Fables of La Fontaine — a New Edition, with Notes

Fables of La Fontaine — a New Edition, with Notes
Author: Jean de La Fontaine
Pages: 618,236 Pages
Audio Length: 8 hr 35 min
Languages: en

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XII--THE DOVE AND THE ANT.[18]

    The same instruction we may get     From another couple, smaller yet.     A dove came to a brook to drink,   When, leaning o'er its crumbling brink,   An ant fell in, and vainly tried,   In this, to her, an ocean tide,   To reach the land; whereat the dove,   With every living thing in love,   Was prompt a spire of grass to throw her,   By which the ant regain'd the shore.     A barefoot scamp, both mean and sly,   Soon after chanced this dove to spy;   And, being arm'd with bow and arrow,     The hungry codger doubted not     The bird of Venus, in his pot,   Would make a soup before the morrow.     Just as his deadly bow he drew,       Our ant just bit his heel.     Roused by the villain's squeal,     The dove took timely hint, and flew       Far from the rascal's coop;--       And with her flew his soup.      

[18] Aesop.


XIII--THE ASTROLOGER WHO STUMBLED INTO A WELL.[19]

      To an astrologer who fell       Plump to the bottom of a well,       'Poor blockhead!'       cried a passer-by,       'Not see your feet, and read the sky?'       This upshot of a story will suffice       To give a useful hint to most;     For few there are in this our world so wise       As not to trust in star or ghost,       Or cherish secretly the creed     That men the book of destiny may read.       This book, by Homer and his pupils sung,     What is it, in plain common sense,   But what was chance those ancient folks among,     And with ourselves, God's providence?       Now chance doth bid defiance       To every thing like science;             'Twere wrong, if not,       To call it hazard, fortune, lot--           Things palpably uncertain.       But from the purposes divine,           The deep of infinite design,     Who boasts to lift the curtain?       Whom but himself doth God allow     To read his bosom thoughts?       and how     Would he imprint upon the stars sublime     The shrouded secrets of the night of time?       And all for what?       To exercise the wit     Of those who on astrology have writ?       To help us shun inevitable ills?       To poison for us even pleasure's rills?       The choicest blessings to destroy,       Exhausting, ere they come, their joy?       Such faith is worse than error--'tis a crime.       The sky-host moves and marks the course of time;   The sun sheds on our nicely-measured days   The glory of his night-dispelling rays;       And all from this we can divine       Is, that they need to rise and shine,--       To roll the seasons, ripen fruits,       And cheer the hearts of men and brutes.       How tallies this revolving universe       With human things, eternally diverse?       Ye horoscopers, waning quacks,     Please turn on Europe's courts your backs,       And, taking on your travelling lists       The bellows-blowing alchemists,       Budge off together to the land of mists.       But I've digress'd.       Return we now, bethinking   Of our poor star-man, whom we left a drinking.       Besides the folly of his lying trade,     This man the type may well be made       Of those who at chimeras stare       When they should mind the things that are.        

[19] Aesop.Diogenes Laertius tells the story of this fable of Thales of Miletus."It is said that once he (Thales) was led out of his house by an old woman for the purpose of observing the stars, and he fell into a ditch and bewailed himself.On which the old woman said to him--'Do you, O Thales, who cannot see what is under your feet, think that thou shalt understand what is in heaven?'"--Diogenes Laertius, Bohn's edition.


XIV--THE HARE AND THE FROGS.[20]

  Once in his bed deep mused the hare,   (What else but muse could he do there?)   And soon by gloom was much afflicted;--   To gloom the creature's much addicted.   'Alas!   these constitutions nervous,'     He cried, 'how wretchedly they serve us!   We timid people, by their action,     Can't eat nor sleep with satisfaction;     We can't enjoy a pleasure single,     But with some misery it must mingle.   Myself, for one, am forced by cursed fear       To sleep with open eye as well as ear.   "Correct yourself," says some adviser.   Grows fear, by such advice, the wiser?   Indeed, I well enough descry       That men have fear, as well as I.'   With such revolving thoughts our hare     Kept watch in soul-consuming care.   A passing shade, or leaflet's quiver     Would give his blood a boiling fever.   Full soon, his melancholy soul         Aroused from dreaming doze         By noise too slight for foes,       He scuds in haste to reach his hole.   He pass'd a pond; and from its border bogs,   Plunge after plunge, in leap'd the timid frogs,       'Aha!   I do to them, I see,'       He cried, 'what others do to me.   The sight of even me, a hare,       Sufficeth some, I find, to scare.   And here, the terror of my tramp       Hath put to rout, it seems, a camp.   The trembling fools!   they take me for     The very thunderbolt of war!   I see, the coward never skulk'd a foe   That might not scare a coward still below.'    

[20] Aesop.


XV--THE COCK AND THE FOX.[21]

  Upon a tree there mounted guard     A veteran cock, adroit and cunning;     When to the roots a fox up running,   Spoke thus, in tones of kind regard:--     'Our quarrel, brother, 's at an end;     Henceforth I hope to live your friend;         For peace now reigns       Throughout the animal domains.   I bear the news:--come down, I pray,       And give me the embrace fraternal;     And please, my brother, don't delay.   So much the tidings do concern all,     That I must spread them far to-day.   Now you and yours can take your walks     Without a fear or thought of hawks.   And should you clash with them or others,   In us you'll find the best of brothers;--   For which you may, this joyful night,     Your merry bonfires light.   But, first, let's seal the bliss       With one fraternal kiss.'   'Good friend,' the cock replied, 'upon my word,     A better thing I never heard;         And doubly I rejoice         To hear it from your voice;     And, really there must be something in it,   For yonder come two greyhounds, which I flatter   Myself are couriers on this very matter.   They come so fast, they'll be here in a minute.   I'll down, and all of us will seal the blessing     With general kissing and caressing.'   'Adieu,' said fox; 'my errand's pressing;         I'll hurry on my way,         And we'll rejoice some other day.'   So off the fellow scamper'd, quick and light,   To gain the fox-holes of a neighbouring height,   Less happy in his stratagem than flight.   The cock laugh'd sweetly in his sleeve;--     'Tis doubly sweet deceiver to deceive.    

[21] Aesop.


XVI--THE RAVEN WISHING TO IMITATE THE EAGLE.[22]

  The bird of Jove bore off a mutton,       A raven being witness.  That weaker bird, but equal glutton,       Not doubting of his fitness       To do the same with ease,       And bent his taste to please,       Took round the flock his sweep,       And mark'd among the sheep,       The one of fairest flesh and size,       A real sheep of sacrifice--       A dainty titbit bestial,       Reserved for mouth celestial.  Our gormand, gloating round,         Cried, 'Sheep, I wonder much         Who could have made you such.  You're far the fattest I have found;       I'll take you for my eating.'  And on the creature bleating       He settled down.  Now, sooth to say,       This sheep would weigh           More than a cheese;           And had a fleece         Much like that matting famous       Which graced the chin of Polyphemus;[23]         So fast it clung to every claw,         It was not easy to withdraw. The shepherd came, caught, caged, and, to their joy,   Gave croaker to his children for a toy. Ill plays the pilferer the bigger thief;     One's self one ought to know;--in brief,     Example is a dangerous lure;   Death strikes the gnat, where flies the wasp secure.  

[22] Aesop; and Corrozet.
[23] Polyphemus. --The Cyclop king: vide Homer's Odyssey, Book IX.


XVII--THE PEACOCK COMPLAINING TO JUNO.[24]

    The peacock[25] to the queen of heaven       Complain'd in some such words:--     'Great goddess, you have given       To me, the laughing-stock of birds,     A voice which fills, by taste quite just,         All nature with disgust;     Whereas that little paltry thing,       The nightingale, pours from her throat       So sweet and ravishing a note,   She bears alone the honours of the spring.' In anger Juno heard,     And cried, 'Shame on you, jealous bird! Grudge you the nightingale her voice,     Who in the rainbow neck rejoice,     Than costliest silks more richly tinted,     In charms of grace and form unstinted,--       Who strut in kingly pride,       Your glorious tail spread wide     With brilliants which in sheen do     Outshine the jeweller's bow window? Is there a bird beneath the blue         That has more charms than you? No animal in everything can shine. By just partition of our gifts divine,       Each has its full and proper share;       Among the birds that cleave the air,     The hawk's a swift, the eagle is a brave one,     For omens serves the hoarse old raven,     The rook's of coming ills the prophet;       And if there's any discontent,         I've heard not of it. 'Cease, then, your envious complaint;       Or I, instead of making up your lack,   Will take your boasted plumage from your back.'  

[24] Phaedrus, III.17.
[25] The peacock was consecrated to Juno the "Queen of Heaven," and was under her protection.


XVIII--THE CAT METAMORPHOSED INTO A WOMAN.[26]

    A bachelor caress'd his cat,     A darling, fair, and delicate;     So deep in love, he thought her mew     The sweetest voice he ever knew.    By prayers, and tears, and magic art,     The man got Fate to take his part;     And, lo!    one morning at his side     His cat, transform'd, became his bride.    In wedded state our man was seen     The fool in courtship he had been.    No lover e'er was so bewitch'd       By any maiden's charms     As was this husband, so enrich'd       By hers within his arms.     He praised her beauties, this and that,     And saw there nothing of the cat.    In short, by passion's aid, he       Thought her a perfect lady.    'Twas night: some carpet-gnawing mice       Disturb'd the nuptial joys.    Excited by the noise,     The bride sprang at them in a trice;         The mice were scared and fled.    The bride, scarce in her bed,     The gnawing heard, and sprang again,--         And this time not in vain,     For, in this novel form array'd,     Of her the mice were less afraid.    Through life she loved this mousing course,     So great is stubborn nature's force.    In mockery of change, the old       Will keep their youthful bent.    When once the cloth has got its fold,       The smelling-pot its scent,     In vain your efforts and your care     To make them other than they are.    To work reform, do what you will,     Old habit will be habit still.    Nor fork[27] nor strap can mend its manners,   Nor cudgel-blows beat down its banners. Secure the doors against the renter,   And through the windows it will enter.  

[26] Aesop.
[27] Naturam expellas furca, tamen usque recurret.--Hor.Epist.Bk.I.10.--Translator.


XIX--THE LION AND THE ASS HUNTING.[28]

    The king of animals, with royal grace,     Would celebrate his birthday in the chase.     'Twas not with bow and arrows,       To slay some wretched sparrows;     The lion hunts the wild boar of the wood,     The antlered deer and stags, the fat and good.     This time, the king, t' insure success,       Took for his aide-de-camp an ass,       A creature of stentorian voice,       That felt much honour'd by the choice.     The lion hid him in a proper station,     And order'd him to bray, for his vocation,       Assured that his tempestuous cry       The boldest beasts would terrify,       And cause them from their lairs to fly.     And, sooth, the horrid noise the creature made   Did strike the tenants of the wood with dread;       And, as they headlong fled,     All fell within the lion's ambuscade.     'Has not my service glorious       Made both of us victorious?'     Cried out the much-elated ass.     'Yes,' said the lion; 'bravely bray'd!     Had I not known yourself and race,     I should have been myself afraid!'     If he had dared, the donkey       Had shown himself right spunky     At this retort, though justly made;       For who could suffer boasts to pass       So ill-befitting to an ass?      

[28] Phaedrus, I.11: Aesop.


XX--THE WILL EXPLAINED BY AESOP.[29]

        If what old story says of Aesop's true,           The oracle of Greece he was,         And more than Areopagus[30] he knew,           With all its wisdom in the laws. The following tale gives but a sample         Of what has made his fame so ample. Three daughters shared a father's purse,           Of habits totally diverse. The first, bewitched with drinks delicious;         The next, coquettish and capricious;         The third, supremely avaricious. The sire, expectant of his fate,         Bequeathed his whole estate,         In equal shares, to them,         And to their mother just the same,--       To her then payable, and not before,   Each daughter should possess her part no more. The father died. The females three       Were much in haste the will to see. They read, and read, but still         Saw not the willer's will. For could it well be understood         That each of this sweet sisterhood,         When she possess'd her part no more,         Should to her mother pay it o'er? 'Twas surely not so easy saying         How lack of means would help the paying. What meant their honour'd father, then? Th' affair was brought to legal men,       Who, after turning o'er the case       Some hundred thousand different ways,         Threw down the learned bonnet,         Unable to decide upon it;         And then advised the heirs,         Without more thought, t' adjust affairs. As to the widow's share, the counsel say,       'We hold it just the daughters each should pay         One third to her upon demand,         Should she not choose to have it stand           Commuted as a life annuity,   Paid from her husband's death, with due congruity.' The thing thus order'd, the estate         Is duly cut in portions three. And in the first they all agree       To put the feasting-lodges, plate,         Luxurious cooling mugs,         Enormous liquor jugs,   Rich cupboards,--built beneath the trellised vine,--   The stores of ancient, sweet Malvoisian wine,     The slaves to serve it at a sign;       In short, whatever, in a great house,       There is of feasting apparatus. The second part is made     Of what might help the jilting trade--       The city house and furniture,       Exquisite and genteel, be sure,     The eunuchs, milliners, and laces,     The jewels, shawls, and costly dresses. The third is made of household stuff,     More vulgar, rude, and rough--     Farms, fences, flocks, and fodder,     And men and beasts to turn the sod o'er. This done, since it was thought       To give the parts by lot       Might suit, or it might not,     Each paid her share of fees dear,     And took the part that pleased her. 'Twas in great Athens town,       Such judgment gave the gown. And there the public voice   Applauded both the judgment and the choice. But Aesop well was satisfied       The learned men had set aside,       In judging thus the testament,       The very gist of its intent. 'The dead,' quoth he, 'could he but know of it,   Would heap reproaches on such Attic wit. What! men who proudly take their place     As sages of the human race,         Lack they the simple skill         To settle such a will?' This said, he undertook himself       The task of portioning the pelf;     And straightway gave each maid the part     The least according to her heart--     The prim coquette, the drinking stuff,       The drinker, then, the farms and cattle;     And on the miser, rude and rough,       The robes and lace did Aesop settle;       For thus, he said, 'an early date       Would see the sisters alienate       Their several shares of the estate. No motive now in maidenhood to tarry,   They all would seek, post haste, to marry;     And, having each a splendid bait,     Each soon would find a well-bred mate;   And, leaving thus their father's goods intact,   Would to their mother pay them all, in fact,'--       Which of the testament       Was plainly the intent. The people, who had thought a slave an ass,   Much wonder'd how it came to pass     That one alone should have more sense     Than all their men of most pretence.  

