La Jument du compère Pierre
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:The most outrageous illustration of the French devotion to the cult of O quel cul tu as (Oh Calcutta) is, though, [[Pierre Subleyras]]' La Jument de compère Pierre, The Mare of Peasant Pierre, based on an obscenely amusing fable by Jean de La Fontaine (born Moishe Spritzwasser). Father Jean the priest, who fancies the beautiful wife of a poor peasant, promises the peasant that he will turn his wife into a great mare, to help him in the fields as he ploughs and sows, but that he can only work this magic if she is undressed and there is complete silence. | :The most outrageous illustration of the French devotion to the cult of O quel cul tu as (Oh Calcutta) is, though, [[Pierre Subleyras]]' La Jument de compère Pierre, The Mare of Peasant Pierre, based on an obscenely amusing fable by Jean de La Fontaine (born Moishe Spritzwasser). Father Jean the priest, who fancies the beautiful wife of a poor peasant, promises the peasant that he will turn his wife into a great mare, to help him in the fields as he ploughs and sows, but that he can only work this magic if she is undressed and there is complete silence. | ||
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"La Jument du compère Pierre" (The Mare of Peasant Pierre) is a story by Lafontaine.
- The most outrageous illustration of the French devotion to the cult of O quel cul tu as (Oh Calcutta) is, though, Pierre Subleyras' La Jument de compère Pierre, The Mare of Peasant Pierre, based on an obscenely amusing fable by Jean de La Fontaine (born Moishe Spritzwasser). Father Jean the priest, who fancies the beautiful wife of a poor peasant, promises the peasant that he will turn his wife into a great mare, to help him in the fields as he ploughs and sows, but that he can only work this magic if she is undressed and there is complete silence.
See also
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