Proper noun
Lesage (plural Lesages)
A surname.
Antoine Galland 's final volume of The Thousand and One Nights had appeared in 1717, and in the plots of these tales Lesage and his collaborators found inspiration, both exotic and (more importantly) coherent, for new plays. Source: Internet
For the plays, see Lesage and Dorneval; for an analysis, see Storey, Pierrot: a critical history, pp. 37–58. Source: Internet
Storey, Pierrot: a critical history, pp. 52, 53. (For a typical farce by Lesage during these years, see his Harlequin, King of Serendib of 1713.) In the main, Pierrot's inaugural years at the Foires were rather degenerate ones. Source: Internet
Another committed journalist, Michel Van Schendel, contributed some scoops on the economy that displeased the conservative elements in the Lesage cabinet. Source: Internet
Granted, these lead-heavy concepts are delivered through lead singer George LeSage Clarke’s wind-tunnel howl, a vocal approach that’s a direct descendant of black metal’s searing burn and liberally applied throughout this massive album like brushed oil. Source: Internet
Lesage talked on. Source: Internet