The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Alfonce/Fable 7
¶ The vij fable is of a Rethorycian and of a crowk backed
Philosopher sayd ones to his sone / that whan he were falle by fortune in to somme dommage or perylle / the sooner that he myght he shold delyuere hym of hit / to thende / that afterward he shold no more be vexed ne greued of hit / As hit appiereth by this fable of a rethoryque man or fayr speker / whiche ones demaunded of a kynge / that of alle them whiche shold entre in to the cyte / hauynge somme faulte of . kynde on theyr bodyes / as crouked or counterfayted / he myght haue and take of them at thentre of the yate a peny / the whiche demaunde the kynge graunted to hym / and made his lettres to be sealed and wreton vnder his sygnet / And thus he kepte hym styll at the yate / And of euery lame / scabbed / & of alle suche that had ony counterfaytour on theyr bodyes / he tooke a peny / ¶ It happed thene on a day that a croukbacked and counterfayted man wold haue entryd within the Cyte withoute gyuynge of ony peny / and bethought hym self / that he shold take and put on hym a fayre mantel / and thus arayed came to the yate / ¶ And thenne whan the porter byheld hym / he perceyued that he was goglyed / and sayd to hym pay me of my dewte / And the goglyed wold paye nought / whertore he toke from hym his mantel / And thenne he sawe that he was crowkbacked and sayd to hym / thow woldest not to fore paye a peny / but now thou shalte paye tweyne / ¶ And whyle that they stryued to gyder / the hat and the bonet felle from his hede to the erthe / And the porter whiche sawe his scabbed hede / sayd to hym / Now shalt thou paye to me thre pens / and thenne the porter yet ageyne setted his handes on hym / and felte / that his body was al scabbed / And as they were thus wrastlynge to gyder / the crowkbacked fylle to the ground / and hurted hym self sore on the legge / And the porter sayd thenne to hym / Now shalt thow paye v pens / For thy body is al counterfayted / wherfore thow shalt leue here thy mantele / And yf thou haddest payd a peny / thow haddest gone on thy waye free and quyte / wherfore he is wyse that payeth that / that he oweth of ryght / to thende that therof come not to hym gretter dommage