The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quintus/Fable 9

3810185The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quintus — Fable 9: The Foxe, the Wulf and the LyonWilliam Caxton

¶ The ix fable is of the foxe / of the wulf / and of the lyon /

YF hit be soo that ony hath ben adommaged by other he ought not to take vengeaūce by the tong in gyuyng Iniuryous wordes / and the cause why / is by cause / that suche vengeaunce is dishonest.  As to us reherceth this present fable / Somtyme was a foxe / that ete fysshe in a Ryuer /  ¶ It happed / that the wulf came that waye /  ¶ And whanne he sawe the foxe / whiche ete with so grete appetyte / He beganne to saye / My broder gyue me somme fysshe / And the foxe ansuerd to hym / Allas my lord / It behouveth not that ye ete the releef of my table / but for the worship of your persone I shall counceylle yow wel / Doo soo moche to gete yow a basket / And I shalle teche yow how men shalle take fysshes / to thende / that ye may take somme whan ye shalle be hongry / And the wulf wente in to the streete / and stalle a basket / whiche he brought with hym / the foxe tooke the basket / and bound it with a cord at the wulfs taylle /  ¶ And whanne he was wel bounden / the foxe sayd to the wulf / goo thow by the Ryuer / and I shalle lede and take hede to the basket / And the wulf dyde as the foxe had hym do / ¶ And as the wulf was goynge within the water / the foxe fylled the basket fulle of stones by his malyce / ¶ And whan the basket was full / the foxe sayd to the wulf / Certaynly my lord / I maye no more lyfte ne hold the basket / so full it is of fysshe / ¶ And the wulf wenynge that the foxe had sayd truthe / profered such wordes / sayenge / I render graces and thankes to god / that I maye ones see thyn hyghe and excellente wysedome in the arte and crafte of fysshynge / ¶ And thenne the foxe sayd to hym / My lord abyde me here / And I shalle fetche some to helpe vs for to haue and take the fysshe oute of the basket / And in sayenge these wordes / the foxe ranne in to the strete / where he fond men / to whome he sayd in this manere / My lordes what doo ye here / why are yow werkless / see yonder the wulf / which ete your sheep / your lambes / and your beestes / and yet now he taketh your fysshes oute of the Ryuer / and ete them / ¶ And thenne alle the men came to gyder / somme with slynges / and somme with bowes / and other with staues vnto the Ryuer / where they fond the wulf / whiche they bete outragyoussly / ¶ And whanne the poure wulf sawe hym thus oppressed / it vexed with strokes beganne with alle his strengthe & myghte to drawe / and supposed to haue caryed the fysshe awey / but so strongly he drewe / that he drewe and pulled his taylle fro his ers / and thus he scaped vnnethe with his lyf / ¶ In the menewhyle thenne happed / that the lyon whiche was kynge ouer alle beestes selle in a grete sekenesse / for the whiche cause euery beest wente for to see hym / as theyr lord / ¶ And when the wulf would haue gone thyder / he salewed his lord / saying thus to hym / My kynge I salewe yow / please it you to knowe that I haue gone round aboute the countre and prouynce / and in alle places of hit for to serche somme medycynes prouffitable for yow / and to recowere your helthe / but nothyng I haue found good for your sekenesse / but only the skynne of a foxe fyers and prowde and malycious / whiche is youre body medycynal / but he dayneth not to come hyther to see you   But ye shalle calle hym to a counceylle / and whanne ye hold hym / lete his skynne be taken from hym / And thenne lete hym renne where he wylle / and that fayr skynne which is so holsome / ye shalle make hit to be sette and bound vpon your bely / And within fewe dayes after hit shalle rendre yow in as good helthe / as euer ye were / ¶ And whanne he had sayd these wordes / he departed fro the lyon and toke his leue / but neuer he had supposed / that the foxe had herd hym / but he had / For he was within a terryer nyghe to the lodgys of the lyon / where he herd alle the proposycion of the wulf / to the whiche he dyd put remedye and grete prouysyon / For as soone as the wulf was departed fro the lyon / the foxe wente in