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Winkie The full text of Ole
Lukøie at
Wikisource Danish
Wikisource has
original text
related to this article: Ole
Lukøie Media related to Ole Lukoje...
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Naughty Boy" (1835) "The Nightingale" (1843) "The Old House" (1847) "Ole
Lukoie" (1841) "The Philosopher's Stone" (1858) "The
Princess and the Pea" (1835)...
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Archived from the
original on
December 31, 2018.
Retrieved June 1, 2019. "Ole
Lukoie". The Hans
Christian Andersen Center.
Archived from the
original on March...
- (1837) "The Most
Incredible Thing" (1870) "The Nightingale" (1843) "Ole
Lukoie" (1841) "The
Princess and the Pea" (1835) "The Red Shoes" (1845) "The Shadow"...
-
eliminating religious themes and
cutting short the
original ending. 24 "Ole
Lukoie the Dustman" / "Ole the Dream-god"-「ねむりの精 オーレ」- "Nemuri no sei Ōre"...
- (1837) "The Most
Incredible Thing" (1870) "The Nightingale" (1843) "Ole
Lukoie" (1841) "The
Princess and the Pea" (1835) "The Red Shoes" (1845) "The Shadow"...
- Prince" ("Den onde Fyrste") (1840) "The Buckwheat" ("Boghveden") (1841) "Ole
Lukoie" ("Ole Lukøje") (1841) "The Swineherd" ("Svinedrengen") (1841) "A Rose from...
- (Eventyr,
fortalte for Børn. Ny Samling.
Tredie Hefte)
comprising "Ole
Lukoie" ("Ole Lukøje"), "The Rose Elf" ("Rosen-Alfen"), "The Swineherd" ("Svinedrengen")...
- "Shen's Daughter"—Mary Soon Lee "The
Robber Girl, the Strangers, and Ole
Lukoie"—Phyllis Ann Karr "Too in the Morning"—George Barr "The Song of the Stones"—Diana...
- installment. Was
published on 20
December 1841 and
contained four tales: "Ole
Lukoie" ("Ole Lukøje") "The Rose Elf" ("Rosen-Alfen") "The Swineherd" ("Svinedrengen")...