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    The Gorgon's Head

    by Nathaniel Hawthorne
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    Page 1 of 24
    From: "A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys"

    --

    The author has long been of opinion that many of the classical myths
    were capable of being rendered into very capital reading for children.

    In the little volume here offered to the public, he has worked up half a
    dozen of them, with this end in view. A great freedom of treatment was
    necessary to his plan; but it will be observed by every one who attempts
    to render these legends malleable in his intellectual furnace, that they
    are marvellously independent of all temporary modes and circumstances.
    They remain essentially the same, after changes that would affect the
    identity of almost anything else.

    He does not, therefore, plead guilty to a sacrilege, in having sometimes
    shaped anew, as his fancy dictated, the forms that have been hallowed by
    an antiquity of two or three thousand years. No epoch of time can claim
    a copyright in these immortal fables. They seem never to have been
    made; and certainly, so long as man exists, they can never perish; but,
    by their indestructibility itself, they are legitimate subjects for
    every age to clothe with its own garniture of manners and sentiment, and
    to imbue with its own morality. In the present version they may have
    lost much of their classical aspect (or, at all events, the author has
    not been careful to preserve it), and have, perhaps, assumed a Gothic or
    romantic guise.

    In performing this pleasant task,--for it has been really a task fit for

    hot weather, and one of the most agreeable, of a literary kind, which he
    ever undertook,--the author has not always thought it necessary to write
    downward, in order to meet the comprehension of children. He has
    generally suffered the theme to soar, whenever such was its tendency,
    and when he himself was buoyant enough to follow without an effort.
    Children possess an unestimated sensibility to whatever is deep or high,
    in imagination or feeling, so long as it is simple, likewise. It is
    only the artificial and the complex that bewilder them.

    Lenox, July 15, 1851.

    --



    THE GORGON'S HEAD

    TANGLEWOOD PORCH

    INTRODUCTORY TO "THE GORGON'S HEAD."

    Beneath the porch of the country-seat called Tanglewood, one fine
    autumnal morning, was assembled a merry party of little folks, with a
    tall youth in the midst of them. They had planned a nutting expedition,
    and were impatiently waiting for the mists to roll up the hill-slopes,
    and for the sun to pour the warmth of the Indian summer over the fields
    and pastures, and into the nooks of the many-colored woods. There was a
    prospect of as fine a day as ever gladdened the aspect of this beautiful
    and comfortable world. As yet, however, the morning mist filled up
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    Page 1 of 24
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