Page:The fables of Aesop, as first printed by William Caxton in 1484, with those of Avian, Alfonso and Poggio. Vol 2.djvu/30

t is not good to byleue what flaterers and euyll men aye / for by theyr wete wordes / they deceyue the good folke / whereof Eope reherceth uch a fable / This was a bytche which wold and be delyuerd of her lytyl dogges / and came to the hows of another bytche / & her by wete and fayre wordes that he would to her a place for to lyttre her lytyll dogges / And this other lend to her / her bed and her hows to doo wel / And whan the bytche had lyttred her lytyl dogges / the good bytche ayd to the other / that it was tyme that he hold goo and departe oute of her hows   And then the bytche and her young dogges ranne vpon the other / and boot and cated her oute of her owne hows / and thus for to have doo well / grete cometh ofte therfore   And ofte the good men lee theyr goodes by the decepcion and flaterye of the peruers and evylle folke