The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Poge/Tale 3

3931834The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Poggio — Fable 3: The Tale of the Januey and the Noble ManPoggio Bracciolini

HE telleth also that ther was a carryk of Jene hyred in to fraūce for to make warre ayenst englisshmen / of the whiche caarrick the patrone bare in his sheld painted an oxe hede / whiche a noble man of fraūce beheld and sawe / & sayd he wold auenge hym on hym that bare tho armes / wherapon aroos an altercacion so moche / that the frensshman prouoked the Janueye to bataylle and fyght therfore / The Januey acceptyd the prouocacion / & came at the day assigned in to the felde withoute ony araye or habyllements of warre / And that other frensshe man came in moche noble apparayll in to the feld that was ordeyned / & thene the patrone of the carrik said wherfore is it that we two shold this day fyght & make bataill fore I saye said that other that thyn armes ben myn / & bylonged to me to sore that thow haddest them / Thenne the Januey said It is no nede to make ony bataylle therfore / For the armes that I bare is not the hede of an oxe but it is the hede of a cowe whiche thynge so spoken the noble Frensshe man was abasshed and so departed half mocqued