Page:Fables of Aesop and other eminent mythologists.djvu/168

114 tue, is able to tand before it. The Lyon's Parting with his Teeth, and his Clawes, in a Complement to his New Mitres, is no more then what we ee Every Day Exemplify’d in the cae of making over Elates and Joyntures, with the Malice Prepene all this While, of holding their Noes to the Grindtone, and with the Girles Father here, of Jilting them at lat.

Numerous Iue paes in the World for a Bleing; and This Conideration made a Fox cat it in the Teeth of a Lyones, that he brought forth but One Whelp at a time. Very Right, ays the Other, but then That One is a Lyon.