BOOK I.
BOOK II.
BOOK III.
BOOK IV.
BOOK V.
BOOK I.
THE PROLOGUE.
The matter which Æsop, the inventor of Fables, has provided,
I have polished in Iambic verse. The advantages of this little work
are twofold—that it excites laughter, and by counsel guides the
life of man. But if any one shall think fit to cavil, because not
only wild beasts, but even trees speak, let him remember that we
are disporting in fables.
Fable I.
THE WOLF AND THE LAMB.
Driven by thirst, a Wolf and a Lamb had come to the same
stream; the Wolf stood above, and the Lamb at a distance below.
Then, the spoiler, prompted by a ravenous maw, alleged a pretext
for a quarrel. “Why,” said he, “have you made the water muddy for
me while I am drinking?” The Fleece-bearer, trembling, answered:
“Prithee, Wolf, how can I do what you complain of? The water is
flowing downwards from you to where I am drinking.” The other,
disconcerted by the force of truth, exclaimed: “Six months ago, you
slandered me.” “Indeed,” answered the Lamb, “I was not born then.”
“By Hercules,” said the Wolf, “then ’twas your father slandered
me;” and so, snatching him up, he tore him to pieces, killing him
unjustly.
This Fable is applicable to those men who, under false
pretences, oppress the innocent.
Fable II.
THE FROGS ASKING FOR A KING.
When AthensI.1 was flourishing under just laws, liberty grown
wanton embroiled the city, and license relaxed the reins of ancient
discipline. Upon this, the partisans of factions conspiring,
Pisistratus the TyrantI.2 seized the citadel. When the Athenians
were lamenting their sad servitude (not that he was cruel, but
because every burden is grievous to those who are unused to it),
and began to complain, Æsop related a Fable to the following
effect:—
“The Frogs, roaming at large in their marshy fens, with loud
clamour demanded of Jupiter a king, who, by his authority, might
check their dissolute manners. The Father of the Gods smiled, and
gave them a little Log, which, on being thrown among them startled
the timorous race by the noise and sudden commotion in the bog.
When it had lain for some time immersed in the mud, one of them by
chance silently lifted his head above the water, and having taken a
peep at the king, called up all the rest. Having got the better of
their fears, vying with each other, they swim towards him, and the
insolent mob leap upon the Log. After defiling it with every kind
of insult, they sent to Jupiter, requesting another king, because
the one that had been given them was useless. Upon this, he sent
them a Water Snake,I.3 who with his sharp teeth began to gobble
them up one after another. Helpless they strive in vain to escape
death; terror deprives them of voice. By stealth, therefore, they
send through Mercury a request to Jupiter, to succour them in their
distress. Then said the God in reply: ‘Since you would not be
content with your good fortune, continue to endure your bad
fortune.’”
“Do you also, O fellow-citizens,” said Æsop, “submit to the
present evil, lest a greater one befall you.”
Fable III.
THE VAIN JACKDAW AND THE PEACOCK.
That one ought not to plume oneself on the merits which
belong to another, but ought rather to pass his life in his own
proper guise, Æsop has given us this illustration:—
A Jackdaw, swellingI.4 with empty pride, picked up some
feathers which had fallen from a Peacock, and decked himself out
therewith; upon which, despising his own kind, he mingled with a
beauteous flock of Peacocks. They tore his feathers from off the
impudent bird, and put him to flight with their beaks. The Jackdaw,
thus roughly handled, in grief hastened to return to his own kind;
repulsed by whom, he had to submit to sad disgrace. Then said one
of those whom he had formerly despised: “If you had been content
with our station, and had been ready to put up with what nature had
given, you would neither have experienced the former affront, nor
would your ill fortune have had to feel the additional pang of this
repulse.”
Fable IV.
THE DOG CARRYING SOME MEAT ACROSS A RIVER.
He who covets what belongs to another, deservedly loses his
own.
As a Dog, swimmingI.5 through a river, was carrying a piece
of meat, he saw his own shadow in the watery mirror; and, thinking
that it was another booty carried by another dog, attempted to
snatch it away; but his greediness was disappointed, he both
dropped the food which he was holding in his mouth, and was after
all unable to reach that at which he grasped.
