ABC Petits Contes (Short Stories)


Book Description

Livre bilingue français/anglais pour enfants (Bilingual French/English Children Book) Jules Lemaître a beaucoup aimé les enfants. Il eut lui-même, lorsqu'il fut professeur à Grenoble, une petite fille, Madeleine, qui mourut au bout d'un mois et dont il ne se consola jamais. Plus tard il devint un parrain multiple et délicieux. Tout le monde connaît les contes charmants écrits pour ses filleules et ses filleuls. A Paris, dans son grand atelier de la rue d'Artois, tapissé de l'or pâli des précieuses reliures, Jules Lemaître se plaisait à recevoir des enfants, les comblait de gâteaux et de sucreries et ouvrait pour eux un bahut mystérieux de sa bibliothèque, qui répandait alors sur le tapis les jouets les plus inattendus, collectionnés avec presque autant d'amour que les livres. C'est ainsi qu'il fut amené à écrire un Alphabet. (Jules Lemaître loved children. He had himself, when he was a professor at Grenoble, a daughter, Madeleine, who died after a month and he never consoled. Later he became a multiple and delicious godfather. Everyone knows the charming stories written for his godchildren. In Paris, in his large studio in the Rue d'Artois, lined with pale gold of precious bindings, Jules Lemaître was pleased to receive children, gobble them with cakes and sweets and opened for them a mysterious chest of his library, which then spread on the carpet the most unexpected toys, collected with almost as much love as books. Thus he was led to write an Alphabet)




ABC Petits Contes (Short Stories)


Book Description

Jules Lemaître a beaucoup aimé les enfants. Il eut lui-même, lorsqu'il fut professeur à Grenoble, une petite fille, Madeleine, qui mourut au bout d'un mois et dont il ne se consola jamais.Plus tard il devint un parrain multiple et délicieux. Tout le monde connaît les contes charmants écrits pour ses filleules et ses filleuls.A Paris, dans son grand atelier de la rue d'Artois, tapissé de l'or pâli des précieuses reliures, Jules Lemaître se plaisait à recevoir des enfants, les comblait de gâteaux et de sucreries et ouvrait pour eux un bahut mystérieux de sa bibliothèque, qui répandait alors sur le tapis les jouets les plus inattendus, collectionnés avec presque autant d'amour que les livres.C'est ainsi qu'il fut amené à écrire un Alphabet.(Jules Lemaître loved children. He had himself, when he was a professor at Grenoble, a daughter, Madeleine, who died after a month and he never consoled.Later he became a multiple and delicious godfather. Everyone knows the charming stories written for his godchildren.In Paris, in his large studio in the Rue d'Artois, lined with pale gold of precious bindings, Jules Lemaître was pleased to receive children, gobble them with cakes and sweets and opened for them a mysterious chest of his library, which then spread on the carpet the most unexpected toys, collected with almost as much love as books.Thus he was led to write an Alphabet)




ABC Short Stories


Book Description

François Élie Jules Lemaître always loved children. Hisown beloved daughter, Madeleine, died when she wasonly a month old, and he never had any more children.But he had many godchildren, and he loved to tell themstories. The collection of short, alphabet-themed storiesin this volume was born from this love of children andstorytelling.This bilingual edition is designed to assist those learningFrench. The original French text appears on theright-hand pages of the book, with the correspondingEnglish translation on the left-hand pages.




ABC Short Stories


Book Description

Jules Lemaître loved children. He had himself, when he was a professor at Grenoble, a daughter, Madeleine, who died after a month and he never consoled. Later he became a multiple and delicious godfather. Everyone knows the charming stories written for his godchildren. In Paris, in his large studio in the Rue d'Artois, lined with pale gold of precious bindings, Jules Lemaître was pleased to receive children, gobble them with cakes and sweets and opened for them a mysterious chest of his library, which then spread on the carpet the most unexpected toys, collected with almost as much love as books. Thus he was led to write an Alphabet




ABC Short Tales


Book Description

The book includes delicious short tales. It is ideal to read to children of all ages, encouraging creativity and interest for the things of the world. The book was organized based on the French Alphabet of the early twentieth century, when there were not a letter W. Thus, each tale has as title a reference mnemonic word or a letter. So, being translated from the French, it was not possible to maintain full correspondence between these key words in both languages. For this reason the French version was kept for reference. The tales are: Donkey (Âne), Sheep (Bélier), Duck (Canard), Dragonfly (Demoiselle), Snail (Escargot), Ant (Fourmi), Cake (Gateau), Swallow (Hirondelle), Ibis (Ibis), Toys (Jouets), Kangaroo (Kangourou), Wolf (Loup), Sparrow (Moineau), Snow (Neige), Ear (Oreille), Pea (Pois), Tail (Queue ), Nightingale (Rossignol), Pine (Sapin), Tortuise (Tortue), Universe (Univers), Violets (Violettes), Xavier (Xavier), Yvonne (Yvonne), and Zero (Zéro). The author is Jules Lemaître and texts of Hans Christian Andersen and Florian are also used. The original publication came in 1919 with the name “ABC Petites Contes.”




ABC Short Stories


Book Description

Jules Lemaître loved children. He had himself, when he was a professor at Grenoble, a daughter, Madeleine, who died after a month and he never consoled.Later he became a multiple and delicious godfather. Everyone knows the charming stories written for his godchildren.In Paris, in his large studio in the Rue d'Artois, lined with pale gold of precious bindings, Jules Lemaître was pleased to receive children, gobble them with cakes and sweets and opened for them a mysterious chest of his library, which then spread on the carpet the most unexpected toys, collected with almost as much love as books.Thus he was led to write an Alphabet




Maryland School Bulletin


Book Description




The Adventures of a Red Ant


Book Description

"The Reddish Polyergus, the most powerful ants of France by their courage in the fighting, form a people composed of four orders of citizens: males, females, neutrals or warriors ... and slaves, workers conquered on suitable species. I am neutral, and I am proud of it. Is there a life more noble, more chivalrous than mine: to fight, to conquer or to die!... We live for years, and all this time we spend it to serve the country and the nation, to contribute to its greatness, to its power; to make us serve as kings ... and enjoy the sun!"




Climate Change - Global Warming


Book Description

A brutal and catastrophic warming could put humanity in short-term risk, a climate hypothesis that was first presented as highly speculative and subject to more science fiction than a serious prospective, before taking consistency by the scientists from the Rio Summit, and the difficulties of implementing the Kyoto Protocol. This possibility is beginning to be considered by the futurists, including the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), under the aegis of the UN, then a university report synthesis and evaluation that a large and abrupt changes may jeopardize all or part of humanity, biodiversity or societies and ecosystems to adapt capacities. The large press is gradually echoed, referring to the international climate negotiations "more difficult than on nuclear disarmament" and risking "the future of humanity". Tens of thousands of deaths are attributed to heat waves. Floods are expected to increase. The Arctic is warming faster than other European regions, resulting in a doubling of melting of the Greenland ice cap. The sea has risen, with local isostatic variations. Impacts are expected on the flora (flowering, tree diseases..., but also on wildlife: zoonoses, range change) and diseases (ticks, some mosquitoes and sandflies go back further north and at altitude). The pollen season is longer. The plankton is changing and - outside marine environments - the migration/adaptation speed of many species is insufficient compared to the speed of biological and geoclimatic disturbances, which aggravates the risk of extinction. Agricultural yields are expected to decrease to the south and perhaps increase to the north. The reality of risk and the phenomenon is now almost consensus. Faced with the problem, three approaches complement each other: fight against greenhouse gas emissions, carbon sinks, and adaptation. DOI: 10.58679/MM60985