[29] Phaedrus, IV.5.
[30] Areopagus.--This was the Athenian Court of Justice at Mars Hill. It is said to have been called Areiopagos (the Hill of Mars) because, according to tradition, the first trial there was that of Mars for the murder of Halirrhotius.




BOOK III.




I--THE MILLER, HIS SON, AND THE ASS [1]

To M.De Maucroix.[2]

  Because the arts are plainly birthright matters,   For fables we to ancient Greece are debtors;   But still this field could not be reap'd so clean   As not to let us, later comers, glean.  The fiction-world hath deserts yet to dare,   And, daily, authors make discoveries there.  I'd fain repeat one which our man of song,   Old Malherbe, told one day to young Racan.  [3]   Of Horace they the rivals and the heirs,   Apollo's pets,--my masters, I should say,--   Sole by themselves were met, I'm told, one day,   Confiding each to each their thoughts and cares.Racan begins:--'Pray end my inward strife,   For well you know, my friend, what's what in life,   Who through its varied course, from stage to stage,   Have stored the full experience of age;   What shall I do?'Tis time I chose profession.You know my fortune, birth, and disposition.Ought I to make the country my resort,   Or seek the army, or to rise at court?There's nought but mixeth bitterness with charms;   War hath its pleasures; hymen, its alarms.   'Twere nothing hard to take my natural bent,--   But I've a world of people to content.''Content a world!'old Malherbe cries; 'who can, sir?Why, let me tell a story ere I answer.''A miller and his son, I've somewhere read,   The first in years, the other but a lad,--   A fine, smart boy, however, I should say,--   To sell their ass went to a fair one day.In order there to get the highest price,   They needs must keep their donkey fresh and nice;   So, tying fast his feet, they swung him clear,   And bore him hanging like a chandelier.Alas!poor, simple-minded country fellows!The first that sees their load, loud laughing, bellows,   "What farce is this to split good people's sides?The most an ass is not the one that rides!"The miller, much enlighten'd by this talk,   Untied his precious beast, and made him walk.The ass, who liked the other mode of travel,   Bray'd some complaint at trudging on the gravel;   Whereat, not understanding well the beast,   The miller caused his hopeful son to ride,   And walk'd behind, without a spark of pride.Three merchants pass'd, and, mightily displeased,   The eldest of these gentlemen cried out,   "Ho there!dismount, for shame, you lubber lout!Nor make a foot-boy of your grey-beard sire;   Change places, as the rights of age require.""To please you, sirs," the miller said, "I ought."So down the young and up the old man got.Three girls next passing, "What a shame!"says one,   "That boy should be obliged on foot to run,   While that old chap, upon his ass astride,   Should play the calf, and like a bishop ride!""Please save your wit," the miller made reply,   "Tough veal, my girls, the calf as old as I."But joke on joke repeated changed his mind;   So up he took, at last, his son behind.Not thirty yards ahead, another set   Found fault."The biggest fools I ever met,"   Says one of them, "such burdens to impose.The ass is faint, and dying with their blows.Is this, indeed, the mercy which these rustics   Show to their honest, faithful, old domestics?If to the fair these lazy fellows ride,   'Twill be to sell thereat the donkey's hide!""Zounds!"cried the miller, "precious little brains   Hath he who takes, to please the world, such pains;   But since we're in, we'll try what can be done."So off the ass they jump'd, himself and son,   And, like a prelate, donkey march'd alone.Another man they met."These folks," said he,   "Enslave themselves to let their ass go free--   The darling brute!If I might be so bold,   I'd counsel them to have him set in gold.Not so went Nicholas his Jane[4] to woo,   Who rode, we sing, his ass to save his shoe." "Ass! ass!" our man replied; "we're asses three! I do avow myself an ass to be;   But since my sage advisers can't agree,     Their words henceforth shall not be heeded;     I'll suit myself." And he succeeded. 'For you, choose army, love, or court;     In town, or country, make resort;     Take wife, or cowl; ride you, or walk;     Doubt not but tongues will have their talk.'  

[1] The story of this fable has been used by most of the fabulists, from Aesop downwards.
[2] In the original editions this fable is dedicated "A.M.D.M."which initials stand for "To M.De Maucroix," Canon of Rheims, an early and late friend and patron of the poet.See Translator's Preface.
[3] Old Malherbe and young Racan.--French poets.Malherbe was born in 1556, and died in 1628.La Fontaine owed to Malherbe's works the happy inspiration which led him to write poetry.See Translator's Preface.Honorat de Bueil, Marquis de Racan, was born at La Roche Racan in 1589.As a poet he was a pupil of Malherbe.His works were praised by Boileau, and he was one of the earliest members of the French Academy.
[4] Nicholas and his Jane.--An allusion to an old French song.


II--THE MEMBERS AND THE BELLY.[5]

  Perhaps, had I but shown due loyalty,   This book would have begun with royalty,     Of which, in certain points of view,     Boss[6] Belly is the image true,   In whose bereavements all the members share:     Of whom the latter once so weary were,       As all due service to forbear,       On what they called his idle plan,       Resolved to play the gentleman,       And let his lordship live on air.'Like burden-beasts,' said they,         'We sweat from day to day;         And all for whom, and what?Ourselves we profit not.Our labour has no object but one,       That is, to feed this lazy glutton.We'll learn the resting trade         By his example's aid.'So said, so done; all labour ceased;   The hands refused to grasp, the arms to strike;         All other members did the like.Their boss might labour if he pleased!It was an error which they soon repented,     With pain of languid poverty acquainted.The heart no more the blood renew'd,       And hence repair no more accrued         To ever-wasting strength;         Whereby the mutineers, at length,       Saw that the idle belly, in its way,       Did more for common benefit than they.For royalty our fable makes,         A thing that gives as well as takes         Its power all labour to sustain,     Nor for themselves turns out their labour vain.It gives the artist bread, the merchant riches;     Maintains the diggers in their ditches;       Pays man of war and magistrate;         Supports the swarms in place,         That live on sovereign grace;       In short, is caterer for the state.Menenius[7] told the story well:         When Rome, of old, in pieces fell,       The commons parting from the senate.'The ills,' said they, 'that we complain at   Are, that the honours, treasures, power, and dignity,       Belong to them alone; while we             Get nought our labour for       But tributes, taxes, and fatigues of war.'Without the walls the people had their stand     Prepared to march in search of other land,           When by this noted fable           Menenius was able           To draw them, hungry, home           To duty and to Rome.[8] 

[5] Aesop.Rabelais also has a version: Book III.ch.3.
[6] Boss. --A word probably more familiar to hod-carriers than to lexicographers; qu. derived from the French bosseman, or the English boatswain, pronounced bos'n?It denotes a "master" of some practical "art."Master Belly, says Rabelais, was the first Master of Arts in the world.--Translator.The name used by La Fontaine is "Messer Gaster."To which he puts a footnote stating that he meant "L'estomac."He took the name from Rabelais, Book IV., ch.57, where it occurs thus:--"Messer Gaster est le premier maître ès arts de ce monde....Son mandement est nommé: Faire le fault, sans delay, ou mourir."
[7] Menenius--See Translator's Preface.
[8] Rome--According to our republican notions of government, these people were somewhat imposed upon.Perhaps the fable finds a more appropriate application in the relation of employer to employed.I leave the fabulists and the political economists to settle the question between them.--Translator.


III--THE WOLF TURNED SHEPHERD.[9]

  A wolf, whose gettings from the flocks     Began to be but few,   Bethought himself to play the fox     In character quite new.   A shepherd's hat and coat he took,       A cudgel for a crook,       Nor e'en the pipe forgot:   And more to seem what he was not,   Himself upon his hat he wrote,   'I'm Willie, shepherd of these sheep.'   His person thus complete,     His crook in upraised feet,   The impostor Willie stole upon the keep.   The real Willie, on the grass asleep,     Slept there, indeed, profoundly,   His dog and pipe slept, also soundly;     His drowsy sheep around lay.   As for the greatest number,   Much bless'd the hypocrite their slumber,   And hoped to drive away the flock,   Could he the shepherd's voice but mock.   He thought undoubtedly he could.   He tried: the tone in which he spoke,     Loud echoing from the wood,     The plot and slumber broke;     Sheep, dog, and man awoke.   The wolf, in sorry plight,     In hampering coat bedight,     Could neither run nor fight.   There's always leakage of deceit   Which makes it never safe to cheat.   Whoever is a wolf had better     Keep clear of hypocritic fetter.    

[9] The story of this fable is traced to Verdizotti, an Italian poet who lived about 1535-1600.


IV--THE FROGS ASKING A KING.[10]

    A certain commonwealth aquatic,     Grown tired of order democratic,   By clamouring in the ears of Jove, effected   Its being to a monarch's power subjected.     Jove flung it down, at first, a king pacific.     Who nathless fell with such a splash terrific,     The marshy folks, a foolish race and timid,     Made breathless haste to get from him hid.     They dived into the mud beneath the water,   Or found among the reeds and rushes quarter.     And long it was they dared not see       The dreadful face of majesty,       Supposing that some monstrous frog       Had been sent down to rule the bog.     The king was really a log,       Whose gravity inspired with awe         The first that, from his hiding-place       Forth venturing, astonish'd, saw         The royal blockhead's face.     With trembling and with fear,       At last he drew quite near.     Another follow'd, and another yet,     Till quite a crowd at last were met;     Who, growing fast and strangely bolder,     Perch'd soon upon the royal shoulder.     His gracious majesty kept still,     And let his people work their will.     Clack, clack!     what din beset the ears of Jove?     'We want a king,' the people said, 'to move!'     The god straight sent them down a crane,   Who caught and slew them without measure,   And gulp'd their carcasses at pleasure;     Whereat the frogs more wofully complain.     'What!     what!'     great Jupiter replied;   'By your desires must I be tied?     Think you such government is bad?     You should have kept what first you had;   Which having blindly fail'd to do,   It had been prudent still for you   To let that former king suffice,   More meek and mild, if not so wise.     With this now make yourselves content,   Lest for your sins a worse be sent.'      

[10] Aesop: Phaedrus, I.2.


V--THE FOX AND THE GOAT.[11]

  A fox once journey'd, and for company   A certain bearded, horned goat had he;   Which goat no further than his nose could see.   The fox was deeply versed in trickery.   These travellers did thirst compel     To seek the bottom of a well.   There, having drunk enough for two,     Says fox, 'My friend, what shall we do?   'Tis time that we were thinking     Of something else than drinking.   Raise you your feet upon the wall,     And stick your horns up straight and tall;     Then up your back I'll climb with ease,     And draw you after, if you please.'   'Yes, by my beard,' the other said,     ''Tis just the thing.   I like a head     Well stock'd with sense, like thine.   Had it been left to mine,             I do confess,     I never should have thought of this.'   So Renard clamber'd out,       And, leaving there the goat,       Discharged his obligations       By preaching thus on patience:--     'Had Heaven put sense thy head within,     To match the beard upon thy chin,     Thou wouldst have thought a bit,     Before descending such a pit.   I'm out of it; good bye:         With prudent effort try         Yourself to extricate.   For me, affairs of state         Permit me not to wait.'   Whatever way you wend,         Consider well the end.    

[11] Aesop; also in Phaedrus, IV.9.


