says in his rhyme that it does not matter who the judge is; his interpreters have taken him at his word.
James Carlo
Drawing Teacher
than, as usual, a fox as the judge at the finishing line. Auguste Delierre makes the judge a monkey in the 1883 edition of La Fontaine's fables that he illustrated.[15][16] La Fontaine .
John Doe
Dmaths teacher
Disney cartoon version of "The Tortoise and the Hare" (1935).[14] Another departure from the ordinary in Grandville's etching is the choice of a mole (complete with dark glasses) rather .
Shephin Methew
science teacher
Among the many illustrations of the fable, that by the French caricaturist Jean Grandville is novel in portraying the tortoise as running upright. This is also how he is shown in the Walt.
Marcus Smith
principal
but none in English before Francis Barlow's edition of has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since.
James Carlo
art & craft teacher
earliest being Bernard Salomon's Les Fables d'Esope Phrygien, mises en Ryme Francoise (1547).[11] Versions followed from the Netherlands (in Dutch, 1567) and Flanders (in French, 1578)[12.
Smantha Faulkner
geography teacher
There is a Greek version of the fable but no early Latin version. For this reason it did not begin to appear in printed editions of Aesop's fables until the 16th century, one of the .