Unlike some of the other medieval collections, the Romulus known as Ad Rufum (or Magistro Rufo, from its being addressed to a certain "Rufus") contains almost exclusively fables that are also extant in Phaedrus. So, unlike some of the other, more extensive collections, this one gives you a sense of what it means to have Phaedrus's poems put into prose, with only a couple of fables included here that are not found in Phaedrus. The links here are to Hervieux's edition.
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