VI--THE EAGLE, THE WILD SOW, AND THE CAT.[12]

      A certain hollow tree       Was tenanted by three.      An eagle held a lofty bough,     The hollow root a wild wood sow,     A female cat between the two.      All busy with maternal labours,   They lived awhile obliging neighbours.      At last the cat's deceitful tongue     Broke up the peace of old and young.      Up climbing to the eagle's nest,     She said, with whisker'd lips compress'd,   'Our death, or, what as much we mothers fear,     That of our helpless offspring dear,       Is surely drawing near.      Beneath our feet, see you not how     Destruction's plotted by the sow?      Her constant digging, soon or late,     Our proud old castle will uproot.      And then--O, sad and shocking fate!      --   She'll eat our young ones, as the fruit!      Were there but hope of saving one,   'Twould soothe somewhat my bitter moan.'      Thus leaving apprehensions hideous,   Down went the puss perfidious   To where the sow, no longer digging,   Was in the very act of pigging.      'Good friend and neighbour,' whisper'd she,   'I warn you on your guard to be.      Your pigs should you but leave a minute,     This eagle here will seize them in it.      Speak not of this, I beg, at all,       Lest on my head her wrath should fall.'      Another breast with fear inspired,       With fiendish joy the cat retired.      The eagle ventured no egress       To feed her young, the sow still less.      Fools they, to think that any curse       Than ghastly famine could be worse!      Both staid at home, resolved and obstinate,   To save their young ones from impending fate,--       The royal bird for fear of mine,       For fear of royal claws the swine.      All died, at length, with hunger,         The older and the younger;         There staid, of eagle race or boar,     Not one this side of death's dread door;--           A sad misfortune, which           The wicked cats made rich.      O, what is there of hellish plot         The treacherous tongue dares not!      Of all the ills Pandora's box[13] outpour'd,       Deceit, I think, is most to be abhorr'd.  

[12] Phaedrus, II.4.
[13] Pandora's box.--Pandora, the Eve of the Grecian mythology, was sent to earth with all the human ills and Hope in a box, whence all but Hope escaped.--Vide Elton's Hesiod, Works and Days, I.114, Bohn's edition, &c.


VII--THE DRUNKARD AND HIS WIFE.[14]

      Each has his fault, to which he clings         In spite of shame or fear.       This apophthegm a story brings,         To make its truth more clear.       A sot had lost health, mind, and purse;         And, truly, for that matter,         Sots mostly lose the latter       Ere running half their course.       When wine, one day, of wit had fill'd the room,   His wife inclosed him in a spacious tomb.       There did the fumes evaporate       At leisure from his drowsy pate.       When he awoke, he found         His body wrapp'd around         With grave-clothes, chill and damp,         Beneath a dim sepulchral lamp.       'How's this?       My wife a widow sad?'       He cried, 'and I a ghost?       Dead?       dead?'       Thereat his spouse, with snaky hair,         And robes like those the Furies wear,         With voice to fit the realms below,           Brought boiling caudle to his bier--           For Lucifer the proper cheer;         By which her husband came to know--         For he had heard of those three ladies--         Himself a citizen of Hades.       'What may your office be?'       The phantom question'd he.       'I'm server up of Pluto's meat,         And bring his guests the same to eat.'       'Well,' says the sot, not taking time to think,     'And don't you bring us anything to drink?'        

[14] Aesop.


VIII--THE GOUT AND THE SPIDER.[15]

    When Nature angrily turn'd out     Those plagues, the spider and the gout,--   'See you,' said she, 'those huts so meanly built,   These palaces so grand and richly gilt?     By mutual agreement fix     Your choice of dwellings; or if not,         To end th' affair by lot,       Draw out these little sticks.'     'The huts are not for me,' the spider cried;     'And not for me the palace,' cried the gout;   For there a sort of men she spied     Call'd doctors, going in and out,     From whom, she could not hope for ease.     So hied her to the huts the fell disease,     And, fastening on a poor man's toe,     Hoped there to fatten on his woe,     And torture him, fit after fit,     Without a summons e'er to quit,       From old Hippocrates.     The spider, on the lofty ceiling,     As if she had a life-lease feeling.     Wove wide her cunning toils,       Soon rich with insect spoils.     A maid destroy'd them as she swept the room:   Repair'd, again they felt the fatal broom.     The wretched creature, every day,     From house and home must pack away.     At last, her courage giving out,     She went to seek her sister gout,       And in the field descried her,     Quite starved: more evils did betide her     Than e'er befel the poorest spider--     Her toiling host enslaved her so,     And made her chop, and dig, and hoe!     (Says one, "Kept brisk and busy,       The gout is made half easy."     )     'O, when,' exclaim'd the sad disease,       'Will this my misery stop?     O, sister spider, if you please,         Our places let us swop.'     The spider gladly heard,       And took her at her word,--     And flourish'd in the cabin-lodge,     Not forced the tidy broom to dodge     The gout, selecting her abode       With an ecclesiastic judge,     Turn'd judge herself, and, by her code,       He from his couch no more could budge.     The salves and cataplasms Heaven knows,     That mock'd the misery of his toes;     While aye, without a blush, the curse,     Kept driving onward worse and worse.     Needless to say, the sisterhood   Thought their exchange both wise and good.      

[15] The story of this fable is told in Petrarch, (Epistles, III.13) and by others.


IX--THE WOLF AND THE STORK.[16]

  The wolves are prone to play the glutton.   One, at a certain feast, 'tis said,   So stuff'd himself with lamb and mutton,     He seem'd but little short of dead.   Deep in his throat a bone stuck fast.   Well for this wolf, who could not speak,   That soon a stork quite near him pass'd.   By signs invited, with her beak         The bone she drew         With slight ado,     And for this skilful surgery     Demanded, modestly, her fee.   'Your fee!'   replied the wolf,       In accents rather gruff;       'And is it not enough     Your neck is safe from such a gulf?   Go, for a wretch ingrate,       Nor tempt again your fate!'    

[16] Phaedrus, I.8; and Aesop.


X--THE LION BEATEN BY THE MAN.[17]

      A picture once was shown,       In which one man, alone,       Upon the ground had thrown       A lion fully grown.       Much gloried at the sight the rabble.       A lion thus rebuked their babble:--     'That you have got the victory there,       There is no contradiction.       But, gentles, possibly you are       The dupes of easy fiction:   Had we the art of making pictures,   Perhaps our champion had beat yours!'        

[17] Aesop.


XI--THE FOX AND THE GRAPES.[18]

  A fox, almost with hunger dying,   Some grapes upon a trellis spying,   To all appearance ripe, clad in       Their tempting russet skin,   Most gladly would have eat them;   But since he could not get them,     So far above his reach the vine--   'They're sour,' he said; 'such grapes as these,   The dogs may eat them if they please!'   Did he not better than to whine?    

[18] Aesop: Phaedrus, IV.3.


XII--THE SWAN AND THE COOK.[19]

  The pleasures of a poultry yard   Were by a swan and gosling shared.   The swan was kept there for his looks,   The thrifty gosling for the cooks;   The first the garden's pride, the latter   A greater favourite on the platter.   They swam the ditches, side by side,   And oft in sports aquatic vied,   Plunging, splashing far and wide,   With rivalry ne'er satisfied.   One day the cook, named Thirsty John,     Sent for the gosling, took the swan,         In haste his throat to cut,         And put him in the pot.   The bird's complaint resounded         In glorious melody;     Whereat the cook, astounded         His sad mistake to see,     Cried, 'What!   make soup of a musician!   Please God, I'll never set such dish on.   No, no; I'll never cut a throat     That sings so sweet a note.'   'Tis thus, whatever peril may alarm us,     Sweet words will never harm us.    

[19] Aesop.


XIII--THE WOLVES AND THE SHEEP.[20]

    By-gone a thousand years of war,       The wearers of the fleece       And wolves at last made peace;     Which both appear'd the better for;     For if the wolves had now and then       Eat up a straggling ewe or wether,     As often had the shepherd men       Turn'd wolf-skins into leather.     Fear always spoil'd the verdant herbage,     And so it did the bloody carnage.     Hence peace was sweet; and, lest it should be riven,     On both sides hostages were given.     The sheep, as by the terms arranged,     For pups of wolves their dogs exchanged;       Which being done above suspicion,       Confirm'd and seal'd by high commission,     What time the pups were fully grown,     And felt an appetite for prey,     And saw the sheepfold left alone,       The shepherds all away,     They seized the fattest lambs they could,     And, choking, dragg'd them to the wood;     Of which, by secret means apprised,         Their sires, as is surmised,   Fell on the hostage guardians of the sheep,         And slew them all asleep.     So quick the deed of perfidy was done,       There fled to tell the tale not one!     From which we may conclude     That peace with villains will be rued.     Peace in itself, 'tis true,       May be a good for you;     But 'tis an evil, nathless,     When enemies are faithless.      

[20] Aesop.


XIV--THE LION GROWN OLD.[21]

  A lion, mourning, in his age, the wane   Of might once dreaded through his wild domain,       Was mock'd, at last, upon his throne,           By subjects of his own,         Strong through his weakness grown.   The horse his head saluted with a kick;         The wolf snapp'd at his royal hide;         The ox, too, gored him in the side;       The unhappy lion, sad and sick,       Could hardly growl, he was so weak.   In uncomplaining, stoic pride,       He waited for the hour of fate,       Until the ass approach'd his gate;       Whereat, 'This is too much,' he saith;       'I willingly would yield my breath;       But, ah!   thy kick is double death!'    

[21] Phaedrus, I.21.


XV--PHILOMEL AND PROGNE.[22]

  From home and city spires, one day,   The swallow Progne flew away,       And sought the bosky dell       Where sang poor Philomel.  [23]   'My sister,' Progne said, 'how do you do? 'Tis now a thousand years since you   Have been conceal'd from human view;   I'm sure I have not seen your face     Once since the times of Thrace. Pray, will you never quit this dull retreat?' 'Where could I find,' said Philomel, 'so sweet?' 'What! sweet?' cried Progne--'sweet to waste     Such tones on beasts devoid of taste,     Or on some rustic, at the most! Should you by deserts be engross'd? Come, be the city's pride and boast. Besides, the woods remind of harms     That Tereus in them did your charms.'   'Alas!' replied the bird of song,   'The thought of that so cruel wrong       Makes me, from age to age,       Prefer this hermitage;     For nothing like the sight of men     Can call up what I suffer'd then.'  

[22] Aesop.
[23] Progne and Philomel. --Progne and Philomela, sisters, in mythology. Progne was Queen of Thrace, and was changed into a swallow. Her sister was changed into a nightingale; vide Ovid, Metamorphoses


XVI--THE WOMAN DROWNED.[24]

    I hate that saying, old and savage,     "'Tis nothing but a woman drowning."     That's much, I say.     What grief more keen should have edge     Than loss of her, of all our joys the crowning?     Thus much suggests the fable I am borrowing.     A woman perish'd in the water,         Where, anxiously, and sorrowing,         Her husband sought her,       To ease the grief he could not cure,       By honour'd rites of sepulture.     It chanced that near the fatal spot,         Along the stream which had         Produced a death so sad,       There walk'd some men that knew it not.     The husband ask'd if they had seen       His wife, or aught that hers had been.     One promptly answer'd, 'No!     But search the stream below:         It must nave borne her in its flow.'     'No,' said another; 'search above.     In that direction         She would have floated, by the love             Of contradiction.'     This joke was truly out of season;--         I don't propose to weigh its reason.     But whether such propensity           The sex's fault may be,         Or not, one thing is very sure,         Its own propensities endure.     Up to the end they'll have their will,           And, if it could be, further still.      

[24] Verdizotti.


XVII--THE WEASEL IN THE GRANARY.[25]

  A weasel through a hole contrived to squeeze,         (She was recovering from disease,)         Which led her to a farmer's hoard.  There lodged, her wasted form she cherish'd;     Heaven knows the lard and victuals stored       That by her gnawing perish'd!  Of which the consequence       Was sudden corpulence.  A week or so was past,     When having fully broken fast.  A noise she heard, and hurried     To find the hole by which she came,     And seem'd to find it not the same;       So round she ran, most sadly flurried;     And, coming back, thrust out her head,     Which, sticking there, she said,     'This is the hole, there can't be blunder:     What makes it now so small, I wonder,   Where, but the other day, I pass'd with ease?'  A rat her trouble sees,     And cries, 'But with an emptier belly;     You enter'd lean, and lean must sally.'  What I have said to you   Has eke been said to not a few,   Who, in a vast variety of cases,[26]   Have ventured into such-like places.  

[25] Aesop: also in Horace, Epistles, Book I.7.
[26] A vast variety of cases--Chamfort says of this passage: "La Fontaine, with his usual delicacy, here alludes to the king's farmers and other officers in place; and abruptly quits the subject as if he felt himself on ticklish ground."


