Jump to content

The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs)/Vol. II/Auian/Fable 14

From Wikisource

Numbered 340 in the Perry Index. Click here to create an annotated version of this text.

3929997The fables of Aesop by William Caxton (Jacobs), The Fables of Avian — Fable 14: The four OxenAvianus

¶ The xiiij fable is of the four oxen

MEn oughte not to breke his feythe ageynste his good Frend / ne to leue his felauship / as hit appiereth by this fable / of four oxen whiche to gyder were in a fair medowe /  ¶ And by cause that euer they were and kepte them to gyder / none other beest durste not assaylle them / and also the lyon dradde them moche / the whiche lyon on a daye came to them / And by his deceyuable wordes thoughte for to begyle them / & to rausshe & take them the better / maade them to be separed eche one fro other /  ¶ And whanne they were sepered / the lyon wente / and toke one of them / And whan the lyon wold haue strangled hym / the oxe sayd to hym / godsep / He is a foole whiche byleueth fals and deceyuable wordes And leueth the felawship of his good frende / For yf we had ben euer to gyder / thow haddest not taken me / And therfore he whiche is / and standeth wel sure / ought to kepe hym soo that he falle not / For to whiche is wel / meue not hym self