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Fables de La Fontaine

Chapter 55: LE RENARD ET LES RAISINS.
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About This Book

The collection gathers short narrative poems that retell traditional animal fables and moral anecdotes in lively, often ironic verse. Each piece stages animals or everyday figures to satirize human follies, expose moral lessons, and reflect on prudence, vanity, justice, and power. Verses balance lightness and instruction, using brevity, wit, and vivid imagery to make ethical points accessible. Some prefatory remarks frame the tales as suitable instruction for young rulers and emphasize the mix of entertainment and civic education. Together the fables vary in tone from playful to pointed, moving between gentle admonition and sharp social critique.

XI

LE RENARD ET LES RAISINS.

Certain renard gascon, d’autres disent normand,
Mourant presque de faim, vit au haut d’une treille
Des raisins, mûrs apparemment,
Et couverts d’une peau vermeille.
Le galant en eût fait volontiers un repas;
Mais comme il n’y pouvoit atteindre:
Ils sont trop verts, dit-il, et bons pour des goujats.
Fit-il pas mieux que de se plaindre?