XVIII--THE CAT AND THE OLD RAT.[27]

      A story-writer of our sort       Historifies, in short,       Of one that may be reckon'd       A Rodilard the Second,--[28]       The Alexander of the cats,       The Attila,[29] the scourge of rats,       Whose fierce and whisker'd head       Among the latter spread,       A league around, its dread;       Who seem'd, indeed, determined       The world should be unvermined. The planks with props more false than slim,     The tempting heaps of poison'd meal,     The traps of wire and traps of steel,   Were only play compared with him. At length, so sadly were they scared. The rats and mice no longer dared       To show their thievish faces       Outside their hiding-places,     Thus shunning all pursuit; whereat     Our crafty General Cat     Contrived to hang himself, as dead,     Beside the wall with downward head,     Resisting gravitation's laws     By clinging with his hinder claws       To some small bit of string. The rats esteem'd the thing     A judgment for some naughty deed,         Some thievish snatch,         Or ugly scratch;     And thought their foe had got his meed         By being hung indeed. With hope elated all         Of laughing at his funeral,     They thrust their noses out in air;     And now to show their heads they dare;     Now dodging back, now venturing more;       At last upon the larder's store       They fall to filching, as of yore. A scanty feast enjoy'd these shallows;   Down dropp'd the hung one from his gallows,       And of the hindmost caught. 'Some other tricks to me are known,'     Said he, while tearing bone from bone,       'By long experience taught;     The point is settled, free from doubt,     That from your holes you shall come out.' His threat as good as prophecy     Was proved by Mr. Mildandsly;     For, putting on a mealy robe,     He squatted in an open tub,     And held his purring and his breath;--     Out came the vermin to their death. On this occasion, one old stager,     A rat as grey as any badger,     Who had in battle lost his tail,     Abstained from smelling at the meal;     And cried, far off, 'Ah! General Cat,     I much suspect a heap like that;     Your meal is not the thing, perhaps,     For one who knows somewhat of traps;     Should you a sack of meal become,     I'd let you be, and stay at home.' Well said, I think, and prudently,       By one who knew distrust to be       The parent of security.  

[27] Phaedrus, Book IV.2: also in Aesop, and Faerno.
[28] Rodilard the Second.--Another allusion to Rabelais's cat Rodilardus. See Fable II., Book II.
[29] Attila--The King of the Huns, who, for overrunning half Europe, was termed the Scourge of God.




BOOK IV.




I--THE LION IN LOVE.[1]

To Mademoiselle De Sévigné.[2]

    Sévigné, type of every grace     In female form and face,     In your regardlessness of men,     Can you show favour when     The sportive fable craves your ear,     And see, unmoved by fear,       A lion's haughty heart   Thrust through by Love's audacious dart?     Strange conqueror, Love!     And happy he,   And strangely privileged and free,       Who only knows by story       Him and his feats of glory!     If on this subject you are wont     To think the simple truth too blunt,     The fabulous may less affront;   Which now, inspired with gratitude,   Yea, kindled into zeal most fervent,     Doth venture to intrude     Within your maiden solitude,   And kneel, your humble servant.     --   In times when animals were speakers,   Among the quadrupedal seekers     Of our alliance     There came the lions.     And wherefore not?     for then   They yielded not to men   In point of courage or of sense,   Nor were in looks without pretence.     A high-born lion, on his way   Across a meadow, met one day   A shepherdess, who charm'd him so,   That, as such matters ought to go,   He sought the maiden for his bride.     Her sire, it cannot be denied,   Had much preferr'd a son-in-law   Of less terrific mouth and paw.     It was not easy to decide--   The lion might the gift abuse--   'Twas not quite prudent to refuse.     And if refusal there should be,   Perhaps a marriage one would see,   Some morning, made clandestinely.     For, over and above   The fact that she could bear   With none but males of martial air,     The lady was in love   With him of shaggy hair.     Her sire, much wanting cover   To send away the lover,   Thus spoke:--'My daughter, sir,   Is delicate.     I fear to her     Your fond caressings     Will prove rough blessings.     To banish all alarm     About such sort of harm,   Permit us to remove the cause,   By filing off your teeth and claws.     In such a case, your royal kiss   Will be to her a safer bliss,     And to yourself a sweeter;   Since she will more respond   To those endearments fond     With which you greet her.'     The lion gave consent at once,     By love so great a dunce!     Without a tooth or claw now view him--     A fort with cannon spiked.     The dogs, let loose upon him, slew him,     All biting safely where they liked.     O, tyrant Love!     when held by you,   We may to prudence bid adieu.      

[1] Aesop, also Verdizotti.
[2] Mademoiselle de Sévigné. --Francoise-Marguerite de Sévigné, afterwards Madame de Grignan, the daughter of the celebrated Madame de Sévigné. The famous Sévigné "Letters" were for the most part addressed to Madame de Grignan. For some account of Madame de Sévigné and La Fontaine, see the Translator's Preface; also note to Fable XI.Book VII


II--THE SHEPHERD AND THE SEA.[3]

      A shepherd, neighbour to the sea,       Lived with his flock contentedly.       His fortune, though but small,         Was safe within his call.       At last some stranded kegs of gold       Him tempted, and his flock he sold,       Turn'd merchant, and the ocean's waves       Bore all his treasure--to its caves.       Brought back to keeping sheep once more,       But not chief shepherd, as before,       When sheep were his that grazed the shore,       He who, as Corydon or Thyrsis,       Might once have shone in pastoral verses,       Bedeck'd with rhyme and metre,       Was nothing now but Peter.       But time and toil redeem'd in full       Those harmless creatures rich in wool;       And as the lulling winds, one day,   The vessels wafted with a gentle motion,   'Want you,' he cried, 'more money, Madam Ocean?       Address yourself to some one else, I pray;         You shall not get it out of me!       I know too well your treachery.'       This tale's no fiction, but a fact,         Which, by experience back'd,         Proves that a single penny,           At present held, and certain,         Is worth five times as many,           Of Hope's, beyond the curtain;   That one should be content with his condition,   And shut his ears to counsels of ambition,   More faithless than the wreck-strown sea, and which   Doth thousands beggar where it makes one rich,--   Inspires the hope of wealth, in glorious forms,   And blasts the same with piracy and storms. 

[3] Aesop.


III--THE FLY AND THE ANT.[4]

    A fly and ant, upon a sunny bank,     Discuss'd the question of their rank.     'O Jupiter!'     the former said,     'Can love of self so turn the head,       That one so mean and crawling,       And of so low a calling,     To boast equality shall dare     With me, the daughter of the air?     In palaces I am a guest,     And even at thy glorious feast.     Whene'er the people that adore thee       May immolate for thee a bullock,     I'm sure to taste the meat before thee.     Meanwhile this starveling, in her hillock,     Is living on some bit of straw     Which she has labour'd home to draw.     But tell me now, my little thing,     Do you camp ever on a king,     An emperor, or lady?     I do, and have full many a play-day     On fairest bosom of the fair,     And sport myself upon her hair.     Come now, my hearty, rack your brain     To make a case about your grain.'     'Well, have you done?'     replied the ant.     'You enter palaces, I grant,     And for it get right soundly cursed.     Of sacrifices, rich and fat,     Your taste, quite likely, is the first;--       Are they the better off for that?     You enter with the holy train;     So enters many a wretch profane.     On heads of kings and asses you may squat;     Deny your vaunting I will not;     But well such impudence, I know,     Provokes a sometimes fatal blow.     The name in which your vanity delights     Is own'd as well by parasites,   And spies that die by ropes--as you soon will     By famine or by ague-chill,       When Phoebus goes to cheer       The other hemisphere,--     The very time to me most dear.     Not forced abroad to go       Through wind, and rain, and snow,     My summer's work I then enjoy,     And happily my mind employ,     From care by care exempted.     By which this truth I leave to you,   That by two sorts of glory we are tempted,       The false one and the true.     Work waits, time flies; adieu:--       This gabble does not fill       My granary or till.'      

[4] Phaedrus, IV.23.


IV--THE GARDENER AND HIS LORD.

  A lover of gardens, half cit and half clown,   Possess'd a nice garden beside a small town;   And with it a field by a live hedge inclosed,   Where sorrel and lettuce, at random disposed,   A little of jasmine, and much of wild thyme,       Grew gaily, and all in their prime       To make up Miss Peggy's bouquet,       The grace of her bright wedding day.   For poaching in such a nice field--'twas a shame;   A foraging, cud-chewing hare was to blame.   Whereof the good owner bore down       This tale to the lord of the town:--   'Some mischievous animal, morning and night,   In spite of my caution, comes in for his bite.   He laughs at my cunning-set dead-falls and snares;   For clubbing and stoning as little he cares.   I think him a wizard.   A wizard!   the coot!   I'd catch him if he were a devil to boot!'   The lord said, in haste to have sport for his hounds,   'I'll clear him, I warrant you, out of your grounds;   To morrow I'll do it without any fail.'   The thing thus agreed on, all hearty and hale,   The lord and his party, at crack of the dawn,   With hounds at their heels canter'd over the lawn.   Arrived, said the lord in his jovial mood,   'We'll breakfast with you, if your chickens are good.   That lass, my good man, I suppose is your daughter:   No news of a son-in-law?   Any one sought her?   No doubt, by the score.   Keep an eye on the docket,   Eh?   Dost understand me?   I speak of the pocket.'   So saying, the daughter he graciously greeted,   And close by his lordship he bade her be seated;   Avow'd himself pleased with so handsome a maid,   And then with her kerchief familiarly play'd,--   Impertinent freedoms the virtuous fair   Repell'd with a modest and lady-like air,--   So much that her father a little suspected   The girl had already a lover elected.   Meanwhile in the kitchen what bustling and cooking!   'For what are your hams?   They are very good looking.'   'They're kept for your lordship.'   'I take them,' said he;   'Such elegant flitches are welcome to me.'   He breakfasted finely his troop, with delight,--   Dogs, horses, and grooms of the best appetite.   Thus he govern'd his host in the shape of a guest,   Unbottled his wine, and his daughter caress'd.   To breakfast, the huddle of hunters succeeds,   The yelping of dogs and the neighing of steeds,   All cheering and fixing for wonderful deeds;   The horns and the bugles make thundering din;   Much wonders our gardener what it can mean.   The worst is, his garden most wofully fares;   Adieu to its arbours, and borders, and squares;   Adieu to its chiccory, onions, and leeks;   Adieu to whatever good cookery seeks.   Beneath a great cabbage the hare was in bed,   Was started, and shot at, and hastily fled.   Off went the wild chase, with a terrible screech,   And not through a hole, but a horrible breach,   Which some one had made, at the beck of the lord,   Wide through the poor hedge!   'Twould have been quite absurd   Should lordship not freely from garden go out,   On horseback, attended by rabble and rout.   Scarce suffer'd the gard'ner his patience to wince,   Consoling himself--'Twas the sport of a prince;   While bipeds and quadrupeds served to devour,   And trample, and waste, in the space of an hour,   Far more than a nation of foraging hares   Could possibly do in a hundred of years.   Small princes, this story is true,         When told in relation to you.   In settling your quarrels with kings for your tools,   You prove yourselves losers and eminent fools.    

V--THE ASS AND THE LITTLE DOG.[5]

    One's native talent from its course     Cannot be turned aside by force;     But poorly apes the country clown     The polish'd manners of the town.    Their Maker chooses but a few     With power of pleasing to imbue;     Where wisely leave it we, the mass,     Unlike a certain fabled ass,   That thought to gain his master's blessing   By jumping on him and caressing.    'What!'    said the donkey in his heart;     'Ought it to be that puppy's part       To lead his useless life       In full companionship     With master and his wife,       While I must bear the whip?    What doth the cur a kiss to draw?    Forsooth, he only gives his paw!    If that is all there needs to please,     I'll do the thing myself, with ease.'    Possess'd with this bright notion,--     His master sitting on his chair,     At leisure in the open air,--       He ambled up, with awkward motion,     And put his talents to the proof;     Upraised his bruised and batter'd hoof,     And, with an amiable mien,     His master patted on the chin,     The action gracing with a word--     The fondest bray that e'er was heard!    O, such caressing was there ever?    Or melody with such a quaver?    'Ho!    Martin!    [6] here! a club, a club bring!' Out cried the master, sore offended. So Martin gave the ass a drubbing,--     And so the comedy was ended.  

[5] Aesop.
[6] Martin--La Fontaine has "Martin-bâton," a name for a groom or ostler armed with his cudgel of office, taken from Rabelais.


VI--THE BATTLE OF THE RATS AND THE WEASELS.[7]

  The weasels live, no more than cats,   On terms of friendship with the rats;     And, were it not that these     Through doors contrive to squeeze         Too narrow for their foes,       The animals long-snouted       Would long ago have routed,       And from the planet scouted         Their race, as I suppose.  One year it did betide,     When they were multiplied,     An army took the field     Of rats, with spear and shield,     Whose crowded ranks led on     A king named Ratapon.  The weasels, too, their banner       Unfurl'd in warlike manner.  As Fame her trumpet sounds,       The victory balanced well;     Enrich'd were fallow grounds       Where slaughter'd legions fell;     But by said trollop's tattle,     The loss of life in battle     Thinn'd most the rattish race     In almost every place;     And finally their rout     Was total, spite of stout     Artarpax and Psicarpax,     And valiant Meridarpax,[8]     Who, cover'd o'er with dust,     Long time sustain'd their host     Down sinking on the plain. Their efforts were in vain;     Fate ruled that final hour,     (Inexorable power!) And so the captains fled     As well as those they led;     The princes perish'd all. The undistinguish'd small     In certain holes found shelter,     In crowding, helter-skelter;     But the nobility     Could not go in so free,     Who proudly had assumed     Each one a helmet plumed;     We know not, truly, whether     For honour's sake the feather,     Or foes to strike with terror;     But, truly, 'twas their error. Nor hole, nor crack, nor crevice       Will let their head-gear in;     While meaner rats in bevies       An easy passage win;--     So that the shafts of fate     Do chiefly hit the great. A feather in the cap     Is oft a great mishap. An equipage too grand     Comes often to a stand     Within a narrow place. The small, whate'er the case,     With ease slip through a strait,     Where larger folks must wait.  

