The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quartus/Fable 16

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
3810148The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quartus — Fable 16: The Camel and the FleeWilliam Caxton

¶ The xvj fable is of the camel / and of the flee

HE that hath no myght ought not to gloryfye ne preyse hym self of nothynge / As reherceth to vs this presente fable of a camell / whiche bare a grete charge or burden It happed that a flee by cause of the camels here lepte to the back of the camel / and made her to be borne of hym all the day  And whanne they had made a grete way / And that the camel came at euen to the lodgys / and was put in the stable / the flee lepte fro hym to the grounde besyde the foote of the camel / And after sayd to the camel / I haue pyte of the / and am comen doune fro thy back by cause that I wylle nomore greue ne trauaylle the by the berynge of me / And the camel sayd to the flee / I thanke thee / how be it that I am not sore laden of the / And therfore of hym which may neyther helpe ne lette men nede not make grete estymacion of