The little lame prince and his travelling cloak, a parable for old and young
Type
Label
The little lame prince and his travelling cloak, a parable for old and young
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
The little lame prince and his travelling cloak
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
a parable for old and young
Summary
"The Little Lame Prince and his Travelling Cloak" (often published under its shorter title The Little Lame Prince) is a story for children written by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik and first published in 1875.[1] In the story, the young Prince Dolor, whose legs are paralysed due to a childhood trauma, is exiled to a tower in a wasteland. As he grows older, a fairy godmother provides a magical traveling cloak so he can see, but not touch, the world. He uses this cloak to go on various adventures, and develops great wisdom and empathy in the process. Finally he becomes a wise and compassionate ruler of his own land
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Subject
- Princes -- Juvenile fiction
- Happiness -- Juvenile fiction
- Uncles -- Juvenile fiction
- Electronic books
- Adventure stories
- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction
- Magic -- Juvenile fiction
- Kings and rulers -- Juvenile fiction
- Fairy godmothers -- Juvenile fiction
- Inheritance and succession -- Juvenile fiction
- Voyages and travels -- Juvenile fiction
- Children + Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction
- Children with disabilities -- Juvenile fiction
Content
Incoming Resources
- Has instance1
Outgoing Resources
- Classification1
- Contributor1
- Creator1
- Subject13
- Princes -- Juvenile fiction
- Happiness -- Juvenile fiction
- Uncles -- Juvenile fiction
- Electronic books
- Adventure stories
- Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction
- Magic -- Juvenile fiction
- Kings and rulers -- Juvenile fiction
- Fairy godmothers -- Juvenile fiction
- Inheritance and succession -- Juvenile fiction
- Voyages and travels -- Juvenile fiction
- Children + Conduct of life -- Juvenile fiction
- Children with disabilities -- Juvenile fiction
- Content1