[7] Phaedrus, Book IV.6.
[8] Names of rats, invented by Homer.--Translator.


VII--THE MONKEY AND THE DOLPHIN.[9]

      It was the custom of the Greeks     For passengers o'er sea to carry         Both monkeys full of tricks   And funny dogs to make them merry.      A ship, that had such things on deck,     Not far from Athens, went to wreck.      But for the dolphins, all had drown'd.      They are a philanthropic fish,     Which fact in Pliny may be found;--       A better voucher who could wish?      They did their best on this occasion.      A monkey even, on their plan     Well nigh attain'd his own salvation;       A dolphin took him for a man,     And on his dorsal gave him place.      So grave the silly creature's face,     That one might well have set him down     That old musician of renown.      [10]     The fish had almost reach'd the land,       When, as it happen'd,--what a pity! --     He ask'd, 'Are you from Athens grand?' 'Yes; well they know me in that city. If ever you have business there,       I'll help you do it, for my kin       The highest offices are in. My cousin, sir, is now lord mayor.' The dolphin thank'd him, with good grace,     Both for himself and all his race,     And ask'd, 'You doubtless know Piraeus,   Where, should we come to town, you'll see us.' 'Piraeus? yes, indeed I know;     He was my crony long ago.' The dunce knew not the harbour's name,     And for a man's mistook the same. The people are by no means few,     Who never went ten miles from home,     Nor know their market-town from Rome,       Yet cackle just as if they knew. The dolphin laugh'd, and then began     His rider's form and face to scan,     And found himself about to save     From fishy feasts, beneath the wave,     A mere resemblance of a man. So, plunging down, he turn'd to find     Some drowning wight of human kind.  

[9] Aesop.
[10] Arion.--Translator.According to Herodotus, I.24 (Bonn's ed., p.9), Arion, the son of Cyclon of Methymna, and famous lyric poet and musician, having won riches at a musical contest in Sicily, was voyaging home, when the sailors of his ship determined to murder him for his treasure.He asked to be allowed to play a tune; and as soon as he had finished he threw himself into the sea.It was then found that the music had attracted a number of dolphins round the ship, and one of these took the bard on its back and conveyed him safely to Taenarus.


VIII--THE MAN AND THE WOODEN GOD.[11]

  A pagan kept a god of wood,--     A sort that never hears,     Though furnish'd well with ears,--   From which he hoped for wondrous good.   The idol cost the board of three;     So much enrich'd was he     With vows and offerings vain,   With bullocks garlanded and slain:     No idol ever had, as that,     A kitchen quite so full and fat.   But all this worship at his shrine   Brought not from this same block divine   Inheritance, or hidden mine,     Or luck at play, or any favour.   Nay, more, if any storm whatever   Brew'd trouble here or there,   The man was sure to have his share,     And suffer in his purse,   Although the god fared none the worse.   At last, by sheer impatience bold,       The man a crowbar seizes,       His idol breaks in pieces,   And finds it richly stuff'd with gold.   'How's this?   Have I devoutly treated,'   Says he, 'your godship, to be cheated?   Now leave my house, and go your way,   And search for altars where you may.   You're like those natures, dull and gross,   From, which comes nothing but by blows;   The more I gave, the less I got;   I'll now be rich, and you may rot.'    

[11] Aesop.


IX--THE JAY IN THE FEATHERS OF THE PEACOCK.[12]

    A peacock moulted: soon a jay was seen     Bedeck'd with Argus tail of gold and green,[13]     High strutting, with elated crest,     As much a peacock as the rest. His trick was recognized and bruited,       His person jeer'd at, hiss'd, and hooted. The peacock gentry flock'd together,       And pluck'd the fool of every feather. Nay more, when back he sneak'd to join his race,     They shut their portals in his face. There is another sort of jay,         The number of its legs the same,     Which makes of borrow'd plumes display,         And plagiary is its name. But hush! the tribe I'll not offend;       'Tis not my work their ways to mend.  

[12] Aesop; Phaedrus, I.3.
[13] Argus tail of gold and green.--According to mythology, Argus, surnamed Panoptes (or all-seeing), possessed a hundred eyes, some of which were never closed in sleep.At his death Juno either transformed him into the peacock, or transferred his hundred eyes to the tail of that, her favourite, bird."Argus tail of gold and green," therefore, means tail endowed with the eyes of Argus.


X--THE CAMEL AND THE FLOATING STICKS.[14]

  The first who saw the humpback'd camel     Fled off for life; the next approach'd with care;     The third with tyrant rope did boldly dare   The desert wanderer to trammel.   Such is the power of use to change     The face of objects new and strange;     Which grow, by looking at, so tame,     They do not even seem the same.   And since this theme is up for our attention,     A certain watchman I will mention,       Who, seeing something far         Away upon the ocean,         Could not but speak his notion       That 'twas a ship of war.   Some minutes more had past,--       A bomb-ketch 'twas without a sail,       And then a boat, and then a bale,     And floating sticks of wood at last!   Full many things on earth, I wot,     Will claim this tale,--and well they may;     They're something dreadful far away,       But near at hand--they're not.    

[14] Aesop.


XI--THE FROG AND THE RAT.[15]

      They to bamboozle are inclined,         Saith Merlin,[16] who bamboozled are. The word, though rather unrefined,   Has yet an energy we ill can spare;   So by its aid I introduce my tale. A well-fed rat, rotund and hale,       Not knowing either Fast or Lent,       Disporting round a frog-pond went. A frog approach'd, and, with a friendly greeting,     Invited him to see her at her home,   And pledged a dinner worth his eating,--     To which the rat was nothing loath to come. Of words persuasive there was little need:     She spoke, however, of a grateful bath;   Of sports and curious wonders on their path;   Of rarities of flower, and rush, and reed:       One day he would recount with glee       To his assembled progeny     The various beauties of these places,     The customs of the various races,     And laws that sway the realms aquatic,     (She did not mean the hydrostatic!) One thing alone the rat perplex'd,--     He was but moderate as a swimmer. The frog this matter nicely fix'd       By kindly lending him her     Long paw, which with a rush she tied     To his; and off they started, side by side. Arrived upon the lakelet's brink,     There was but little time to think. The frog leap'd in, and almost brought her   Bound guest to land beneath the water. Perfidious breach of law and right! She meant to have a supper warm       Out of his sleek and dainty form. Already did her appetite     Dwell on the morsel with delight. The gods, in anguish, he invokes;     His faithless hostess rudely mocks;     He struggles up, she struggles down. A kite, that hovers in the air,       Inspecting everything with care,     Now spies the rat belike to drown,         And, with a rapid wing,         Upbears the wretched thing,     The frog, too, dangling by the string! The joy of such a double haul     Was to the hungry kite not small. It gave him all that he could wish--     A double meal of flesh and fish. The best contrived deceit         Can hurt its own contriver,       And perfidy doth often cheat         Its author's purse of every stiver.  

[15] Aesop.
[16] Merlin.--This is Merlin, the wizard of the old French novels.


XII--THE ANIMALS SENDING TRIBUTE TO ALEXANDER.[17]

    A fable flourished with antiquity     Whose meaning I could never clearly see.     Kind reader, draw the moral if you're able:       I give you here the naked fable.     Fame having bruited that a great commander,   A son of Jove, a certain Alexander,   Resolved to leave nought free on this our ball,   Had to his footstool gravely summon'd all   Men, quadrupeds, and nullipeds, together   With all the bird-republics, every feather,--   The goddess of the hundred mouths, I say,       Thus having spread dismay,     By widely publishing abroad   This mandate of the demigod,   The animals, and all that do obey   Their appetite alone, mistrusted now   That to another sceptre they must bow.     Far in the desert met their various races,       All gathering from their hiding-places.     Discuss'd was many a notion.     At last, it was resolved, on motion,   To pacify the conquering banner,     By sending homage in, and tribute.     With both the homage and its manner     They charged the monkey, as a glib brute;   And, lest the chap should too much chatter,   In black on white they wrote the matter.     Nought but the tribute served to fash,     As that must needs be paid in cash.     A prince, who chanced a mine to own,     At last, obliged them with a loan.     The mule and ass, to bear the treasure,   Their service tender'd, full of pleasure;   And then the caravan was none the worse,   Assisted by the camel and the horse.     Forthwith proceeded all the four     Behind the new ambassador,   And saw, erelong, within a narrow place,   Monseigneur Lion's quite unwelcome face.     'Well met, and all in time,' said he;     'Myself your fellow traveller will be.     I wend my tribute by itself to bear;     And though 'tis light, I well might spare       The unaccustom'd load.     Take each a quarter, if you please,     And I will guard you on the road;         More free and at my ease--     In better plight, you understand,     To fight with any robber band.'     A lion to refuse, the fact is,       Is not a very usual practice:     So in he comes, for better and for worse;       Whatever he demands is done,       And, spite of Jove's heroic son,     He fattens freely from the public purse.     While wending on their way,       They found a spot one day,     With waters hemm'd, of crystal sheen;     Its carpet, flower-besprinkled green;       Where pastured at their ease     Both flocks of sheep and dainty heifers,       And play'd the cooling breeze--     The native land of all the zephyrs.     No sooner is the lion there     Than of some sickness he complains.     Says he, 'You on your mission fare.     A fever, with its thirst and pains,     Dries up my blood, and bakes my brains;       And I must search some herb,       Its fatal power to curb.     For you, there is no time to waste;     Pay me my money, and make haste.'     The treasures were unbound,       And placed upon the ground.     Then, with a look which testified     His royal joy, the lion cried,   'My coins, good heavens, have multiplied!     And see the young ones of the gold   As big already as the old!     The increase belongs to me, no doubt;'     And eagerly he took it out!     'Twas little staid beneath the lid;       The wonder was that any did.     Confounded were the monkey and his suite.     And, dumb with fear, betook them to their way,   And bore complaint to Jove's great son, they say--       Complaint without a reason meet;     For what could he?     Though a celestial scion,     He could but fight, as lion versus lion.     When corsairs battle, Turk with Turk,       They're not about their proper work.      

[17] The story of this fable has been traced to Gilbert Cousin, in whose works it figures with the title "De Jovis Ammonis oraculo."Gilbert Cousin was Canon of Nozeret, and wrote between 1506 and 1569.


XIII--THE HORSE WISHING TO BE REVENGED UPON THE STAG.[18]

    The horses have not always been       The humble slaves of men.     When, in the far-off past,     The fare of gentlemen was mast,     And even hats were never felt,     Horse, ass, and mule in forests dwelt.     Nor saw one then, as in these ages,       So many saddles, housings, pillions;     Such splendid equipages,       With golden-lace postilions;         Such harnesses for cattle,         To be consumed in battle;     As one saw not so many feasts,     And people married by the priests.     The horse fell out, within that space,       With the antler'd stag, so fleetly made:     He could not catch him in a race,       And so he came to man for aid.     Man first his suppliant bitted;       Then, on his back well seated,     Gave chase with spear, and rested not     Till to the ground the foe he brought.     This done, the honest horse, quite blindly,     Thus thank'd his benefactor kindly:--       'Dear sir, I'm much obliged to you;       I'll back to savage life.     Adieu!'     'O, no,' the man replied;         'You'd better here abide;         I know too well your use.     Here, free from all abuse,         Remain a liege to me,       And large your provender shall be.'     Alas!     good housing or good cheer,       That costs one's liberty, is dear.     The horse his folly now perceived,       But quite too late he grieved.     No grief his fate could alter;     His stall was built, and there he lived,         And died there in his halter.     Ah!     wise had he one small offence forgot!     Revenge, however sweet, is dearly bought   By that one good, which gone, all else is nought.      

[18] Phaedrus, IV.4; Horace (Epistles, Book I.10), and others.


XIV--THE FOX AND THE BUST.[19]

    The great are like the maskers of the stage;     Their show deceives the simple of the age.     For all that they appear to be they pass,     With only those whose type's the ass.     The fox, more wary, looks beneath the skin,   And looks on every side, and, when he sees     That all their glory is a semblance thin,   He turns, and saves the hinges of his knees,       With such a speech as once, 'tis said,       He utter'd to a hero's head.     A bust, somewhat colossal in its size,     Attracted crowds of wondering eyes.     The fox admired the sculptor's pains:     'Fine head,' said he, 'but void of brains!'     The same remark to many a lord applies.      

[19] Aesop: Phaedrus, I.7 (The Fox and the Tragic Mask).


