Explore: Fables Ésopiques
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AI-Generated Overview About “fables-%C3%A9sopiques”:
Books Results
Source: The Open Library
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1Little Book of Fables
By Veronica Uribe

“Little Book of Fables” Metadata:
- Title: Little Book of Fables
- Author: Veronica Uribe
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: Median: 128
- Publisher: Groundwood Books
- Publish Date: 2004
“Little Book of Fables” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Fables - Adaptations - Aesop's fables - Fables ésopiques - Greek Fables - Folklore - Fables grecques
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL8212199M
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 54692839
- All ISBNs: 9780888995735 - 0888995733
First Setence:
"A farmer and his wife bought a hen at market one day."
Access and General Info:
- First Year Published: 2004
- Is Full Text Available: Yes
- Is The Book Public: No
- Access Status: Borrowable
Online Access
Downloads Are Not Available:
The book is not public therefore the download links will not allow the download of the entire book, however, borrowing the book online is available.
Online Borrowing:
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- Borrowing from Archive.org: Borrowing link
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Wiki
Source: Wikipedia
Wikipedia Results
Search Results from Wikipedia
The Fly in the Soup
an independent version of the fable of the fly (La Mouche) in his Mythologie ou recueil des fables grecques, esopiques et sybaritiques (Orléans, 1750)
The Eagle Wounded by an Arrow
provided a four-line poetic version in his Mythologie ou recueil des fables grecques, ésopiques et sybaritiques (Orléans 1750). The moral he drew from the story
Edelestand du Méril
1852. Poésies inédites du moyen âge, précédées d'une histoire de la fable ésopique. 1854. Floire et Blanceflor, poèmes du XIIIe, publiés d'après les manuscrits
Antoine Le Bailly
authored some operas, but is mostly known for his fables. A first collection was published under the title Fables nouvelles, suivies de poésies fugitives (Paris
Romulus (fabulist)
of Adémar de Chabannes (67 fables) is now considered to derive from the Romulus Ordinarius. The Romulus Roberti (22 fables) is taken from the Anglo-Latin
Gualterus Anglicus
Anglo-Norman poet and scribe who produced a seminal version of Aesop's Fables (in distichs) around the year 1175. This author was earlier called the Anonymus
Pierre de Frasnay
des fables grecques, esopiques et sybaritiques (Orléans, 1750), to which he added prose reflections drawing out the human lessons of the fables. Édouard