The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Quintus/Fable 6

3810181The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Quintus — Fable 6: The Hegoot and the WulfWilliam Caxton

¶ The vj fable is of the hegoote and of the wulf

THe feble ought not to arme hym ageynst the stronge / As recyteth this present fable of a wulf / whiche some tyme ranne after a hegoot / and the hegoot for to saue hym lept vpon a rocke / and the wulf besyeged hym / ¶ And after whan they had duelled there two or thre dayes / the wulf beganne to wexe hongry / and the hegoote to haue thurst / And thus the wulf went for to ete / and the hegoot went for to drynke / And as the hegoot dranke he sawe his shadowe in the water / and speculynge and beholdynge his shadowe profered and sayd suche wordes within hym sels / Thou hast so fayre legges / so fayr a berd / and so fayre hornes / and hast fere of the wulf / yf hit happed that he come ageyne / I shalle corryge hym wel / and shalle kepe hym wel / that he shalle haue no myght ouer me / ¶ And the wulf whiche held hys peas / and herkened what he sayd / toke hym by the one legge thus sayenge / what wordes ben these whiche thow proferest & sayst brorder Hegoote / ¶ And whanne the hegote sawe that he was taken / he beganne to saye to the wulf / Ha my lord / I saye no thynge / and haue pyte of me / I knowe wel / that it is my coulpe / And the wulf toke hym by the neck and strangled hym / ¶ And therfore it is grete folye whan the feble maketh werre ageynst the puyssant and stronge.