XV--THE WOLF, THE GOAT, AND THE KID.[20]

  As went the goat her pendent dugs to fill,   And browse the herbage of a distant hill,       She latch'd her door, and bid,       With matron care, her kid;--       'My daughter, as you live,         This portal don't undo         To any creature who       This watchword does not give:     "Deuce take the wolf and all his race!"   '     The wolf was passing near the place   By chance, and heard the words with pleasure,       And laid them up as useful treasure;     And hardly need we mention,     Escaped the goat's attention.   No sooner did he see       The matron off, than he,     With hypocritic tone and face,     Cried out before the place,     'Deuce take the wolf and all his race!'   Not doubting thus to gain admission.   The kid, not void of all suspicion,       Peer'd through a crack, and cried,         'Show me white paw before         You ask me to undo the door.'   The wolf could not, if he had died,         For wolves have no connexion       With paws of that complexion.   So, much surprised, our gormandiser     Retired to fast till he was wiser.   How would the kid have been undone       Had she but trusted to the word       The wolf by chance had overheard!   Two sureties better are than one;       And caution's worth its cost,       Though sometimes seeming lost.    

[20] Corrozet; and others.


XVI--THE WOLF, THE MOTHER, AND HER CHILD.[21]

  This wolf another brings to mind,   Who found dame Fortune more unkind,     In that the greedy, pirate sinner,     Was balk'd of life as well as dinner.   As saith our tale, a villager     Dwelt in a by, unguarded place;   There, hungry, watch'd our pillager     For luck and chance to mend his case.   For there his thievish eyes had seen   All sorts of game go out and in--   Nice sucking calves, and lambs and sheep;     And turkeys by the regiment,     With steps so proud, and necks so bent,   They'd make a daintier glutton weep.   The thief at length began to tire   Of being gnaw'd by vain desire.   Just then a child set up a cry:   'Be still,' the mother said, 'or I   Will throw you to the wolf, you brat!'   'Ha, ha!'   thought he, 'what talk is that!   The gods be thank'd for luck so good!'   And ready at the door he stood,   When soothingly the mother said,     'Now cry no more, my little dear;     That naughty wolf, if he comes here,     Your dear papa shall kill him dead.'   'Humph!'   cried the veteran mutton-eater.   'Now this, now that!   Now hot, now cool!   Is this the way they change their metre?   And do they take me for a fool?   Some day, a nutting in the wood,     That young one yet shall be my food.'   But little time has he to dote       On such a feast; the dogs rush out     And seize the caitiff by the throat;       And country ditchers, thick and stout,     With rustic spears and forks of iron,     The hapless animal environ.   'What brought you here, old head?'   cried one.   He told it all, as I have done.   'Why, bless my soul!'   the frantic mother said,--       'You, villain, eat my little son!   And did I nurse the darling boy,     Your fiendish appetite to cloy?'   With that they knock'd him on the head.   His feet and scalp they bore to town,       To grace the seigneur's hall,       Where, pinn'd against the wall,     This verse completed his renown:--     "Ye honest wolves, believe not all     That mothers say, when children squall!"    

[21] Aesop; and others.


XVII--THE WORDS OF SOCRATES.[22]

      A house was built by Socrates       That failed the public taste to please.       Some blamed the inside; some, the out; and all       Agreed that the apartments were too small.       Such rooms for him, the greatest sage of Greece!       'I ask,' said he, 'no greater bliss       Than real friends to fill e'en this.'       And reason had good Socrates       To think his house too large for these.       A crowd to be your friends will claim,         Till some unhandsome test you bring.       There's nothing plentier than the name;         There's nothing rarer than the thing.        

[22] Phaedrus, III.9.


XVIII--THE OLD MAN AND HIS SONS.[23]

      All power is feeble with dissension:         For this I quote the Phrygian slave.       [24]       If aught I add to his invention,         It is our manners to engrave,       And not from any envious wishes;--       I'm not so foolishly ambitious.       Phaedrus enriches oft his story,       In quest--I doubt it not--of glory:       Such thoughts were idle in my breast.       An aged man, near going to his rest,   His gather'd sons thus solemnly address'd:--   'To break this bunch of arrows you may try;   And, first, the string that binds them I untie.'       The eldest, having tried with might and main,       Exclaim'd, 'This bundle I resign       To muscles sturdier than mine.'       The second tried, and bow'd himself in vain.       The youngest took them with the like success.       All were obliged their weakness to confess.       Unharm'd the arrows pass'd from son to son;   Of all they did not break a single one.       'Weak fellows!'       said their sire, 'I now must show   What in the case my feeble strength can do.'       They laugh'd, and thought their father but in joke,   Till, one by one, they saw the arrows broke.       'See, concord's power!'       replied the sire; 'as long   As you in love agree, you will be strong.       I go, my sons, to join our fathers good;   Now promise me to live as brothers should,   And soothe by this your dying father's fears.'       Each strictly promised with a flood of tears.       Their father took them by the hand, and died;   And soon the virtue of their vows was tried.       Their sire had left a large estate       Involved in lawsuits intricate;       Here seized a creditor, and there       A neighbour levied for a share.       At first the trio nobly bore       The brunt of all this legal war.       But short their friendship as 'twas rare.       Whom blood had join'd--and small the wonder!       --     The force of interest drove asunder;       And, as is wont in such affairs,       Ambition, envy, were co-heirs.       In parcelling their sire's estate,       They quarrel, quibble, litigate,       Each aiming to supplant the other.       The judge, by turns, condemns each brother.       Their creditors make new assault,       Some pleading error, some default.       The sunder'd brothers disagree;       For counsel one, have counsels three.       All lose their wealth; and now their sorrows   Bring fresh to mind those broken arrows.        

[23] Aesop, Avianus, and others.
[24] Phrygan slave.--Aesop.See Translator's Preface.


XIX--THE ORACLE AND THE ATHEIST.[25]

    That man his Maker can deceive,     Is monstrous folly to believe.     The labyrinthine mazes of the heart   Are open to His eyes in every part.     Whatever one may do, or think, or feel,   From Him no darkness can the thing conceal.     A pagan once, of graceless heart and hollow,     Whose faith in gods, I'm apprehensive,     Was quite as real as expensive.     Consulted, at his shrine, the god Apollo.     'Is what I hold alive, or not?'     Said he,--a sparrow having brought,   Prepared to wring its neck, or let it fly,   As need might be, to give the god the lie.     Apollo saw the trick,         And answer'd quick,     'Dead or alive, show me your sparrow,       And cease to set for me a trap       Which can but cause yourself mishap.     I see afar, and far I shoot my arrow.'      

[25] Aesop.


XX--THE MISER WHO HAD LOST HIS TREASURE.[26]

    'Tis use that constitutes possession.     I ask that sort of men, whose passion       It is to get and never spend,       Of all their toil what is the end?     What they enjoy of all their labours     Which do not equally their neighbours?     Throughout this upper mortal strife,     The miser leads a beggar's life.     Old Aesop's man of hidden treasure       May serve the case to demonstrate.     He had a great estate,       But chose a second life to wait     Ere he began to taste his pleasure.     This man, whom gold so little bless'd,     Was not possessor, but possess'd.     His cash he buried under ground,     Where only might his heart be found;     It being, then, his sole delight     To ponder of it day and night,     And consecrate his rusty pelf,     A sacred offering, to himself.     In all his eating, drinking, travel,   Most wondrous short of funds he seem'd;   One would have thought he little dream'd     Where lay such sums beneath the gravel.     A ditcher mark'd his coming to the spot,         So frequent was it,   And thus at last some little inkling got         Of the deposit.     He took it all, and babbled not.     One morning, ere the dawn,       Forth had our miser gone     To worship what he loved the best,     When, lo!     he found an empty nest!     Alas!     what groaning, wailing, crying!     What deep and bitter sighing!     His torment makes him tear       Out by the roots his hair.     A passenger demandeth why       Such marvellous outcry.     'They've got my gold!     it's gone--it's gone!'     'Your gold!     pray where?'     --'Beneath this stone.'     'Why, man, is this a time of war,     That you should bring your gold so far?     You'd better keep it in your drawer;     And I'll be bound, if once but in it,     You could have got it any minute.'     'At any minute!     Ah, Heaven knows     That cash comes harder than it goes!     I touch'd it not.'     --'Then have the grace     To explain to me that rueful face,'       Replied the man; 'for, if 'tis true     You touch'd it not, how plain the case,     That, put the stone back in its place,       And all will be as well for you!'      

[26] Aesop, and others.


XXI--THE EYE OF THE MASTER.[27]

      A stag took refuge from the chase         Among the oxen of a stable,         Who counsel'd him, as saith the fable,       To seek at once some safer place.       'My brothers,' said the fugitive,       'Betray me not, and, as I live,       The richest pasture I will show,       That e'er was grazed on, high or low;       Your kindness you will not regret,       For well some day I'll pay the debt.'       The oxen promised secrecy.       Down crouch'd the stag, and breathed more free.       At eventide they brought fresh hay,       As was their custom day by day;       And often came the servants near,       As did indeed the overseer,       But with so little thought or care,       That neither horns, nor hide, nor hair       Reveal'd to them the stag was there.       Already thank'd the wild-wood stranger       The oxen for their treatment kind,       And there to wait made up his mind,     Till he might issue free from danger.       Replied an ox that chew'd the cud,     'Your case looks fairly in the bud;     But then I fear the reason why     Is, that the man of sharpest eye     Hath not yet come his look to take.       I dread his coming, for your sake;     Your boasting may be premature:     Till then, poor stag, you're not secure.'       'Twas but a little while before     The careful master oped the door.       'How's this, my boys?'       said he;     'These empty racks will never do.       Go, change this dirty litter too.       More care than this I want to see       Of oxen that belong to me.       Well, Jim, my boy, you're young and stout;   What would it cost to clear these cobwebs out?       And put these yokes, and hames, and traces,   All as they should be, in their places?'       Thus looking round, he came to see     One head he did not usually.       The stag is found; his foes       Deal heavily their blows.       Down sinks he in the strife;       No tears can save his life.       They slay, and dress, and salt the beast,   And cook his flesh in many a feast,   And many a neighbour gets a taste.       As Phaedrus says it, pithily,     The master's is the eye to see:--     I add the lover's, as for me.        

[27] Phaedrus, II.8 (The Stag and the Oxen); and others.


XXII--THE LARK AND HER YOUNG ONES WITH THE OWNER OF A FIELD.[28]

    "Depend upon yourself alone,"     Has to a common proverb grown.     'Tis thus confirm'd in Aesop's way:--   The larks to build their nests are seen   Among the wheat-crops young and green;           That is to say,   What time all things, dame Nature heeding,   Betake themselves to love and breeding--       The monstrous whales and sharks,         Beneath the briny flood,         The tigers in the wood,       And in the fields, the larks.     One she, however, of these last,   Found more than half the spring-time past   Without the taste of spring-time pleasures;     When firmly she set up her will     That she would be a mother still,     And resolutely took her measures;--     First, got herself by Hymen match'd;     Then built her nest, laid, sat, and hatch'd.     All went as well as such things could.     The wheat-crop ripening ere the brood   Were strong enough to take their flight,   Aware how perilous their plight,     The lark went out to search for food,     And told her young to listen well,     And keep a constant sentinel.     'The owner of this field,' said she,     'Will come, I know, his grain to see.     Hear all he says; we little birds     Must shape our conduct by his words.'     No sooner was the lark away,     Than came the owner with his son.     'This wheat is ripe,' said he: 'now run         And give our friends a call         To bring their sickles all,         And help us, great and small,       To-morrow, at the break of day.'     The lark, returning, found no harm,     Except her nest in wild alarm.     Says one, 'We heard the owner say,       Go, give our friends a call     To help, to-morrow, break of day.'     Replied the lark, 'If that is all,     We need not be in any fear,     But only keep an open ear.     As gay as larks, now eat your victuals.     --'     They ate and slept--the great and littles.     The dawn arrives, but not the friends;     The lark soars up, the owner wends     His usual round to view his land.     'This grain,' says he, 'ought not to stand.     Our friends do wrong; and so does he     Who trusts that friends will friendly be.     My son, go call our kith and kin     To help us get our harvest in.'     This second order made     The little larks still more afraid.     'He sent for kindred, mother, by his son;     The work will now, indeed, be done.'     'No, darlings; go to sleep;         Our lowly nest we'll keep.'     With reason said; for kindred there came none.     Thus, tired of expectation vain,     Once more the owner view'd his grain.     'My son,' said he, 'we're surely fools     To wait for other people's tools;     As if one might, for love or pelf,     Have friends more faithful than himself!     Engrave this lesson deep, my son.     And know you now what must be done?     We must ourselves our sickles bring,     And, while the larks their matins sing,     Begin the work; and, on this plan,     Get in our harvest as we can.'     This plan the lark no sooner knew,     Than, 'Now's the time,' she said, 'my chicks;'     And, taking little time to fix,         Away they flew;     All fluttering, soaring, often grounding,     Decamp'd without a trumpet sounding.      

[28] Aesop (Aulus Gellus); Avianus.




BOOK V.




