The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quintus/Fable 3

3810175The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quintus — Fable 3: The Foxe and the CockeWilliam Caxton

¶ The thyrd fable is of the foxe and of the cocke /

OFtyme moche talkynge letteth / As hit appiereth by this fable / Of a foxe / whiche came toward a Cocke / And sayd to hym / I wold fayne wete / yf thow canst as wel synge as thy fader dyde / And thenne the Cock shette his eyen / and beganne to crye and synge /  ¶ And thenne the Foxe toke and bare hym awey / And the peple of the towne cryed / the foxe bereth awey the cok /  ¶ And thenne the Cocke sayd thus to the Foxe / My lord vnderstandest thow not / what the peple sayth / that thow berest awey theyr cock / telle to them / that it is thyn / and not theyrs/ And as the foxe sayd / hit is not yours / but it is myn / the cok scaped fro the foxe mouthe / and flough vpon a tree / And thenne the Cok sayd to the fox thow lyest / For I am theyrs and not thyn / And thenne the foxe beganne to hytte erthe bothe with his mouthe & heed sayenge / mouthe / thow hast spoken to moche / thow sholdest haue eten the Cok / had not be thyn ouer many wordes / And therfor ouer moche talkyng letteth / and to moche crowynge smarteth / therfore kepe thy self fro ouer many wordes / to thende / that thow repentest the not