Fable V.
THE COW, THE SHE-GOAT, THE SHEEP, AND THE LION.
An alliance with the powerful is never to be relied upon: the
present Fable testifies the truth of my maxim.
A Cow, a She-Goat, and a SheepI.6 patient under injuries,
were partners in the forests with a Lion. When they had captured a
Stag of vast bulk, thus spoke the Lion, after it had been divided
into shares: “Because my name is Lion, I take the first; the second
you will yield to me because I am courageous; then, because I am
the strongest,I.7 the third will fall to my lot; if anyone touches
the fourth, woe betide him.”
Thus did unscrupulousness seize upon the whole prey for
itself.
Fable VI.
THE FROGS’ COMPLAINT AGAINST THE SUN.
Æsop, on seeing the pompous wedding of a thief, who was his
neighbour, immediately began to relate the following story:
Once on a time, when the Sun was thinking of taking a
wife,I.8 the Frogs sent forth their clamour to the stars. Disturbed
by their croakings, Jupiter asked the cause of their complaints.
Then said one of the inhabitants of the pool: “As it is, by himself
he parches up all the standing waters, and compels us unfortunates
to languish and die in our scorched abode. What is to become of us,
if he beget children?”
Fable VII.
THE FOX AND THE TRAGIC MASK.
A Fox, by chance, casting his eyes on a Tragic Mask: “Ah,”
said she, “great as is its beauty, still it has no brains.”I.9
This is meant for those to whom fortune has granted honor and
renown, leaving them void of common sense.
Fable VIII.
THE WOLF AND THE CRANE.
He who expects a recompense for his services from the
dishonest commits a twofold mistake; first, because he assists the
undeserving, and in the next place, because he cannot be gone while
he is yet safe.
A bone that he had swallowed stuck in the jaws of a Wolf.
Thereupon, overcome by extreme pain, he began to tempt all and
sundry by great rewards to extract the cause of misery. At length,
on his taking an oath, a Crane was prevailed on, and, trusting the
length of her neck to his throat, she wrought, with danger to
herself, a cure for the Wolf. When she demanded the promised reward
for this service, “You are an ungrateful one,” replied the Wolf,
“to have taken your head in safety out of my mouth, and then to ask
for a reward.”
Fable IX.
THE SPARROW AND THE HARE.
Let us show, in a few lines, that it is unwise to be
heedlessI.10 of ourselves, while we are giving advice to others.
A Sparrow upbraided a Hare that had been pounced upon by an
Eagle, and was sending forth piercing cries. “Where now,” said he,
“is that fleetness for which you are so remarkable? Why were your
feet thus tardy?” While he was speaking, a Hawk seizes him
unawares, and kills him, shrieking aloud with vain complaints. The
Hare, almost dead, as a consolation in his agony, exclaimed: “You,
who so lately, free from care, were ridiculing my misfortunes, have
now to deplore your own fate with as woful cause.”
Fable X.
THE WOLF, THE FOX, AND THE APE.
Whoever has once become notorious by base fraud, even if he
speaks the truth, gains no belief. To this, a short Fable of Æsop
bears witness.
A Wolf indicted a Fox upon a charge of theft; the latter
denied that she was amenable to the charge. Upon this, the Ape sat
as judge between them; and when each of them had pleaded his cause,
the Ape is said to have pronounced this sentence: “You, Wolf,
appear not to have lost what you demand; I believe that you, Fox,
have stolen what you so speciously deny.”
Fable XI.
THE ASS AND THE LION HUNTING.
A dastard, who in his talk brags of his prowess, and is
devoid of courage,I.11 imposes upon strangers, but is the jest of
all who know him.