I--THE WOODMAN AND MERCURY.[1]

To M.The Chevalier De Bouillon.[2]

    Your taste has served my work to guide;     To gain its suffrage I have tried.    You'd have me shun a care too nice,     Or beauty at too dear a price,     Or too much effort, as a vice.    My taste with yours agrees:       Such effort cannot please;     And too much pains about the polish     Is apt the substance to abolish;     Not that it would be right or wise     The graces all to ostracize.    You love them much when delicate;     Nor is it left for me to hate.    As to the scope of Aesop's plan,[3]     I fail as little as I can. If this my rhymed and measured speech     Availeth not to please or teach,     I own it not a fault of mine;     Some unknown reason I assign. With little strength endued       For battles rough and rude,     Or with Herculean arm to smite,     I show to vice its foolish plight. In this my talent wholly lies;     Not that it does at all suffice. My fable sometimes brings to view     The face of vanity purblind     With that of restless envy join'd;   And life now turns upon these pivots two. Such is the silly little frog     That aped the ox upon her bog. A double image sometimes shows     How vice and folly do oppose     The ways of virtue and good sense;     As lambs with wolves so grim and gaunt,     The silly fly and frugal ant. Thus swells my work--a comedy immense--     Its acts unnumber'd and diverse,     Its scene the boundless universe. Gods, men, and brutes, all play their part     In fields of nature or of art,     And Jupiter among the rest. Here comes the god who's wont to bear     Jove's frequent errands to the fair,       With winged heels and haste;     But other work's in hand to-day. A man that labour'd in the wood     Had lost his honest livelihood;           That is to say,       His axe was gone astray. He had no tools to spare;       This wholly earn'd his fare. Without a hope beside,       He sat him down and cried,     'Alas, my axe! where can it be? O Jove! but send it back to me,     And it shall strike good blows for thee.' His prayer in high Olympus heard,     Swift Mercury started at the word. 'Your axe must not be lost,' said he:     'Now, will you know it when you see? An axe I found upon the road.' With that an axe of gold he show'd. 'Is't this?' The woodman answer'd, 'Nay.' An axe of silver, bright and gay,     Refused the honest woodman too. At last the finder brought to view     An axe of iron, steel, and wood. 'That's mine,' he said, in joyful mood;     'With that I'll quite contented be.' The god replied, 'I give the three,     As due reward of honesty.' This luck when neighbouring choppers knew,     They lost their axes, not a few,     And sent their prayers to Jupiter     So fast, he knew not which to hear. His winged son, however, sent     With gold and silver axes, went. Each would have thought himself a fool     Not to have own'd the richest tool. But Mercury promptly gave, instead     Of it, a blow upon the head. With simple truth to be contented,     Is surest not to be repented;       But still there are who would       With evil trap the good,--       Whose cunning is but stupid,       For Jove is never dupèd.  

[1] Aesop. There is also a version of the story in Rabelais, Book IV, Prologue
[2] La Fontaine's dedication is in initials thus:--"A.M.L.C.D.B."which are interpreted by some as meaning, "To M.the Chevalier de Bouillon" (as above), and by others as meaning, "To Monseigneur le Cardinal de Bouillon."
[3] Aesop's plan. --Here, as in the dedication of Book VII., Fable II., Book I., Fable I., Book III., Fable I., Book VI., Fable IV., Book VIII., and Fable I., Book IX., the poet treats of the nature and uses of Fable.


II--THE EARTHEN POT AND THE IRON POT.[4]

    An iron pot proposed       To an earthen pot a journey.     The latter was opposed,       Expressing the concern he     Had felt about the danger     Of going out a ranger.     He thought the kitchen hearth     The safest place on earth     For one so very brittle.     'For thee, who art a kettle,     And hast a tougher skin,     There's nought to keep thee in.'     'I'll be thy body-guard,'       Replied the iron pot;     'If anything that's hard       Should threaten thee a jot,     Between you I will go,     And save thee from the blow.'     This offer him persuaded.     The iron pot paraded       Himself as guard and guide       Close at his cousin's side.     Now, in their tripod way,       They hobble as they may;       And eke together bolt       At every little jolt,--       Which gives the crockery pain;         But presently his comrade hits         So hard, he dashes him to bits,       Before he can complain.     Take care that you associate   With equals only, lest your fate   Between these pots should find its mate.      

[4] Aesop.


III--THE LITTLE FISH AND THE FISHER.[5]

  A little fish will grow,     If life be spared, a great;   But yet to let him go,     And for his growing wait,   May not be very wise,     As 'tis not sure your bait   Will catch him when of size.   Upon a river bank, a fisher took   A tiny troutling from his hook.   Said he, ''Twill serve to count, at least,   As the beginning of my feast;   And so I'll put it with the rest.'   This little fish, thus caught,       His clemency besought.   'What will your honour do with me?   I'm not a mouthful, as you see.   Pray let me grow to be a trout,   And then come here and fish me out.   Some alderman, who likes things nice,   Will buy me then at any price.   But now, a hundred such you'll have to fish,   To make a single good-for-nothing dish.'   'Well, well, be it so,' replied the fisher,     'My little fish, who play the preacher,     The frying-pan must be your lot,     Although, no doubt, you like it not:     I fry the fry that can be got.'   In some things, men of sense     Prefer the present to the future tense.    

[5] Aesop.


IV--THE EARS OF THE HARE.[6]

    Some beast with horns did gore       The lion; and that sovereign dread,     Resolved to suffer so no more,       Straight banish'd from his realm, 'tis said,     All sorts of beasts with horns--     Rams, bulls, goats, stags, and unicorns.    Such brutes all promptly fled.    A hare, the shadow of his ears perceiving,       Could hardly help believing   That some vile spy for horns would take them,   And food for accusation make them.    'Adieu,' said he, 'my neighbour cricket;       I take my foreign ticket.    My ears, should I stay here,         Will turn to horns, I fear;       And were they shorter than a bird's,       I fear the effect of words.'    'These horns!'    the cricket answer'd; 'why,     God made them ears who can deny?'    'Yes,' said the coward, 'still they'll make them horns,     And horns, perhaps of unicorns!    In vain shall I protest,     With all the learning of the schools:       My reasons they will send to rest         In th' Hospital of Fools.'    [7] 

[6] Faerno.
[7] Hospital of Fools, i.e., madhouse.


V--THE FOX WITH HIS TAIL CUT OFF.[8]

  A cunning old fox, of plundering habits,   Great crauncher of fowls, great catcher of rabbits,   Whom none of his sort had caught in a nap,   Was finally caught in somebody's trap.   By luck he escaped, not wholly and hale,   For the price of his luck was the loss of his tail.   Escaped in this way, to save his disgrace,   He thought to get others in similar case.   One day that the foxes in council were met,   'Why wear we,' said he, 'this cumbering weight,   Which sweeps in the dirt wherever it goes?   Pray tell me its use, if any one knows.   If the council will take my advice,       We shall dock off our tails in a trice.'   'Your advice may be good,' said one on the ground;   'But, ere I reply, pray turn yourself round.'   Whereat such a shout from the council was heard,   Poor bob-tail, confounded, could say not a word.   To urge the reform would have wasted his breath.   Long tails were the mode till the day of his death.    

[8] Aesop; Faerno.


VI--THE OLD WOMAN AND HER TWO SERVANTS.[9]

    A beldam kept two spinning maids,     Who plied so handily their trades,     Those spinning sisters down below   Were bunglers when compared with these.     No care did this old woman know   But giving tasks as she might please.     No sooner did the god of day       His glorious locks enkindle,     Than both the wheels began to play,       And from each whirling spindle     Forth danced the thread right merrily,     And back was coil'd unceasingly.     Soon as the dawn, I say, its tresses show'd,     A graceless cock most punctual crow'd.     The beldam roused, more graceless yet,       In greasy petticoat bedight,       Struck up her farthing light,     And then forthwith the bed beset,     Where deeply, blessedly did snore     Those two maid-servants tired and poor.     One oped an eye, an arm one stretch'd,     And both their breath most sadly fetch'd,     This threat concealing in the sigh--     'That cursed cock shall surely die!'     And so he did:--they cut his throat,     And put to sleep his rousing note.     And yet this murder mended not     The cruel hardship of their lot;     For now the twain were scarce in bed     Before they heard the summons dread.     The beldam, full of apprehension     Lest oversleep should cause detention,     Ran like a goblin through her mansion.     Thus often, when one thinks         To clear himself from ill,       His effort only sinks         Him in the deeper still.     The beldam, acting for the cock,       Was Scylla for Charybdis' rock.      

[9] Aesop.


VII--THE SATYR AND THE TRAVELLER.[10]

  Within a savage forest grot     A satyr and his chips   Were taking down their porridge hot;     Their cups were at their lips.   You might have seen in mossy den,     Himself, his wife, and brood;   They had not tailor-clothes, like men,     But appetites as good.   In came a traveller, benighted,     All hungry, cold, and wet,   Who heard himself to eat invited     With nothing like regret.   He did not give his host the pain     His asking to repeat;   But first he blew with might and main     To give his fingers heat.   Then in his steaming porridge dish     He delicately blew.   The wondering satyr said, 'I wish     The use of both I knew.'   'Why, first, my blowing warms my hand,     And then it cools my porridge.'   'Ah!'   said his host, 'then understand     I cannot give you storage.   'To sleep beneath one roof with you,     I may not be so bold.   Far be from me that mouth untrue     Which blows both hot and cold.'    

[10] Aesop.


VIII--THE HORSE AND THE WOLF.[11]

  A wolf, what time the thawing breeze   Renews the life of plants and trees,   And beasts go forth from winter lair   To seek abroad their various fare,--   A wolf, I say, about those days,   In sharp look-out for means and ways,   Espied a horse turn'd out to graze.   His joy the reader may opine.   'Once got,' said he, 'this game were fine;   But if a sheep, 'twere sooner mine.   I can't proceed my usual way;   Some trick must now be put in play.'   This said,     He came with measured tread,   As if a healer of disease,--   Some pupil of Hippocrates,--   And told the horse, with learned verbs,   He knew the power of roots and herbs,--   Whatever grew about those borders,--     And not at all to flatter     Himself in such a matter,     Could cure of all disorders.   If he, Sir Horse, would not conceal     The symptoms of his case,   He, Doctor Wolf, would gratis heal;   For that to feed in such a place,     And run about untied,   Was proof itself of some disease,     As all the books decide.   'I have, good doctor, if you please,'   Replied the horse, 'as I presume,   Beneath my foot, an aposthume.'   'My son,' replied the learned leech,   'That part, as all our authors teach,   Is strikingly susceptible   Of ills which make acceptable   What you may also have from me--   The aid of skilful surgery;   Which noble art, the fact is,   For horses of the blood I practise.'   The fellow, with this talk sublime,   Watch'd for a snap the fitting time.   Meanwhile, suspicious of some trick,     The wary patient nearer draws,   And gives his doctor such a kick,     As makes a chowder of his jaws.   Exclaim'd the wolf, in sorry plight,   'I own those heels have served me right.   I err'd to quit my trade,       As I will not in future;     Me nature surely made       For nothing but a butcher.'    

[11] Aesop; also in Faerno.


IX--THE PLOUGHMAN AND HIS SONS.[12]

        The farmer's patient care and toil         Are oftener wanting than the soil.         A wealthy ploughman drawing near his end,     Call'd in his sons apart from every friend,       And said, 'When of your sire bereft,       The heritage our fathers left       Guard well, nor sell a single field.         A treasure in it is conceal'd:       The place, precisely, I don't know,       But industry will serve to show.         The harvest past, Time's forelock take,       And search with plough, and spade, and rake;       Turn over every inch of sod,       Nor leave unsearch'd a single clod.'         The father died.         The sons--and not in vain--       Turn'd o'er the soil, and o'er again;       That year their acres bore       More grain than e'er before.         Though hidden money found they none,       Yet had their father wisely done,         To show by such a measure,         That toil itself is treasure.          

[12] Aesop.


X--THE MOUNTAIN IN LABOUR.[13]

      A mountain was in travail pang;       The country with her clamour rang.      Out ran the people all, to see,         Supposing that the birth would be         A city, or at least a house.      It was a mouse!      In thinking of this fable,           Of story feign'd and false,         But meaning veritable,           My mind the image calls       Of one who writes, "The war I sing   Which Titans waged against the Thunder-king."      [14]       As on the sounding verses ring,         What will be brought to birth? Why, dearth.  

[13] Phaedrus, IV.22.
[14] The War, &c.--The war of the Gods and Titans (sons of Heaven and Earth); vide Hesiod, Theogony, I.1083, Bohn's ed.


XI--FORTUNE AND THE BOY.[15]

    Beside a well, uncurb'd and deep,     A schoolboy laid him down to sleep:     (Such rogues can do so anywhere.)     If some kind man had seen him there,     He would have leap'd as if distracted;     But Fortune much more wisely acted;   For, passing by, she softly waked the child,   Thus whispering in accents mild:       'I save your life, my little dear,       And beg you not to venture here       Again, for had you fallen in,       I should have had to bear the sin;       But I demand, in reason's name,       If for your rashness I'm to blame?'     With this the goddess went her way.     I like her logic, I must say.     There takes place nothing on this planet,     But Fortune ends, whoe'er began it.     In all adventures good or ill,     We look to her to foot the bill.     Has one a stupid, empty pate,     That serves him never till too late,     He clears himself by blaming Fate!      