to the feldes / And in a hyghe way he fond a grete donghyll / within the whiche he put hym self / ¶ And as he suppofed after his aduys to be defowled and dagged ynough / came thus arayed in to the pytte of the lyon / the whiche he salewed as he oughte to haue done to his lord / sayenge to hym in this manere / Syre kynge god yeue good helthe / And the lyon ansuerd to hym God salewe the swete frend / come nyghe me and kysse me / & after I shalle telle to the somme secrete / whiche I wylle not that euery man knowe / to whome the foxe sayd in this maner Ha a syre kynge be not displeasyd / for I am to fowle arayed and al to dagged / by cause of the grete way / whiche I haue gone / sekynge al aboute somme good medycyne for you / wherfore it behoueth not me / for to be so nyghe your persone   For the stenche of the donge myght wel greue you for the grete sekenesse that ye haue / but dere syre / yf hit please to the or euer I come nerer to your Royal mageste I shalle goo bathe me and make me fayre and clene / And thenne I shall come ageyne to presente my self byfore thy noble persone / And notwithstondynge al this / also er I goo / please the to wete & knowe that I come from alle the contrees here aboute / and from alle the Royalmes adiacent to this prouynce / for to see yf I coude fynde somme good medycyn dusynge and nedeful to thy sikenesse / and for to recouere thy helthe / but certaynly I haue foūd no better coūceylle than the coūceylle of an aūcycent greke with a grete & long berd / a man of grete wysdom / sage & worthy to be praysed / the whiche sayd to me / how in this prouynce is a wulf withoute taylle / the whiche hath lost his taylle by the vertue of the grete medycyn whiche is within hym / For the whiche thynge it is nedeful and expedyent / that ye doo make this wulf to come to yow for the recoueraunce of the helthe of your fayr and noble body / And whan he is come dyssymylle and calle hym to counceylle / sayenge that it shalle be for his grete worship & proffite / & as he shal be nyghe vnto yow cast on hym your armed feet / and as swetely as ye maye pulle the skynne fro the body of hym & kepe it hoole / sauf only that ye shalle leue the heed and the feet / And thenne lete hym gone his way to seche his auenture / And forthwith whan ye shalle haue that skynne / al hot and warme ye shal do bynd hit al aboute your bely / And after that or lytyll tyme be passed / your helthe shalle be restored to yow / and ye shal be as hole as euer in your lyf ye were / ¶ And thenne the foxe toke his leue of the kynge / and departed / and wente ageyne in to his terryer / ¶ Soone after came then the wulf for to see the lyon / And Incontynent the lyon called hym to counceylle / and castynge softly his feet vpon hym dyspoylled the wulf of his skynne sauf the skynne of his hede and of his feet / And after the lyon bound it al warme about his bely / ¶ And the wulf ranne aweye skynles / wherfore he had ynough to doo to defende and put from hym the flyes / whiche greued hym sore / And for the grete destresse that he felte by cause of the flyes / that thus ete his flesshe / he as wood beganne to renne / and passyd vnder an hylle / vpon the whiche the foxe was / ¶ And after whanne the foxe sawe hym / he beganne to crye / and calle / lawhyng after the wulf / and mocked / and sayd to hym / who arte thow that passest there before with suche a fayre hood on thy heed and with ryght fayr glouues in thyn handes / Herke herke / what I shalle saye to the / whan thow wente & camest by the kynges hows / thow werte blessed of the lord / & whan thou were at the Court thow herkenest and also sayest many good wordes and good talkynge of al the world /

¶ And therfore my godsep be it euyl or good / thow muste al lete passe / and goo / and haue pacyence in thyn aduersyte /

¶ And thus this table sheweth vnto vs / that yf ony be hurted or dommaged / by somme other he must not auenge hym self by his tonge lor to make ony treson / ne for to say of other ony harme ne open blasphemye / For he ought to consydere / that who so euer maketh the pytte redy for his broder / ofte it happeth that he hym self falleth in the same / and is beten with the same rodde that he maketh for other