The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quintus/Fable 3

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Numbered 562 in the Perry Index. Translated from French by William Caxton and first published in 1484. Click here to create an annotated version of this text.

3810175The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quintus — Fable 3: The Foxe and the CockeWilliam Caxton

¶ The thyrd fable is of the foxe and of the cocke /

OFtyme moche talkynge letteth / As hit appiereth by this fable / Of a foxe / whiche came toward a Cocke / And sayd to hym / I wold fayne wete / yf thow canst as wel synge as thy fader dyde / And thenne the Cock shette his eyen / and beganne to crye and synge /  ¶ And thenne the Foxe toke and bare hym awey / And the peple of the towne cryed / the foxe bereth awey the cok /  ¶ And thenne the Cocke sayd thus to the Foxe / My lord vnderstandest thow not / what the peple sayth / that thow berest awey theyr cock / telle to them / that it is thyn / and not theyrs/ And as the foxe sayd / hit is not yours / but it is myn / the cok scaped fro the foxe mouthe / and flough vpon a tree / And thenne the Cok sayd to the fox thow lyest / For I am theyrs and not thyn / And thenne the foxe beganne to hytte erthe bothe with his mouthe & heed sayenge / mouthe / thow hast spoken to moche / thow sholdest haue eten the Cok / had not be thyn ouer many wordes / And therfor ouer moche talkyng letteth / and to moche crowynge smarteth / therfore kepe thy self fro ouer many wordes / to thende / that thow repentest the not