The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Annotated/Vol. II/Liber Primus/Fable 12

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The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Primus (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 12: The two Rats
Aesop3909434The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Primus — Fable 12: The two Rats1889William Caxton


¶ The xij fable is of the two rats

B Etter worthe is to lyue in pouerte surely / than to lyue rychely beyng euer in daunger / Wherof Esope tellelh suche a fable / There were two rats wherof the one was grete and fatte / and held hym in the celer of a Ryche man And the other was poure and lene /   ¶ On a daye this grete and fat ratte wente to sporte hym in the feldes and mette by the way the poure rat / of the whiche he was receyued as well as he coude in his poure cauerne or hole / and gaf from of suche mete as he had / Thenne sayd the fatte ratte come thow wyth me / And I shalle gyue the wel other metes / He went with hym in to the toune / and enterd bothe into the celer of the ryche man / the whiche celer was full of alle goodes / And when they were within the grete rat presented and gaf to the poure rat of the delycious metes / saying thus to hym / Be mery and make good chere / and ete and drynke Joyously /   ¶ And as they were etynge / the bouteler of the place came in to the celer / & the grete rat fled anon in to his hole / & the poure rat wist not whyther he shold goo ne flee / But hyd hym behynd the dore with grete fere and drede / and the bouteler turned ageyne and sawe hym not / And whan he was gone the fatte rat cam out of his cauerne or hole / and called the poure ratte / whiche yet was shakynge for fere / and said to hym / come hyder and be not aferd / & ete as moche as thou wylt / And the poure rat sayd to hym / for goddes loue lete me go oute of this celer / For I haue better ete some corne in the feldes and lyue surely / than to be ever in this torment / for thou arte here in grete doubte & lyuest not surely / And therfore hit is good to lyue pourely & surely   For the poure lyueth more surely than the ryche.