Fables: texte intégral

Front Cover
Gallimard, 1991 - Fiction - 582 pages

Contents

A Monseigneur le Dauphin
21
La vie dEsope le Phrygien
31
A Monseigneur le Dauphin
53
Livre deuxième
76
Livre troisième
100
Livre quatrième
121
Livre cinquième
150
Livre sixième
170
Livre neuvième
267
Livre dixième
300
Livre onzième
324
Livre douzième
342
Fables non recueillies
425
Chronologie succincte
431
Notes
445
Indications bibliographiques
567

Livre septième
193
Livre buitième
226
Table alphabétique des fables
573
Copyright

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About the author (1991)

Although he had a degree to practice law, La Fontaine does not seem to have done so but, rather, spent his life in Paris dependent on aristocratic patrons. His principal contribution to literature was his 12 books of Fables, to which he devoted 30 years of his life. They were published from 1668 to 1694 and are universally appreciated in France by children and adults alike. In drawing on a tradition of the fable going back to Aesop, La Fontaine created a portrait of human life and French society through the representations of animals. His work is marked by great insight into human moral character, while it preaches the value of the middle road.

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