Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Man And His Image.[1] by Jean de La Fontaine
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The Man And His Image.[1]

    By Jean de La Fontaine



To M. The Duke De La Rochefoucauld.

    A man, who had no rivals in the love
    Which to himself he bore,
    Esteem'd his own dear beauty far above
    What earth had seen before.
    More than contented in his error,
    He lived the foe of every mirror.
    Officious fate, resolved our lover
    From such an illness should recover,
    Presented always to his eyes
    The mute advisers which the ladies prize; -
    Mirrors in parlours, inns, and shops, -
    Mirrors the pocket furniture of fops, -
    Mirrors on every lady's zone,[2]
    From which his face reflected shone.
    What could our dear Narcissus do?
    From haunts of men he now withdrew,
    On purpose that his precious shape
    From every mirror might escape.
    But in his forest glen alone,
    Apart from human trace,
    A watercourse,
    Of purest source,
    While with unconscious gaze
    He pierced its waveless face,
    Reflected back his own.
    Incensed with mingled rage and fright,
    He seeks to shun the odious sight;
    But yet that mirror sheet, so clear and still,
    He cannot leave, do what he will.

    Ere this, my story's drift you plainly see.
    From such mistake there is no mortal free.
    That obstinate self-lover
    The human soul doth cover;
    The mirrors follies are of others,
    In which, as all are genuine brothers,
    Each soul may see to life depicted
    Itself with just such faults afflicted;
    And by that charming placid brook,
    Needless to say, I mean your Maxim Book.



Extra Info:
[1] This is one of La Fontaine's most admired fables, and is one of the few for which he did not go for the groundwork to some older fabulist. The Duke de la Rochefoucauld, to whom it was dedicated, was the author of the famous "Reflexions et Maximes Morales," which La Fontaine praises in the last lines of his fable. La Rochefoucauld was La Fontaine's friend and patron. The "Maximes" had achieved a second edition just prior to La Fontaine's publication of this first series of his Fables, in 1668. "The Rabbits" (Book X., Fable 15.), published in the second collection, in 1678-9, is also dedicated to the Duke, who died the following year, 1680. See Translator's Preface.
[2] Lady's zone. - One of La Fontaine's commentators remarks upon this passage that it is no exaggeration of the foppishness of the times in which the poet wrote, and cites the instance that the canons of St. Martin of Tours wore mirrors on their shoes, even while officiating in church.



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