A Lion having resolved to hunt in company with an Ass,
concealed him in a thicket, and at the same time enjoined him to
frighten the wild beasts with his voice, to which they were unused,
while he himself was to catch them as they fled. Upon this,
Long-ears, with all his might, suddenly raised a cry, and terrified
the beasts with this new cause of astonishment.I.12 While, in their
alarm, they are flying to the well-known outlets, they are
overpowered by the dread onset of the Lion; who, after he was
wearied with slaughter, called forth the Ass from his retreat, and
bade him cease his clamour. On this the other, in his insolence,
inquired: “What think you of the assistance given by my voice?”
“Excellent!” said the Lion, “so much so, that if I had not been
acquainted with your spirit and your race, I should have fled in
alarm like the rest.”
Fable XII.
THE STAG AT THE STREAM.
This story shows that what you contemn is often found of more
utility than what you load with praises.
A Stag, when he had drunk at a stream, stood still, and gazed
upon his likeness in the water. While there, in admiration, he was
praising his branching horns, and finding fault with the extreme
thinness of his legs, suddenly roused by the cries of the huntsmen,
he took to flight over the plain, and with nimble course escaped
the dogs. Then a wood received the beast; in which, being entangled
and caught by his horns, the dogs began to tear him to pieces with
savage bites. While dying, he is said to have uttered these words:
“Oh, how unhappy am I, who now too late find out how useful to me
were the things that I despised; and what sorrow the things I used
to praise, have caused me.”
Fable XIII.
THE FOX AND THE RAVEN.
He who is delighted at being flattered with artful words,
generally pays the ignominious penalty of a late repentance.
As a Raven, perched in a lofty tree, was about to eat a piece
of cheese, stolen from a window,I.13 a Fox espied him, and
thereupon began thus to speak: “O Raven, what a glossiness there is
upon those feathers of yours! What grace you carry in your shape
and air! If you had a voice, no bird whatever would be superior to
you.” On this, the other, while, in his folly, attempting to show
off his voice, let fall the cheese from his mouth, which the crafty
Fox with greedy teeth instantly snatched up. Then, too late, the
Raven, thus, in his stupidity overreached, heaved a bitter sigh.
By this storyI.14 it is shown, how much ingenuity avails, and
how wisdom is always an overmatch for strength.
Fable XIV.
THE COBBLER TURNED PHYSICIAN.
A bungling Cobbler, broken down by want, having begun to
practise physic in a strange place, and selling his antidoteI.15
under a feigned name, gained some reputation for himself by his
delusive speeches.
Upon this, the King of the city, who lay ill, being afflicted
with a severe malady, asked for a cup, for the purpose of trying
him; and then pouring water into it, and pretending that he was
mixing poison with the fellow’s antidote, ordered him to drink it
off, in consideration of a stated reward. Through fear of death,
the cobbler then confessed that not by any skill in the medical
art, but through the stupidity of the public, he had gained his
reputation. The King, having summoned a council, thus remarked:
“What think you of the extent of your madness, when you do not
hesitate to trust your livesI.16 to one to whom no one would trust
his feet to be fitted with shoes?”
This, I should say with good reason, is aimed at those
through whose folly impudence makes a profit.
Fable XV.
THE ASS AND THE OLD SHEPHERD.
In a change of government, the poor change nothing beyond the
name of their master. That this is the fact this little Fable
shows.
A timorous Old Man was feeding an Ass in a meadow. Frightened
by a sudden alarm of the enemy, he tried to persuade the Ass to
fly, lest they should be taken prisoners. But he leisurely replied:
“Pray, do you suppose that the conqueror will place double panniers
upon me?” The Old Man said, “No.” “Then what matters it to me, so
long as I have to carry my panniers, whom I serve?”
Fable XVI.
THE STAG, THE SHEEP, AND THE WOLF.
When a rogue offers his name as surety in a doubtful case, he
has no design to act straight-forwardly, but is looking to
mischief.
A Stag asked a Sheep for a measureI.17 of wheat, a Wolf being
his surety. The other, however, suspecting fraud, replied: “The
Wolf has always been in the habit of plundering and absconding;
you, of rushing out of sight with rapid flight: where am I to look
for you both when the day comes?”I.18
Fable XVII.
THE SHEEP, THE DOG, AND THE WOLF.
Liars generallyI.19 pay the penalty of their guilt.