The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Other Aesop's/Fable 4

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The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Other Aesop's Fables (1484)
translated by William Caxton
Fable 4: The Catte and the Chyken

Numbered 16 in the Perry Index. Click here to create an annotated version of this text.

3926979The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Other Aesop's Fables — Fable 4: The Catte and the ChykenWilliam Caxton

¶ The fourthe fable is of the catte and of the chyken

HE whiche is fals of kynde / & hath bcgonne to deceyue Ibme other/ euer he wyl use his craft / As it appiereth by this present Fable of a kat whiche somtyme toke a chyken / the whiche he beganne strongly to blame / for to haue fonde somme cause that he myght ete hit / and sayd to hym in this manere / Come hyther thou chyken / thow dost none other good but crye alle the nyght / thow letest not the men slepe / And thenne the chyken ansuerd to hym / I doo hit for theyre grete prouffite /  And ouer ageyne the catte sayd to hym / yet is there wel wors / For thow arte an inceste & lechour For thow knowest naturelly both thy moder and thy doughter  And thenne the chyken sayd to the cat / I doo hit by cause that my mayster maye haue egges for his etynge /  And that hys mayster for his prouffyte gaf to hym bothe the moder and the doughter for to multyplye the egges /  And thenne the catte sayd to hym / by my feythe godsep thow hast excusacions ynough / but neuertheless thow shalt passe thurgh my throte / for I suppose not to faste this day for alle thy wordes /  ¶ And thus is it of hym whiche is custommed to lyue by rauyn /  For he can not kepe ne absteyne hym self fro hit /  For alle thexcusacions[errata 1] that be leyd on hym.


  1. Original: thexcasacions was amended to thexcusacions: detail