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Title
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en_US
Les Fables de Jean-Pierre-Claris de Florian
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en_US
Les Chefs-d'Oeuvre
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Description
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en_US
Language note: French
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Florian
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Creator
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en_US
Florian
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Contributor
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en_US
Vimar, August
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en_US
Theuriet, André (Foreword)
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Date
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2022-11-07T16:12:58Z
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2022-09
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en_US
1932?
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Date Available
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2022-11-07T16:12:58Z
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Date Issued
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en_US
1932
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Abstract
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en_US
Here is apparently a 1932 reprint of the first printing, also by Laurens, in 1899. I note several small changes. The cloth cover is now red. The page facing the title page has expanded the number of books being advertised and divided them into two series. This book belongs to the former, "Les Chefs-d'Oeuvre," along with Morin's La Fontaine. The only clue to this printing's date comes at the bottom of that page: "9.32." As I wrote of the 1899 printing, this is a beautiful book. On the cover is an animal excursion led by the monkey with a magic lantern on his back. The title-page illustration is an animal parade led by the fox barrister. All 110 fables are represented. Bodemann counts 75 illustrations in the text. Of these I find three (Bodemann counts only two) that are full-page colored illustrations: "Le Singe qui montre la Lanterne magique" (34), "L'habit d'Arlequin" (84), and "Le Léopard et l'Ecureuil" (118). We both count five further colored illustrations: "La Carpe et les Carpillons" (10); "Le Danseur de corde et le Balancier" (42); "Le Paon, les deux Oisons et le Plongeon" (68); "Le Lapin et la Sarcelle" (95); and "Le Procès des deux Renards" (111). The uncolored drawings are also often delightful. Particularly spirited are these illustrations: "Le Boeuf, le Cheval et l'Ane" (5); "L'Ane et la Flûte" (115); and "Le Crocodile et l'Esturgeon" (124). There is a full T of C at the end.
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Identifier
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en_US
381.1
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en_US
13175 (Access ID)
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Language
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en_US
fre
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Publisher
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en_US
Henri Laurens
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en_US
Paris
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Subject
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Florian