
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Commonplace Tales: Tales of Imagination––Stories, again, of the Christmas holidays, of George and Lucy, of the amusements, foibles, and virtues of children in their own condition of life, leave nothing to the imagination. The children know all about everything so well that it never occurs to them to play at the situations in any one of these tales, or even to read it twice over. But let them have tales of the imagination, scenes laid in other lands and other times, heroic adventures, hairbreadth escapes, delicious fairy tales in which they are never roughly pulled up by the impossible––even where all is impossible, and they know it, and yet believe.
Charlotte Mason, Vol. 1, Home Education Show Summary:Last but not least, the fact that the story does not turn on children, and does not foster that self-consciousness, the dawn of which in the child is, perhaps, the individual “Fall of Man.”
Charlotte Mason, Formation of Character Books Mentioned:Northrop Frye
C. S. Lewis
J. R. R. Tolkien
Harold Goddard
“Meditation on a Toolshed” by C. S. Lewis
Aesop’s Fables illus. by Jerry Pinkney
He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands illus. by Kadir Nelson
Find Cindy, Angelina, and Timilyn:Morning Time for Moms
Cindy’s Patreon Discipleship Group
Mere Motherhood Facebook Group
The Literary Life Podcast
Cindy’s Facebook
Cindy’s Instagram
House of Humane Letters
Angelina’s Facebook
Angelina’s Instagram
The Literary Life Online Conference 2023
4.9
415415 ratings
Commonplace Tales: Tales of Imagination––Stories, again, of the Christmas holidays, of George and Lucy, of the amusements, foibles, and virtues of children in their own condition of life, leave nothing to the imagination. The children know all about everything so well that it never occurs to them to play at the situations in any one of these tales, or even to read it twice over. But let them have tales of the imagination, scenes laid in other lands and other times, heroic adventures, hairbreadth escapes, delicious fairy tales in which they are never roughly pulled up by the impossible––even where all is impossible, and they know it, and yet believe.
Charlotte Mason, Vol. 1, Home Education Show Summary:Last but not least, the fact that the story does not turn on children, and does not foster that self-consciousness, the dawn of which in the child is, perhaps, the individual “Fall of Man.”
Charlotte Mason, Formation of Character Books Mentioned:Northrop Frye
C. S. Lewis
J. R. R. Tolkien
Harold Goddard
“Meditation on a Toolshed” by C. S. Lewis
Aesop’s Fables illus. by Jerry Pinkney
He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands illus. by Kadir Nelson
Find Cindy, Angelina, and Timilyn:Morning Time for Moms
Cindy’s Patreon Discipleship Group
Mere Motherhood Facebook Group
The Literary Life Podcast
Cindy’s Facebook
Cindy’s Instagram
House of Humane Letters
Angelina’s Facebook
Angelina’s Instagram
The Literary Life Online Conference 2023
3,354 Listeners
696 Listeners
2,961 Listeners
1,025 Listeners
519 Listeners
509 Listeners
315 Listeners
864 Listeners
1,360 Listeners
2,090 Listeners
1,129 Listeners
2,014 Listeners
398 Listeners
306 Listeners
170 Listeners