Page:The fables of Aesop, as first printed by William Caxton in 1484, with those of Avian, Alfonso and Poggio. Vol 2.djvu/158

  get to hit / For the whiche I wylle not that thow ete me here in the waye for the grete and hame that therof myght come to me / But I pray the / and Intantly requyre the / that thow wylt here my counceylle / whiche is / that we two go in to the foret / and thow halt bynde me by thy brete / as thy eruant / And I halle bynd the by thy neck as my mayter And thow halt lede me before the in to the wood where omeuer thow wylt / to the ende that more ecretely thow ete me / to the whiche counceylle the wulf acorded and ayd / I wylle wel that it be donne o / ¶ And whanne they were come in to the foret / they bounde eche other in the maner as aboue is ayd / ¶ And whanne they were wel bounden / the wulf ayd to the Ae / goo we where thow wylt / and goo before for to hewe the waye / And the ae wente before and ledde the wulf in to the ryght waye of his mayters hows / ¶ And whanne the wulf beganne to knowe the way / he ayd to the ae / we goo not the ryght way / to the whiche the ae anuerd / ¶ My lord aye not that / For certaynly / this is the ryght wey / But for alle that / the wulf wold haue gone backward / But neuertheles the ae ledde hym vnto the hows of his mayter / ¶ And as his mayter and alle his awe how the Ae drewe the