Aesop's Fables > Aesop's Artifacts >...> Separated Book Pages > Pages from a French edition of about 1850
Pages from a French edition of about 1850
- Address Labels
- Album Stamps
- Art Book Offprints
- Articles Presenting La Fontaine's Works
- Bookmark Puzzles
- Bookplates
- Book Reviews
- Box of Chinese characters with pen and booklet
- Brain-Teaser Puzzles: Fables de Nestlé
- Broadsides
- Broadside Reproductions of La Fontaine
- Broadside Reproductions of Florian
- Brochures
- Calendars
- Canvas Prints
- Cartoons about Politics
- Classroom Scroll Hangings
- Comics and Comical Cartoons
- Decals
- Die Cut Papers
- Dioramas
- Dust Jackets
- Encyclopedia Articles
- Engravings
- Envelopes
- Etchings
- Exhibit Guide Pages
- Fable Pages: Der Wolf und das Schaf
- Fairy Tale Stamps
- Flip-Overs
- Gift Certificates
- Christmas Tree Garlands
- Handbills
- Hangable Pictures
- Hidden Pictures/Devinettes
- Leaflets
- Linocut Print
- Lithographs
- Lottery Tickets
- Magazine and Newspaper Illustrations
- Magazine and Newspaper Articles
- Magic Pads
- Maps
- Menus
- Minute Biographies
- Musical Scores
- Notebooks
- Paper Pads
- Painting Reproductions
- Photographs of Art Works
- Other Photographs
- Picture Story Albums
- Pictures to Color
- Plate Reproductions
- Poems Responding to La Fontaine
- Popper Guns
- Posters
- Prints
- Printer's Blocks and Plates
- Receipts
- Scraps
- Scrap Illustrations from Books
- Separated Book Pages
- Sewing Patterns and Designs
- Fables in Silhouette
- Sketches
- Souvenir Currency
- Aesop's Fable Tags and Frames Scrapbook Paper
- Stickers
- Syndicated Newspaper Features
- Teacher Literature Units
- Tissage Imagé: Paper Puzzles for Weaving Together
- Woodcuts
1850? 13 separated pages from a set of (La Fontaine’s?) numbered fables. 4.25” x 7.2”. €50. Unknown source.
I wonder if I will be able to find this edition in our collection. And I wonder if these really are separated pages. There are (page?) numbers besides the individual fable numbers. Is that Fable CXXIII not “La Discorde”? The illustrator has the traditional problem in presenting the face of a lion, presumably because he had never seen one.












