The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Liber Tertius/Fable 7

The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius (1889)
by Aesop, translated by William Caxton, edited by Joseph Jacobs
Fable 7: The Herte and the Hunter
Aesop3789058The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Liber Tertius — Fable 7: The Herte and the Hunter1889William Caxton

¶ The seuenth fable is of the herte and of the hunter

MEn preysen somtyme that / that shold be blamed & vitupered / And ofte men blamen & vytuperen that / that shold be preysed / as reciteth to vs this fable of a herte / To whome it happyd on a tyme that he drank in a fonteyn or welle as he dranke / he sawe in the water his hede which was horned / wherfore he preysed moche his hornes / And as he loked on his legges / whiche were lene and smal / he despreysed and vytupered them / And as he was drynkynge in the fontayne he herd the voys and barkynge of dogges / wherfore he wold haue fledde awey in to the forest for to saue hym self / but as he sawe the dogges so nyghe hym he wold haue entred within a busshe / but he myght not / for his homes kepte hym withoute / And thenne seyng that he myght not escape began to saye within hym self / I haue blamed and vytupered my legges / whiche haue ben to me vtyle and prouffitable / and haue preysed my hornes / whiche ben now cause of my dethe / And therfore men ought to desprayre that thynge / whiche is vnprouffitable / and preyse that whiche is vtyle and prouffitable / And they ought to preyse and loue the chirche and the commaundements of the same / the whiche ben moche vtyle & prouffytable / And despreyse and flee al synne and vyce / whiche ben inutyle harmeful and dommageable