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

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The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Avian (1434)
by Avianus, translated by William Caxton
Fable 7: The camel and of Jupiter

Numbered 117 in the Perry Index. Click here to create an annotated version of this text.

3927197The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Avian — Fable 7: The camel and of JupiterWilliam CaxtonAvianus

¶ The vij fable is of the camel and of Jupiter

EUery creature ought to be content of that / that god hath gyuen to hym withoute to take their herytaunce of other / As reherceth this fable  Of a camel whiche som tyme complayned hym to Jupiter of that the other beestes mocqued hym / by cause that he was not of so grete beaute / as they were of / wherfore to Jupiter Instantly he prayd in suche maner as foloweth / Fayr syre and god / I requyre and praye that thow wylt gyue to me hornes / to thende that I maye be nomore mocqued / Jupiter then beganne to lawhe / and in stede of hornes / he took fro hym his erys / and sayd / thow hast more good than hit behoueth thee to haue / And by cause that thow demaundest that / whiche thow oughtest not to haue I haue take fro the that whiche of ryght and kynd thow ouȝtest to haue / For none ought not to desyre more than he ought to haue / to the ende that he lese not that whiche he hath /