The Frost King

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Frost_King an entity of type: Thing

"The Frost King" (originally titled "Autumn Leaves") is a short story about King Jack Frost written by Helen Keller, then 11. Keller's teacher, Anne Sullivan, had mentioned that the autumn leaves were "painted ruby, emerald, gold, crimson, and brown," and Keller, by her own account, imagined fairies doing the work. Keller wrote a story about how a cask of jewels, being transported by fairy servants, had melted in the sun and covered the leaves. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Frost King
rdf:langString The Frost King
xsd:integer 5807208
xsd:integer 1124366515
xsd:integer 1891
rdf:langString Perkins annual report
rdf:langString Autumn Leaves
rdf:langString "The Frost King" (originally titled "Autumn Leaves") is a short story about King Jack Frost written by Helen Keller, then 11. Keller's teacher, Anne Sullivan, had mentioned that the autumn leaves were "painted ruby, emerald, gold, crimson, and brown," and Keller, by her own account, imagined fairies doing the work. Keller wrote a story about how a cask of jewels, being transported by fairy servants, had melted in the sun and covered the leaves. As a birthday gift, Keller sent the story to Michael Anagnos, the head of the Perkins School for the Blind, who published the story in the January 1892 edition of The Mentor, the Perkins alumni magazine. It was picked up by The Goodson Gazette, a journal on deaf-blind education, based in Virginia.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11097

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