The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Annotated/Vol. II/Liber Primus/Fable 15

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Primus (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 15: The Rauen and the Foxe
Aesop3909437The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Primus — Fable 15: The Rauen and the Foxe1889William Caxton


¶ The xv fable is of the rauen and of the foxe

THey that be glad and Joyefull of the praysynge of flaterers oftyme repente them therof / wherof Esope reherceth to us suche a fable / A rauen whiche was vpon a tree / and held with his bylle a chese / the whiche chese the fox desyred moche to haue / wherfore the foxe wente and preysed hym by suche wordes as folowen / O gentyll rauen thow art the fayrest byrd of alle other byrdes / For thy fethers ben so fayr so bright and so resplendysshynge / and can also so wel synge / yf thow haddest the voys clere and small thow sholdest be the moost happy of al other byrdes / And the foole whiche herd the flateryringe wordes of the foxe beganne to open his bylle for to synge / And then the chese fylle to the grounde / and the fox toke and ete hit / And whan the rauen sawe that for his vayn glorye he was deceyued wexed hevy and sorowfull / and repented hym of that he had byleued the foxe / And this fable techeth vs / how men ought not to be glad ne take reioysshynge in the wordes of caytyf folke / ne also to leue flatery ne vayn glory.