The Little Glass Man, and Other Stories - Wilhelm Hauff - Book

The Little Glass Man, and Other Stories

THE CHILDREN’S LIBRARY
THE LITTLE GLASS MAN
From a wash drawing by James Pryde
“FAT HEZEKIEL”
FROM THE GERMAN OF WILHELM HAUFF
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK: MACMILLAN & CO. LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN 1894


Fairy Queen sat in her office drinking afternoon tea. Fairy Queen, thinking how she could please children best, had turned publisher. She had come to London, she had taken an office up a steep flight of stairs, and had sent out her fairies all over Europe in search of children’s books. Off they had gone in all directions, and so many manuscripts and books had been sent in or brought back by them, that Fairy Queen published volume after volume of the Children’s Library, and still there remained a lot of work to be done.
There she sat now thinking over the tales she had published and over those she was planning to publish, as the clock of St. Paul’s slowly struck five. Fairy Queen poured out a last cup of tea; she finished sorting a heap of letters which she packed away in the drawers of her writing-table, and listened in the direction of the room next to hers. There were steps on the stairs coming and going. Then there was a good deal of banging about the room, and Fairy Queen’s ear caught snatches of a song.
In that room were stored books, and manuscripts, and letters and brown paper parcels, and there by the side of the big, big waste-paper basket of Fairy Queen’s publishing firm, sat Gogul Mogul reading manuscripts. Gogul Mogul was a long-legged creature, with a tiny head, who had come out of Fairyland to help publish tales suitable for child readers. He was devoted to Fairy Queen, and read through piles and piles of manuscript with great perseverance, though he frequently groaned, longing to be back in Fairyland.

Wilhelm Hauff
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2014-05-07

Темы

Children's stories

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