The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Tertius/Fable 20

The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 20: The fallace of the Lyon and his conuersacion
Aesop3795557The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius — Fable 20: The fallace of the Lyon and his conuersacion1889William Caxton

¶ The xx fable maketh mencion of the fallace of the lyon / And of his conuersacion

TO conuerse with folke of euylle lyf is a thyng moche peryllous / And only to speke with them letteth moch other / As this fable reherceth of a lyon ryght strong and ryght myghty / the whiche made hym self kynge for to haue grate renommee and glorye / And fro thenne forthon he beganne to chaunge his condycions and customme shewing hym self curtois / and swore that he shold hurte no bestes / but shold kepe them ageynst euery one / And of this promesse he repented hym by cause hit is moche dyffycyle and hard to chaunge his owne kynd / And therfore whanne he was angry / he lad with hym somme smalle beestes in to a secrete place for to ete and deceyue them / And demaunded of them / yf his mouthe stanke or not / And alle they that sayd that it stanke or not were al saued / And alle they the whiche ansuered not he kylled / & deuoured them al / It happed that he demaunded of the Ape / yf his mouthe stanke or not / And thape sayd no but that hit smelleth lyke bame / And thenne the lyon had shame to slee the ape / but he fond a grete falsheed for to put hym to dethe / He fayned to be seke and commaunded that al his leches & Cyrurgyens shold anone come vnto hym / whan they were come / he commaunded them to loke his vryne / And whan they had sene hit / they sayd to hym / Syre ye shalle sbone be hole / But ye must ete lyght metes / And by cause that ye be kynge / alle is at your commaundement / And the lyon ansuerd Allas Ryght fayne I wold ete of an Ape / Certaynly sayd the medecyn that same is good mete / Thenne was the Ape sente for   And notwithstondyng that he worshipfully spak and ansuerd to the kynge / the kynge made hym to dye / and deuoured hym   ¶ Therfore hit is peryllous and harmeful to be in the felauship of a Tyraunt / For be hit euylle or good he wylle ete and deuoure euery thynge / And wel happy is he / that may ecape fro his blody handes / And that may eschewe and flee the felauship of the eyyll tyraunt

¶ Here fynysshed the thyrdde booke of the subtyle fables of Esope