Page:The Fables of Æsop (Jacobs).djvu/240

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
210
ÆSOP'S FABLES

ordinary Greek prose Æsops. It was included as the last fable in Alsop's Oxford Æsop, 1798, where it was introduced in order to insert a gibe against Bentley for his "dog in the manger" behaviour with regard to the Royal Manuscripts. See Jebb, Bentley, p. 62.


XLI.—MAN AND WOODEN GOD (Re. vi.)

Taken by Stainhöwel from the hundred Latin prose versions of Greek fables translated by Ranutio D'Arezzo from a manuscript, in 1476, before any of the fables had been published in Greek. It occurs in the Greek prose Æsop 66, from Babrius 119.


XLII.—THE FISHER (Re. vii.)

Told by Herodotus, i. 141. Thence by Ennius, Ed. Vahlen, p. 151. Ranutio got it from prose Æsop, 39, derived from Babrius 9. There is an English proverb: "Fish are not to be caught with a bird-call."


XLIII.—THE SHEPHERD BOY (Re. x.)

Ultimately derived from Babrius: though only extant in the Greek prose Æsop. Gittlbauer has restored it from the prose version in his edition of Babrius, number 199. We are familiar with the story from its inclusion in the spelling-books, like that of Mavor, whence our expression "To cry wolf."


XLIV.—YOUNG THIEF AND MOTHER (Re. xiv.)

From Babrius through the Greek prose. Restored by Gittlbauer 247.