[15] Aesop.


XII--THE DOCTORS.[16]

      The selfsame patient put to test   Two doctors, Fear-the-worst and Hope-the-best.       The latter hoped; the former did maintain     The man would take all medicine in vain.       By different cures the patient was beset,     But erelong cancell'd nature's debt,                 While nursed     As was prescribed by Fear-the-worst.       But over the disease both triumph'd still.       Said one, 'I well foresaw his death.'       'Yes,' said the other, 'but my pill       Would certainly have saved his breath.'        

[16] Aesop, and others.


XIII--THE HEN WITH THE GOLDEN EGGS.[17]

    How avarice loseth all,       By striving all to gain,     I need no witness call       But him whose thrifty hen,     As by the fable we are told,     Laid every day an egg of gold.     'She hath a treasure in her body,'     Bethinks the avaricious noddy.     He kills and opens--vexed to find     All things like hens of common kind.     Thus spoil'd the source of all his riches,   To misers he a lesson teaches.     In these last changes of the moon,       How often doth one see       Men made as poor as he     By force of getting rich too soon!      

[17] Aesop.


XIV--THE ASS CARRYING RELICS.[18]

  An ass, with relics for his load,   Supposed the worship on the road     Meant for himself alone,       And took on lofty airs,     Receiving as his own       The incense and the prayers.   Some one, who saw his great mistake,   Cried, 'Master Donkey, do not make     Yourself so big a fool.   Not you they worship, but your pack;   They praise the idols on your back,     And count yourself a paltry tool.'   'Tis thus a brainless magistrate     Is honour'd for his robe of state.    

[18] Aesop; also Faerno.


XV--THE STAG AND THE VINE.[19]

  A stag, by favour of a vine,   Which grew where suns most genial shine,   And form'd a thick and matted bower   Which might have turn'd a summer shower,   Was saved from ruinous assault.   The hunters thought their dogs at fault,   And call'd them off.   In danger now no more     The stag, a thankless wretch and vile,   Began to browse his benefactress o'er.   The hunters, listening the while,       The rustling heard, came back,       With all their yelping pack,     And seized him in that very place.   'This is,' said he, 'but justice, in my case.   Let every black ingrate       Henceforward profit by my fate.'   The dogs fell to--'twere wasting breath     To pray those hunters at the death.   They left, and we will not revile 'em,     A warning for profaners of asylum.    

[19] Aesop.


XVI--THE SERPENT AND THE FILE.[20]

  A serpent, neighbour to a smith,   (A neighbour bad to meddle with,)   Went through his shop, in search of food,   But nothing found, 'tis understood,   To eat, except a file of steel,   Of which he tried to make a meal.   The file, without a spark of passion,   Address'd him in the following fashion:--   'Poor simpleton!   you surely bite   With less of sense than appetite;       For ere from me you gain       One quarter of a grain,     You'll break your teeth from ear to ear.   Time's are the only teeth I fear.'   This tale concerns those men of letters,     Who, good for nothing, bite their betters.   Their biting so is quite unwise.   Think you, ye literary sharks,       Your teeth will leave their marks   Upon the deathless works you criticise?   Fie!   fie!   fie!   men!   To you they're brass--they're steel--they're diamond!    

[20] Phaedrus, Book IV.8; also Aesop.


XVII--THE HARE AND THE PARTRIDGE.

      Beware how you deride     The exiles from life's sunny side:       To you is little known     How soon their case may be your own.       On this, sage Aesop gives a tale or two,   As in my verses I propose to do.       A field in common share         A partridge and a hare,         And live in peaceful state,         Till, woeful to relate!       The hunters' mingled cry         Compels the hare to fly.       He hurries to his fort,         And spoils almost the sport         By faulting every hound         That yelps upon the ground.       At last his reeking heat         Betrays his snug retreat.       Old Tray, with philosophic nose,       Snuffs carefully, and grows         So certain, that he cries,           'The hare is here; bow wow!'       And veteran Ranger now,--         The dog that never lies,--         'The hare is gone,' replies.       Alas!       poor, wretched hare,         Back comes he to his lair,         To meet destruction there!       The partridge, void of fear,         Begins her friend to jeer:--         'You bragg'd of being fleet;         How serve you, now, your feet?'       Scarce has she ceased to speak,--         The laugh yet in her beak,--         When comes her turn to die,         From which she could not fly.       She thought her wings, indeed,         Enough for every need;         But in her laugh and talk,         Forgot the cruel hawk!        

XVIII--THE EAGLE AND THE OWL.[21]

  The eagle and the owl, resolved to cease   Their war, embraced in pledge of peace.  On faith of king, on faith of owl, they swore   That they would eat each other's chicks no more.  'But know you mine?'  said Wisdom's bird.  [22]       'Not I, indeed,' the eagle cried. 'The worse for that,' the owl replied:     'I fear your oath's a useless word;       I fear that you, as king, will not       Consider duly who or what:     You kings and gods, of what's before ye,     Are apt to make one category. Adieu, my young, if you should meet them!' 'Describe them, then, or let me greet them,     And, on my life, I will not eat them,'     The eagle said. The owl replied:     'My little ones, I say with pride,     For grace of form cannot be match'd,--     The prettiest birds that e'er were hatch'd;     By this you cannot fail to know them;     'Tis needless, therefore, that I show them. Pray don't forget, but keep this mark in view,     Lest fate should curse my happy nest by you.' At length God gives the owl a set of heirs,     And while at early eve abroad he fares,       In quest of birds and mice for food,       Our eagle haply spies the brood,       As on some craggy rock they sprawl,       Or nestle in some ruined wall,       (But which it matters not at all,)       And thinks them ugly little frights,       Grim, sad, with voice like shrieking sprites. 'These chicks,' says he, 'with looks almost infernal,   Can't be the darlings of our friend nocturnal. I'll sup of them.' And so he did, not slightly:--   He never sups, if he can help it, lightly. The owl return'd; and, sad, he found       Nought left but claws upon the ground. He pray'd the gods above and gods below   To smite the brigand who had caused his woe. Quoth one, 'On you alone the blame must fall;       Or rather on the law of nature,       Which wills that every earthly creature   Shall think its like the loveliest of all. You told the eagle of your young ones' graces;       You gave the picture of their faces:--       Had it of likeness any traces?'  

[21] Avianus; also Verdizotti.
[22] Wisdom's bird--The owl was the bird of Minerva, as the eagle was that of Jupiter.


XIX--THE LION GOING TO WAR.[23]

  The lion had an enterprise in hand;     Held a war-council, sent his provost-marshal,     And gave the animals a call impartial--   Each, in his way, to serve his high command.   The elephant should carry on his back   The tools of war, the mighty public pack,   And fight in elephantine way and form;   The bear should hold himself prepared to storm;   The fox all secret stratagems should fix;   The monkey should amuse the foe by tricks.   'Dismiss,' said one, 'the blockhead asses,     And hares, too cowardly and fleet.'   'No,' said the king; 'I use all classes;     Without their aid my force were incomplete.   The ass shall be our trumpeter, to scare   Our enemy.   And then the nimble hare   Our royal bulletins shall homeward bear.'   A monarch provident and wise   Will hold his subjects all of consequence,     And know in each what talent lies.   There's nothing useless to a man of sense.    

[23] Abstemius.


XX--THE BEAR AND THE TWO COMPANIONS.[24]

      Two fellows, needing funds, and bold,       A bearskin to a furrier sold,       Of which the bear was living still,       But which they presently would kill--         At least they said they would.      And, if their word was good,       It was a king of bears--an Ursa Major--         The biggest bear beneath the sun.      Its skin, the chaps would wager,         Was cheap at double cost;         'Twould make one laugh at frost--         And make two robes as well as one.      Old Dindenaut,[25] in sheep who dealt,       Less prized his sheep, than they their pelt--         (In their account 'twas theirs,         But in his own, the bears.)By bargain struck upon the skin,       Two days at most must bring it in.Forth went the two.More easy found than got,     The bear came growling at them on the trot.Behold our dealers both confounded,     As if by thunderbolt astounded!Their bargain vanish'd suddenly in air;   For who could plead his interest with a bear?One of the friends sprung up a tree;     The other, cold as ice could be,       Fell on his face, feign'd death,       And closely held his breath,--     He having somewhere heard it said     The bear ne'er preys upon the dead.Sir Bear, sad blockhead, was deceived--     The prostrate man a corpse believed;     But, half suspecting some deceit,     He feels and snuffs from head to feet,       And in the nostrils blows.The body's surely dead, he thinks.'I'll leave it,' says he, 'for it stinks;'       And off into the woods he goes.The other dealer, from his tree     Descending cautiously, to see     His comrade lying in the dirt,       Consoling, says, 'It is a wonder       That, by the monster forced asunder,     We're, after all, more scared than hurt.But,' addeth he, 'what of the creature's skin?He held his muzzle very near;     What did he whisper in your ear?''He gave this caution,--"Never dare     Again to sell the skin of bear     Its owner has not ceased to wear."'[26] 

[24] Versions will be found in Aesop, Avianus, and Abstemius.
[25] Old Dindenaut--Vide Rabelais, Pantagruel, Book IV.chap.viii.--Translator.The character in Rabelais is a sheep-stealer as well as a sheep-dealer.
[26] According to Philip de Commines, the Emperor Frederic III. of Germany used a story conveying the substance of this fable, with its moral of Never sell your bear-skin till the beast is dead, as his sole reply to the ambassadors of the French king when that monarch sent him proposals for dividing between them the provinces of the Duke of Burgundy. The meaning of which was, says de Commines, "That if the King came according to his promise, they would take the Duke, if they could; and when he was taken, they would talk of dividing his dominions." -- Vide Bohn's edition of the "Memoirs of De Commines," vol. i. , p. 246.


XXI--THE ASS DRESSED IN THE LION'S SKIN.[27]

    Clad in a lion's shaggy hide,     An ass spread terror far and wide,     And, though himself a coward brute,     Put all the world to scampering rout:       But, by a piece of evil luck,       A portion of an ear outstuck,       Which soon reveal'd the error       Of all the panic-terror.    Old Martin did his office quick.    Surprised were all who did not know the trick,       To see that Martin,[28] at his will,       Was driving lions to the mill! In France, the men are not a few       Of whom this fable proves too true;       Whose valour chiefly doth reside       In coat they wear and horse they ride.  

[27] Aesop, and Avianus.
[28] Martin. --Martin-bâton, again as in Fable V., Book IV




BOOK VI.




I--THE SHEPHERD AND THE LION.[1]

  Of fables judge not by their face;   They give the simplest brute a teacher's place.  Bare precepts were inert and tedious things;   The story gives them life and wings.  But story for the story's sake       Were sorry business for the wise;     As if, for pill that one should take,       You gave the sugary disguise.  For reasons such as these,     Full many writers great and good     Have written in this frolic mood,       And made their wisdom please.  But tinsel'd style they all have shunn'd with care;   With them one never sees a word to spare.  Of Phaedrus some have blamed the brevity,   While Aesop uses fewer words than he.  A certain Greek,[2] however, beats       Them both in his larconic feats.Each tale he locks in verses four;   The well or ill I leave to critic lore.At Aesop's side to see him let us aim,   Upon a theme substantially the same.The one selects a lover of the chase;   A shepherd comes, the other's tale to grace.Their tracks I keep, though either tale may grow   A little in its features as I go.The one which Aesop tells is nearly this:--   A shepherd from his flock began to miss,   And long'd to catch the stealer of, his sheep.Before a cavern, dark and deep,       Where wolves retired by day to sleep,       Which he suspected as the thieves,       He set his trap among the leaves;       And, ere he left the place,       He thus invoked celestial grace:--       'O king of all the powers divine,   Against the rogue but grant me this delight,   That this my trap may catch him in my sight,     And I, from twenty calves of mine,       Will make the fattest thine.'But while the words were on his tongue,     Forth came a lion great and strong.Down crouch'd the man of sheep, and said,       With shivering fright half dead,   'Alas!that man should never be aware   Of what may be the meaning of his prayer!To catch the robber of my flocks,     O king of gods, I pledged a calf to thee:     If from his clutches thou wilt rescue me,       I'll raise my offering to an ox.''Tis thus the master-author[3] tells the story:       Now hear the rival of his glory.  

[1] Aesop.
[2] A certain Greek--Gabrias.--La Fontaine.This is Babrias, the Greek fabulist, to whom La Fontaine gives the older form of his name.La Fontaine's strictures on this "rival" of Aesop proceed from the fact that he read the author in the corrupted form of the edition by Ignatius Magister (ninth century).It was not till a century after La Fontaine wrote, that the fame of Babrias was cleared by Bentley and Tyrwhitt, who brought his Fables to light in their original form.
[3] Master-author, &c.--The "master-author" is Aesop; the rival, Gabrias, or Babrias.The last line refers the reader to the following fable for comparison.In the original editions of La Fontaine, the two fables appear together with the heading "Fables I.et II."