Author
Scottish · 1844-1912 · 9 quotes
Scottish · 1844–1912
9 quotes in our collection
Andrew Lang was the Scottish anthropologist, folklorist, and man of letters who collected, translated, and edited the coloured Fairy Books — Blue, Red, Green, Yellow, and on through twelve volumes — that introduced generations of children to folk tales from around the world. Born in Selkirk in 1844, he studied at Oxford and became one of the most productive writers of the Victorian era: novels, poetry, literary criticism, translations of Homer, and the fairy book series that remains his most lasting contribution. His work on mythology argued that folk tales and religious beliefs arise from similar impulses across cultures — a claim that influenced Frazer's Golden Bough. His aphorism on statistics — used like lamp posts, for support rather than illumination — is perhaps the most repeated sentence from any Victorian critic of quantitative argument.
Collected Quotes
For your reward you must demand the bronze ring which has the power to grant you everything you desire.
I have no fear, no matter how fast you go.
Say yes or no without fear.
I wish to go back to my palace and see my Beast again.
I wish you to be attired as befits your rank and beauty.
In this place you may fearlessly stay.
There was a miller who left no more estate to the three sons he had than his mill, his ass, and his cat.