安徒生童话(英文版)(世界经典故事)(Andersen's Fairy Tales)

分類: 图书,英语与其他外语,英语读物,英文版,童话寓言故事,
品牌: 汉斯·安徒生
基本信息·出版社:中央编译出版社
·页码:515 页
·出版日期:2008年
·ISBN:7802117089/9787802117082
·条形码:9787802117082
·包装版本:1版
·装帧:平装
·开本:16
·正文语种:英语
·丛书名:世界经典故事
·外文书名:Andersen's Fairy Tales
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内容简介《安徒生童话》(英文版)收集了安徒生早、中、晚三个时期的大部分作品,主要包括《夜鹰》、《海的女儿》、《丑小鸭》、《打火匣》、《笨汉汉斯))、《老头子做事总不会错》、《幸运的套鞋》、《一个贵族和他的女儿们》等。这些作品都植根于现实生活,具有天真烂漫的幻想、巧妙的构思和朴素的幽默感。作者以满腔热情表达了他对人间的爱和关怀,对人的尊严的重视,对人类进步的赞颂。
作者简介安徒生(1805—1875),丹麦作家,世界闻名的童话大师。善于将浪漫主义与现实主义、幻想与幽默、讽刺与讥嘲融合一起,其作品充满情感和人道主义。著有诗歌、剧本、小说和自传《我的童话人生》。代表作有《坚定的锡兵》《丑小鸭》《皇帝的新装》等。
编辑推荐在童话世界里,安徒生这个名字像一座永恒的丰碑,闪耀着最辉煌的光芒。他的一生创作了无数美丽的童话,《安徒生童话》(英文版)精选了数十篇脍炙人口的佳作。童话的情节曲折动人,童话的主人公幸福无比。打开《安徒生童话》(英文版),让我们畅游在安徒生童话的美妙世界中,把生活创造的更美丽。
Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales are like ex-quisite jewels, drawing from us gasps of recognitionand delight. Andersen created intriguing and uniquecharacters such as a tin soldier with only one leg buta big heart. Each one of us at some time, has beentouched by one of Andersen's Fairy Tales. Here you' 11find his classic tales such as The Mermaid,Thumbelina, The Gallant Tin Soldier, and The UglyDuckling, 42 of your favorite tales in all.
目录
The Wild Swans
What the Old Man Does Is Always Right
The Old House
Thumbeline
The Storm Shifts the Signboards
The Shepherdess and the Chimney-sweep
Daddy Dustman (Ole Luksie)
Little Claus and Big Claus
The Shirt Collar
The Little Mermaid
It's Quite True!
The Little Match Girl
Twelve by the Mail
The Garden of Paradise
The Wind Tells About Valdemar Daa and His Daughters
The Gallant Tin Soldier
The Story of a Mother
The Emperor's New Clothes
The Snow Man
"Everything in Its Proper Place"
The Happy Family
The Shadow
The Princess on the Pea
The Nightingale
The Jumpers
The Travelling Companion
The Money-pig
The Galoshes of Fortune
Aunty Toothache
The Tinder Box
Little Ida's Flowers
Elder-Tree Mother
The Brownie at the Butterman's
The Snow Queen
The Swineherd
The Sweethearts
The Pine-tree
"The Will-o'-the-wisps Are in Town," Said the Woman from the Marsh
The Ugly Duckling
The Flying Trunk
The Storks
Silly Hans
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序言Such an original species of writing as that in which Andersenexcelled does not burst full-blown upon the world. It is the result ofmany experiments, many accidents, even, perhaps, of some blunderings.Andersen did not set out deliberately to be a teller of fairy stories, muchless did he expect or desire to be mainly known as the composer ofthese smaating, as he called them, of these trifles or bagatelles. He setout in life intending to be a serious poet, a writer of five-act dramas, anovelist of passion and society. Almost to the very last he persisted itsbelieving that the critics and the public had made a mistake, and thathis ambitious works, in the conventional branches of the profession,were what he would really live by. "Don't you think," he said to me ina sort of coaxing whisper, towards the very close of his life, "don't youthink that people will really come back to ' The Two Baronesses' whenthese smaating have had their day? The Two Baronesses" is an oldnovel of Andersen's, which I had not read, so I could only bend my eyespolitely. But that was in 1874, and people have neither come back to"The Two Baronesses" nor forgotten "The Ugly Duckling" and "TheSnow Queen."
文摘When she was dressed again and had plaited her long hair, she wentto the sparkling spring, drank out of the hollow of her hand, andwandered further into the forest, without knowing where she went. Shethought of her brothers and of the kind God, who surely would notdesert her. He let the wild forest apples grow, so that the hungry mightbe satisfied; he showed her such a tree, the branches of which werebent beneath the weight of the fruit, and there she made her middaymeal. After having propped up the branches of the tree, she walked offinto the darkest parts of the forest. It was so quiet that she heard herown footsteps, heard every little dry leaf being crushed under her foot;not a bird was to be seen, nor could any sunbeam penetrate through thegreat close branches of the trees; the lofty trunks stood so close to oneanother, that when she looked straight before her it appeared as if onerow of 10gs close upon another encircled her; oh, such a solitude shehad never known before.
The night was very dark, and not one single little glow-wormglittered in the moss. Quite distressed, she lay down to sleep; she thenthought she saw the branches part above her, and Our Lord lookingdown upon her with eyes full of tenderness, while little angels peepedout above His head and from under His arms.
When she woke in the morning, she did not know whether she hadbeen dreaming, or whether it had all really happened.
She had not gone many steps, when she met an old woman with abasket of berries, of which the woman gave her some. Elisa asked her ifshe had not seen eleven princes riding through the forest.
"No," said the old woman; "but yesterday I saw eleven swans withgolden crowns on their heads, swimming down the river close by!" And she led Elisa some distance further till they came to a slope, atthe bottom of which a river wound its way; the trees on its banksstretched their long, leafy branches across the water to each other, andwhere they, according to their natural g
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