
Introduction to Plant Lore and Legends
Folkard’s introduction offers a dense and dazzling catalog of the world's floral mythology—an herbal grimoire where every leaf and blossom carries symbolic weight, medical promise, or ancient superstition. At once antiquarian and poetic, it opens the door to a world where plants are not background, but characters: whispered to by witches, consecrated by priests, and feared by those who know too much.
The Legend of Saint Nicholas
Framed as a tale for children but echoing the structure of sacred legend, Faulkner’s Legend of Saint Nicholas traces the saint’s quiet acts of mercy, from dowries tossed through windows to storms stilled by prayer. In her telling, the spirit of Christmas is not spectacle but secrecy: a love so humble it asks not to be seen, only shared.
Frost
A tale of cruelty, endurance, and elemental justice, Frost transforms the Russian winter into a moral force—testing hearts as surely as it chills bones. Ralston’s retelling captures the icy grandeur of the folkloric world, where the cold rewards humility with warmth and punishes vanity with silence, and where even the snow listens for wise words.
The Little Match Girl
In the frozen glow of New Year’s Eve, a little girl lights match after match to keep the dark at bay—and in their flickering light, visions of warmth and love appear. Andersen’s heartbreaking fable is not about death so much as release: a quiet indictment of a world indifferent to suffering, wrapped in the gentlest, most luminous sorrow.
Saint Nicholas and the Children
A grisly tale softened by snowfall and faith, Saint Nicholas and the Children blends Christian legend with frontier folklore, casting the saint not as a jolly gift-giver but as a holy avenger, come to deliver children from the barrel of death. In Macmillan’s Canadian rendering, salvation wears snowshoes, evil comes with sausages and firelight, and holiness arrives not with sleigh bells—but with justice.
The Fir Tree
In this quietly devastating parable, Hans Christian Andersen charts the life of a restless little fir tree whose longing for a grander future blinds it to the beauty of its present. What begins as a charming woodland tale becomes a meditation on transience, vanity, and the sorrowful fate of those who live always for what’s next, never for what is.