The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Alfonce/Fable 8

3930911The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Alphonse — Fable 8: The Discyple and the SheepPetrus Alphonsi

¶ The eyght fable is of the discyple / and of the sheep /

A Discyple was somtyme / whiche toke his playsyre to reherce and telle many fables / the whiche prayd to his mayster / that he wold reherce vnto hym a long fable / To whome the mayster ansuerd / kepe and beware wel that hit happe not to vs / as it happed to a kyng and to his fabulatour  And the discyple ansuerd / My mayster I pray the to telle to me how it befelle / And thenne the mayster sayd to his descyple /  ¶ Somtyme was a kynge whiche hadde a fabulatour / the whiche reherced to hym at euery tyme / that he wold sleep fyue fables for to reioysshe the kynge / and for to make hym falle in to a slepe / It befelle thenne on a daye / that the kynge was moche sorowful and so heuy / that he coude in no wyse falle a slepe / And after that the sayd fabulatour had told and reherced his fyue fables / the kynge desyred to here more / And thenne the sayd fabulatour recyted vnto hym thre fables wel shorte / And the kynge thenne sayd to hym / I wold fayne here one wel longe / And thenne shalle I leue wel the slepe / The fabulatour thenne reherced vnto hym suche a fable / Of a ryche man whiche wente to the market or feyre for to bye sheep / the which man bought a thowsand sheep / And as he was retornynge fro the feyre / he cam vnto a Ryuer/ and by cause of the grete waiues of the water he coude not parte ouer the bridge / Neuertheles he wente soo longe to and fro on the Ryuage of the sayd Ryuer / that at the last he fonde a narowe way / vpon the whiche myght passe scant ynough thre sheep attones / And thus he parted and had them ouer one after another / And hyderto reherced of this fable / the fabulatour felle on slepe / And anon after the kynge awoke the fabulatour / and sayd to hym in this manere / I pray the that thow wylt make an ende of thy fable / And the fabulatour ansuerd to hym in this manere  Syre this Ryuer is right grete / and the ship is lytyl / wherfore late the marzhaunt doo pass ouer his sheep / And after I shalle make an ende of my fable / And thenne was the kynge wel appeased and pacyfyed / ¶ And therfore be thow content of that I haue reherced vnto the / For there is folke superstycious or capaxe / that they may not be contented with fewe wordes