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Examples
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In his famous fable “The Fox and the Turkeys,” Jean de La Fontaine tells of a group of confident turkeys who suffered the consequences of being preoccupied with an opponent.
Egonomics David Marcum 2007
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Jean de La Fontaine (16211695) LE singe avec le léopard
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Jean de La Fontaine (16211695) UN mal qui répand la terreur,
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François de Maucroix (1619-1708) and Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695).
The Library of William Congreve William Congreve 1699
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A great supporter of the arts, Louis patronized the foremost writers and artists of his time, including Molière, Jean Racine, Jean de La Fontaine, and Charles Le Brun.
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A great supporter of the arts, Louis patronized the foremost writers and artists of his time, including Molière, Jean Racine, Jean de La Fontaine, and Charles Le Brun.
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The series consisted of adaptations of libertine fiction from the European literary canon, original authors included Marguerite of Navarre, Comte de Mirabeau, Nicolas Restif de La Bretonne, Anton Chekhov, Chaucer, Guy de Maupassant, Jean de La Fontaine, Théophile Gautier, Daniel Defoe and Aristophanes.
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The series consisted of adaptations of libertine fiction from the European literary canon, original authors included Marguerite of Navarre, Comte de Mirabeau, Nicolas Restif de La Bretonne, Anton Chekhov, Chaucer, Guy de Maupassant, Jean de La Fontaine, Théophile Gautier, Daniel Defoe and Aristophanes.
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“A foe by being over-heeded”: Jean de La Fontaine, The Original Fables of La Fontaine, trans.
Egonomics David Marcum 2007
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Ribaud after J. B. Oudry from Jean de La Fontaine, Fables Paris, 1755-59.
Savoring The Past Wheaton Barbara Ketcham 1983
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