He did not care about his soldiers, nor about the theatre, and only liked to drive out and show his new clothes. He had a coat for every hour of the day; and just as they say of a king, " He is in council," so they always said of him, " The Emperor is... Stories - Síða 187eftir Hans Christian Andersen - 1891 - 205 síðurHeildartexta - Um bókina
| Hans Christian Andersen - 1866 - 808 síður
...they say of a king, " He is in council," one always said of him, "The Emperor is in the wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was always very merry ; every day a number of strangers arrived there. One day two cheats came : they fave themselves out as weavers,... | |
| Hans Christian Andersen - 1867 - 514 síður
...they say of a king, " He is in council," one always said of him, " The Emperor is in the wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was always very merry ; every day a number of strangers arrived there. One day two cheats came : they gave themselves out as weavers,... | |
| Aesop, Wilhelm Grimm, Jacob Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen - 1909 - 396 síður
...say of a king, " He is in council," so they always said of him, " The Emperor is in the wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was always...rogues came: they gave themselves out as weavers, and declared they could weave the finest stuff any one could imagine. Not only were their colors and patterns,... | |
| Frank Ellsworth Spaulding, Catherine Turner Bryce - 1909 - 392 síður
...spent all his money upon them, that he might be very fine. He had a coat for every hour of the day. In the great city in which he lived it was always...rogues came ; they gave themselves out as weavers, and declared they could weave the finest stuff any one could imagine. Their colors and patterns, they said,... | |
| Elias Hershey Sneath, George Hodges, Edward Lawrence Stevens - 1913 - 374 síður
...as they say of a king, "He is in council," one always said of him, "The Emperor is in the wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was always very merry ; every day a number of strangers arrived there. One day two cheats came; they gave themselves out as weavers,... | |
| Franklin Thomas Baker, Ashley Horace Thorndike - 1917 - 282 síður
...said of him, " The emperor is in his wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was al- 10 ways merry ; every day came many strangers. One day two...rogues came ; they gave themselves out as weavers, and declared they could weave the finest cloth any one could imagine. Not only were their colors and patterns,... | |
| Fannie Wyche Dunn - 1917 - 280 síður
...said of him, " The emperor is in his wardrobe." In the great city in which he lived it was al- 10 ways merry ; every day came many strangers. One day two...rogues came ; they gave themselves out as weavers, and declared they could weave the finest cloth any one could imagine. Not only were their colors and patterns,... | |
| Frank Ellsworth Spaulding, Catherine Turner Bryce - 1920 - 360 síður
...spent all his money upon them, that he might be very fine. He had a coat for every hour of the day. In the great city in which he lived, it was always...rogues came; they gave themselves out as weavers, and declared they could weave the finest stuff any one could imagine. Their colors and patterns, they said,... | |
| Clarence Robert Stone - 1922 - 336 síður
...Christian Andersen, in The Riverside Fourth Reader. The story reads as follows: THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES he did not care to see the play, or to drive in the...very beautiful, but the clothes made of the stuff had this wonderful quality — they could not be seen by any one who was unfit for the office he held,... | |
| Clarence Robert Stone - 1922 - 342 síður
...reads as follows: THE EMPEROR'B NEW CLOTHES he did not care to see the play, or to drive in the wood*, except to show his new clothes. He had a coat for...very beautiful, but the clothes made of the stuff had this wonderful quality — they could not be seen by any one who was unfit for the office he held,... | |
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