The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Auian/Fable 23

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3930069The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Avian — Fable 23: The Oxe and the RatAvianus

¶ The xxiij fable is of the oxe and of the rat

THe lordes ought to loue theyr subgettis / For he whiche is hated of his tenaunts and subgets / is not lord of his land / as hit appereth by this Fable / Of an oxe / whiche somtyme was within a stable / and as the oxe on a tyme wold haue slepte fayne / a rat came / whiche bote the oxe by the thyes / And as the oxe wold haue smyten hym / he ran awaye into his hole / And thenne the oxe beganne to menace the rat / And the ratte sayd to hym / I am not aferd of the  And yf thow arte grete / thy parentes ben cause therof and not thy self / And therfore the stronge ought not to despeyse the feble / but ought to loue hym as the chyef or hede ought to loue his lymmes / For he that loueth not / oughte not to be loued / And therfore the lord must loue his subgettys / yf of them he wylle be loued