This is one of Wilde's handful of fairy tales - short and sweet. It tells the story of a young shepherd boy who is the illegitimate son of a king who has recently died. When he's taken to the palace to take the throne, he has three dreams, all of which reflect on the struggles of the poor. The young king wakes and decides to fashion his own robe, scepter, and crown.
Themes: Religion/ Repentance and Salvation/ Love/ Abuse of Power/ Kindness
Opener: “The young king was alone in his beautiful room in the palace. He was only sixteen years old and he was wild-eyed, like an animal of the forest. The old king’s servants found him in the forest. At that time, the boy believed that he was the son of a poor forester. He was brought up by the forester. But now he knew that he was the child of the old king’s daughter.”
Summary: Seven short stories that have various moral lessons from needing to be kind to others, that the soul and the body being indivisible, about repentance to the notion of power and money corrupting people.
Final Review: Hardly any of the seven stories indulged me.
Definitivamente "The happy prince" y "The selfish giant" son mis favoritas, que joya de cuentos y más en su idioma original tienen una escencia hermosa.
-PENGUIN READERS,Level 3 -Time 5/29=10minutes 5/30=10minutes 5/31=10minutes 6/1=15minutes 6/2=15minutes -7 words summary:king-birthday-dwarf-dance-angry-die-heart -Discussion question Q:What is your memory in your birthday? A:When I was an elementary school student, my friends held my birthday pirty and celebrated me. Then, all of them gave me present, such as a cake, an album, and a sportswear. It was my great memory.
This book has seven short stories. Some of them are related to king, rich person. They had little difficult words, so I could not understand well. However, I knew the difference of thinking between rich people and general people (just in the case of this book).
'In war, answered the weaver, 'the strong make slaves of the weak, and in peace the rich make slaves of the poor. We must work to live, but they pay us so little that we die. We grow the corn, but we have no bread. We are slaves, ... Oscar Wilde, The young king and other stories, Essex: Longman, new edition 1976, p 3.