Item
Fables Choisies de M. Jauffret, Tradutes en Vers Latins (Spine: Selectae Fabulae), Vol. II
- Title
- en_US Fables Choisies de M. Jauffret, Tradutes en Vers Latins (Spine: Selectae Fabulae), Vol. II
- Description
- en_US This is a hardbound book (hard cover)
- en_US Language note: Bilingual: Latin/French
- en_US Louis-François Jauffret; Translated by Adolphe Jaufret
- Creator
- en_US No Author See all items with this value
- Contributor
- en_US Beisson
- Date
- 2016-01-25T15:38:36Z
- en_US 2014-08
- en_US 1828
- Date Available
- 2016-01-25T15:38:36Z
- Date Issued
- en_US 1828
- Abstract
- en_US The title-page continues: Avec le Texte en Regard; Suivies de Diverses Poésies Latines. The pair of volumes, of which this is Volume II, are a genuine curiosity. Louis-François Jauffret was editor of a volume of Florian's fables in 1801 and in 1815 he published his own volume of ten books of French fables. Bodemann (#225) speaks of these fables in the 1815 volume as Insgesamt 200 gereimte Versfabeln, Neuerfindungen mit Stoffanleihen bei verschiedenen Fabeldichtern. This collection has the second edition of that book, published in 1826. In this present pair of volumes, thirteen years after the first edition and two years after the second, his son, apparently a professor of law, publishes five books of his father's fables with Latin translations on facing pages. Picard had this unusual find to start a great Parisian weekend for me. As Picard notes, there are four full-page lithographs by Beisson in the two volumes, two of them as frontispieces. Here L'Ours et l'Ane serves as frontispiece, and Venus et la Colombe appears with its fable facing 54. As a sample, I read L'Ours et l'Ane. A bear facing death after years of reigning honorably is confronted by an ass, who recalls a tawdry chapter in the bear's history. The ass alleges that the bear was once a street entertainer. The bear denies it, imprisons him, and threatens death. What did I do? asks the ass. Courtiers tell him that powerful people do not like to have their unseemly past deeds recalled. The Varia Carmina section taking up 92 pages at the end of this volume consists of a mixture, as the closing T of C for this volume indicates, of six French poems presented bilingually and a number of Latin poems. Should one presume that the latter are by Jauffret fils?
- Identifier
- en_US 10232 (Access ID)
- Publisher
- en_US Chez A. Delalain
- en_US Paris
- Subject
- en_US Louis-François Jauffret See all items with this value
- en_US Title Page Scanned See all items with this value
- Type
- en_US Book, Whole
- Item sets
- Carlson Fable Collection Books