Item #02840 Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine. LA FONTAINE, Bayntun of Bath, Jean de.
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine
Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine

Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine

Paris: J. Lemonnyer, 1884. Item #02840

Lusty Stories
With Eighty-Five Hand-Colored Engravings
From the Original Plates By Eisen

LA FONTAINE, [Jean de]. Tales and Novels in Verse of J. De La Fontaine. With Eighty-Five Engravings by Eisen Printed From the Original Plates. In Two Volumes. Paris: J. Lemonnyer, 1884.

Third edition in English thus, all rare, originally issued in 1877, and a Large Paper Copy. Two octavo volumes. xi, 252; x, 334, [1] pp. Eighty-five hand-colored stipple and line engravings. Printed by Charles Hérissey, Evreux.

Bound by Bayntun of Bath for Brentano's of New York in early twentieth century full midnight blue crushed morocco with gilt-ruled border and four-fillet geometric frame with open dots at corners. Gilt tooled raised bands, gilt ruled compartments. All edges gilt. Blue silk endleaves. A fine copy.

A fine reprint of the first edition in English of Charles-Dominique-Joseph Eisen's (1720–1778) richly illustrated edition of La Fontaine's Contes et nouvelles en vers (1762).

"It is as a designer of illustrations and vignettes for books that [Eisen] is best known. The most remarkable of these are the designs for the Fermiers généraux edition of the Contes of La Fontaine, published at Amsterdam [i.e. Paris: Barbou]in 1762; Ovid's Metamorphoses, 1767-71; the Henriade of Voltaire, 1770; the Baisers of Dorat, 1770; and the Vies des Peintres hollandais et flamands of Descamps, published in 1751-63" (Wiki).

"Eisen's...designs for La Fontaine are the liveliest and most adroit that he ever drew. Thoroughly at home with the varied action of these lusty stories - their love passages, their intrigues, their practical jokes - he is also expert in choosing the moment in each that will best serve his purpose as an illustrator...The detailed meaning of his concentrated compositions is to be grasped only after prolonged examination. The world that they depict is that of the homme moyen sensuel, where beauty exists only to satisfy desire and youth has its way over age, where cynicism is the common coin and virtue the calculated means to an end. But before the force and vitality of Eisen's scenes, normal scruples dissolve in admiration" (Ray, The Art of the French Illustrated Book 1700-1914, p. 54).

Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695) was the most famous French fabulist and one of the most widely read French poets of the 17th century. He is known above all for his Fables , which provided a model for subsequent fabulists across Europe and numerous alternative versions in France, and in French regional language.

"Like his miscellaneous works, La Fontaine’s Contes et nouvelles en vers (Tales and Novels in Verse) considerably exceed the Fables in bulk. The first of them was published in 1664, the last posthumously. He borrowed them mostly from Italian sources, in particular Giovanni Boccaccio, but he preserved none of the 14th-century poet’s rich sense of reality. The essence of nearly all his Contes lies in their licentiousness, which is not presented with frank Rabelaisian verve but is transparently and flippantly disguised. Characters and situations are not meant to be taken seriously; they are meant to amuse and are too monotonous to amuse for long. The Contes are the work far less of a poet than of an ingenious stylist and versifier. The accent of La Fontaine the narrator enlivens the story with playfully capricious comments, explanations, and digressions" (Enclyclopedia Britannica).

Price: $2,250.00