor)
- The Story of Deirdre
- Munachar and Manachar
- Gold-Tree and Silver-Tree
- King O'Toole and his Goose
- The Wooing of Olwen
- Jack and his Comrades
- The Shee An Gannon and the Gruagach Gaire
- The Story-Teller at Fault
- The Sea-Maiden
- A Legend of Knockmany
- Fair, Brown and Trembling
- Jack and his Master
- Beth Gellert
- The Tale of Ivan
- Andrew Coffey
- The Battle of the Birds
- Brewery of Eggshells
- The Lad with the Goat-Skin
- Notes and References
- Sèng-keng Khó-kó͘-ha̍k Gián-kiù (Studies in Biblical Archaeology) (1894 nî)
- Celtic Gín-á-kó͘ Sio̍k-chi̍p (More Celtic Fairy Tales) (1894 nî), pau-hâm
- The Fate of the Children of Lir
- Jack the Cunning Thief
- Powel, Prince of Dyfed
- Paddy O'Kelly and the Weasel
- The Black Horse
- The Vision of MacConglinney
- Dream of Owen O'Mulready
- Morraha
- The Story of the McAndrew Family
- The Farmer of Liddesdale
- The Greek Princess and the Young Gardener
- The Russet Dog
- Smallhead and the King's Sons
- The Legend of Knockgrafton
- Elidore
- The Leeching of Kayn's leg
- How Fin went to the Kingdom of the Big Men
- How Cormac Mac Art went to Faery
- The Ridere of Riddles
- The Tail
- 1900 nî khí, chham-ú phian-siá Yehudi Pek-kho-choân-su
- Ìn-tō͘ Gín-á-kó͘ (Indian Fairy Tales) (1912 nî), pau-hâm
- The Lion and the Crane
- How the Raja's Son won the Princess Labam
- The Lambikin
- Punchkin
- The Broken Pot
- The Magic Fiddle
- The Cruel Crane Outwitted
- Loving Laili
- The Tiger, The Brahman, and the Jackal
- The Soothsayers Son
- Harisarman
- The Charmed Ring
- The Talkative Tortoise
- A Lac of Rupees for a Piece of Advice
- The Gold-Giving Serpent
- The Son of Seven Queens
- A Lesson for Kings
- Pride Goes Before a Fall
- Raja Rasalu
- The Ass in the Lion's Skin
- The Farmer and the Money-Lender
- The Boy who had a Moon on his Forehead and a Star on his Chin
- The Prince and the Fakir
- Why the Fish Laughed
- The Demon with the Matted Hair
- The Ivory City and its Fairy Princess
- Sun, Moon, and Wind go out to Dinner
- How the Wicked Sons were Duped
- The Pigeon and the Crow
- Europa Bîn-sio̍k kap Gín-á-kó͘ (European Folk and Fairy Tales) (1916 nî), pau-hâm
- Cinder-Maid
- All Change
- The King of the Fishes
- Scissors
- Beauty and the Beast
- Reynard and Bruin
- The Dancing Water, Singing Apple, and Speaking Bird
- The Language of Animals
- The Three Soldiers
- A Dozen At a Blow
- The Earl of Cattenborough
- The Swan Maidens
- Androcles and the Lion
- Day Dreaming
- Keep Cool
- The Master Thief
- The Unseen Bridegroom
- The Master-Maid
- A Visitor From Paradise
- Inside Again
- John the True
- Johnnie and Grizzle
- The Clever Lass
- Thumbkin
- Snowwhite
Hō-ló-oē ê pán-pún
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]Tân-Tēⁿ Hông-giâu ū hoan-e̍k, chhut-pán "News!" (Siau-sit!) kap "My Own Self" (Goá Ka-tī) 2 phiⁿ.