The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Tertius/Fable 5

The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 5: The Nyghtyngale and the Sperehawke
Aesop3789034The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius — Fable 5: The Nyghtyngale and the Sperehawke1889William Caxton

¶ The v fable is of the nyghtyngale and of the sperehawke

HE that oppresseth the Innocents shalle haue an euyl ende / wherof Esope reherceth to vs suche a fable / Of a sperehawk / whiche dyd put hym within the nest of a nyghtyngale / where he fond the lytyl and yonge byrdes / the nyghtyngale came and perceyued hym / wherfore she praed the sperehawke / sayeng/ I requyre and praye the as moche as I may / that thow haue pyte on my smal byrdes / And the sperehawke ansuerd and sayd / yf thow wylt that I graunte the thy request / thow must synge swetely after my wylle and gree  And thenne the nyghtyngale beganne to synge swetely / not with the herte / but with the throte onely / For he was so fulled with sorowe that otherwyse he myght not doo / The sperehawk sayd thenne to the nyghtyngale / This songe playseth me not / And toke one of the yonge byrdes and deuoured hit / And as the sayd sperehawke would haue deuoured and eten the other came there a hunter whiche dyd caste a grete nette vpon the sperehawk / And whanne she wold haue fleen awey / he myght not / for he was taken / And therfore he that doth harme & letteth the Innocents / is worthy to deye of euylle dethe / As Caym dyd whiche slewe his broder Abel