The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quintus/Fable 7

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Numbered 696 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.

3810182The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quintus — Fable 7: The Wulf and the AffeWilliam Caxton

¶ The vij fable is of the wulf and of the asse

MEn ought not to byleue lyghtly the counceylle of hym to whome men purposen to lette / As ye maye see by this fable / Of a wulf whiche somtyme mette with an Asse / to the whiche he sayd / My broder I am l)ongry / wherfor I must nedes ete the / ¶ And thenne the Asse ansuerd ryght benyngly / My lord / with me thow mayst doo what someuer thow wylt / For yf thow etest me / thow shalt putte me oute of grete payne / But I preye the yf thow wylt ete me / that thou vouchesauf to ete me oute of the way / For wel thow knowest that I brynge home the raysyns fro the vyne / and fro the feldes home the corne / ¶ Also wel thow knowest / that I bere home wood fro the forest / And whanne my maister wel do buyld somme edyffyce / I must go fetche the stones from the montayne / And at the other parte I bere the corne vnto the mylle / And after I bere home the floure / And for alle short conclusions I was borne in a cursyd houre / For to alle payne and to alle grete labours I am submytted & get to hit / For the whiche I wylle not that thow ete me here in the waye for the grete vergoyne and shame that therof myght come to me / But I pray the / and Instantly requyre the / that thow wylt here my counceylle / whiche is / that we two go in to the forest / and thow shalt bynde me by thy breste / as thy seruant / And I shalle bynd the by thy neck as my mayster And thow shalt lede me before the in to the wood where someuer thow wylt / to the ende that more secretely thow ete me / to the whiche counceylle the wulf acorded and sayd / I wylle wel that it be donne so / ¶ And whanne they were come in to the forest / they bounde eche other in the maner as aboue is sayd / ¶ And whanne they were wel bounden / the wulf sayd to the Asse / goo we where thow wylt / and goo before for to shewe the waye / And the asse wente before and ledde the wulf in to the ryght waye of his maysters hows / ¶ And whanne the wulf beganne to knowe the way / he sayd to the asse / we goo not the ryght way / to the whiche the asse ansuerd / ¶ My lord saye not that / For certaynly / this is the ryght wey / But for alle that / the wulf wold haue gone backward / But neuertheless the asse ledde hym vnto the hows of his mayster / ¶ And as his mayster and alle his meyny sawe how the Asse drewe the wulf after hym / and wold haue entred in to the hows they came oute with staues and clubbes and smote on the wulf / ¶ And as one of them wold haue caste and smyten a grete stroke vpon the wulfes heede / he brake the cord / wherwith he was bounden / And so scaped and ranne awey vpon the montayne sore hurted and beten / And thenne the asse for the grete ioye he hadde of that he was so scaped fro the wulf / beganne to synge / And the wulf whiche was vpon the montayne / He herd the voys of thasse beganne to saye in hym self / thow mayst wel cry and calle / For I shalle kepe the wel another tyme / that thow shalt not bynd me as thow hast done / but late gone / ¶ And therfore hit is grete folye to byleue the counceylle of hym / to whome men will lette / And to putte hym self in his subiection / And he that ones hath begyled / must kepe hym fro another tyme that he be not deceyued / For he to whome men purposen to doo somme euylle tourn / syth men holden hym at auauntage / men muste putte him self at the vpper syde of hym / And after men shall purueye for their counceylle