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Title
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en_US
6 Fábulas de Samaniego
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en_US
6 Fábulas 19
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en_US
ET 19
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Description
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en_US
Language note: Spanish
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Félix María Samaniego
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Creator
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en_US
Samaniego, Félix María
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Contributor
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en_US
Pascual, María
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Date
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2020-01-23T17:39:24Z
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2019-09
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en_US
1969
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Date Available
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2020-01-23T17:39:24Z
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Date Issued
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en_US
1969
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Abstract
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en_US
Lively cartoons present "The Quail"; "The Two Frogs"; "The Farmer and the Stork"; "The Dog and the Crocodile"; "The Wolf and the Skinny Dog"; and "The Weasel and the Rats." The quail caught in a trap is an example of the many who out of blind appetite sacrifice everything to gain "a nothing." The pond frog admonishes the path frog to get out of the way of so many dangers. Just as the latter is exclaiming in wonder how he could never leave the home of his ancestors, a wagon comes along and kills him. People cling to blind custom! The crocodile wants the dog on the shore to stand still, probably in order to eat him. "It is harmful, I know, to drink and walk, but is it healthy to sit around waiting to get attacked?" "The Wolf and the Skinny Dog" is a replay of the "Bird in the Hand" proverb. "The Weasel and the Rats" has the former disguising herself in a heap of flour. My prize in this 16-page pamphlet about 7" x 8" goes to the first image for "The Wolf and the Skinny Dog," in which the latter is running desperately from the spritely former. This volume, by contrast with most others in the collection, has a printer's design after several fables.
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Identifier
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en_US
11905 (Access ID)
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Language
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en_US
spa
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Publisher
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en_US
Ediciones Toray
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en_US
Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Subject
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Félix María Samaniego