Page:The fables of Aesop, as first printed by William Caxton in 1484, with those of Avian, Alfonso and Poggio. Vol 2.djvu/22

and fowled my water / whiche I old now drynke / Allas my lord auf your grece / For the water cometh fro yow toward me / Thenne ayd the wulf to the lambe / Hat thou no hame ne drede to cure me / And the lambe ayd My lord with your leue / And the wulf ayd ageyne / Hit is not yxe monethes payd that thy fader dyd to me as moche / And the lambe anuerd yet was I not at that tyme born / And the wulf aid ageyne to hym / Thou hat ete my fader / And the lambe anuerd / I have no / aid the wulf / thou arte wel lyke thy fader / and for his yne and mydede thow halt deye / The wulf thenne toke the lambe and ete hym / This fable heweth that the euylle man not by what maner he may robbe and detroye the good and Innocent man.