Fables de la Fontaine dédiées a la Jeunesse
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Authors
Coste, Pierre
La Fontaine, Jean de
Issue Date
1802
Type
Book, Whole
Language
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Abstract
This stocky little volume reproduces, one year later, Le Prieur's Paris edition. Here the three volumes (I-VI, VII-IX, X-XII) are bound together with fresh paginations and clear dividing points. As Bodemann (#191.2) notes, the illustrations are changed and mirror-opposites of those in the Le Prieur original edition. My inspection suggests that they are not necessarily inferior to the earlier engravings. The seventy-one pages of illustrations -- three to a page -- are all gathered at the ends of the respective volumes. As I mention a propos of the original edition, Coste's commentary had been used as early as 1743. This book is the same size as the original edition (4 x 6¾), and so the illustrations are quite small. Many of them are here nicely hand-colored. The illustrations in this edition feature each a second title in German. Bodemann's earlier entry notes the lack of background in the outdoor scenes, which continues here. The illustrations were described as presenting Darstellung durch feine, genaue Zeichnungen der Personen und Tiere mit überzeichneter Mimik und Gestik. That tendency continues here. Particularly good examples here include Les Deux Mulets (I 4); CJ (I 20); The Crow Imitating the Eagle (II 16); WC (III 9); The Ass and the Lapdog (IV 5); The Man and the Wooden Idol (IV 8); TB (V 20); DS (VI 17); MM (VII 10); Two Cocks (VII 13); Le Dépositaire Infidèle (IX 1); and Le Renard, le Loup et le Cheval (XII 17). The lions and elephants here are not very realistic. This is a very nice find in those closed bookcases at Second Story Books.
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Chez Gerard Fischer le Cadet
Chez Gerard Fleischer le Cadet
Chez Gerard Fleischer le Cadet