First published three years before the Jean de la Fontaine's Fables
began to appear, the verse compositions in Complete Tales in Verse
were the fruit of Fontaine's wicked delight in reading Boccacio's
Decameron, Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, the works of Rabelais, and
others. Marital misdemeanors, resourceful females, and addled males
inspire some of the author's most richly inventive plotting, which
recasts the source stories in his own witty words. While Rabelais,
Voltaire, and Molière are more commonly cited for their comedic virtues,
this collection demonstrates Fontaine's deserving place alongside
them.