The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Secundus/Fable 19

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The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Secundus (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 19: The Man and the Wesel
Aesop3784394The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Secundus — Fable 19: The Man and the Wesel1889William Caxton

¶ The xix fable is of the man and of the wesel

MEn ought wel to loke and behold the courage & thought of hym / whiche dothe good / and the ende / wherfor he dothe hit / wherof Esope reherceth suche a fable / Of a man whiche tooke a wesell / the whiche chaced after the rattes wythynne his hows /  ¶ And after whanne he had taken her / he wold haue kylled her /  ¶ And whanne the poure Weselle sawe the wrathe and furour of her mayster / she cryed to hym / mercy / sayenge thus / My lord I requyre and praye the / that thow wylt pardonne to me / and that thow wylt reward me of the grete seruyse whiche I haue done to the / For euer I haue chaced the rats oute of thy hows /   ¶ And the man sayd to her / thow dydest not that for the loue of me / but only thow hast done it for to fylle thy bely  For yf thow haddest done it for the loue of me / I shold haue pardonned to the /  ¶ And by cause that thow dydest not for to serue me / but for to lette and adōmage me / For that the rattes myght not ete / thou barest it awey / And soo bycause / that thow arte wexed fatte of myne owne brede / thow must rendre and geue to me alle the fatnesse / whiche thou hast conquered and goten here / For he that robbeth shall be robbed / Juxta illud / pellatores pillabuntur / For hit suffyseth not to doo wel / but men must haue good wylle and good entencion for to do hit / For an almesse that is done for vayne glorye / is not merited / but dismeryted / wherfore I shal not pardonne the / but incontynent and withoute taryenge thow shalt deye / For by cause that thow hast deseruyd no mercy / thow shalt now be putte to dethe