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Truth in Fiction

Or, Morality in Masquerade. A Collection of Two hundred twenty five Select Fables of Aesop, and other Authors. Done into English Verse. By Edmund Arwaker
  

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FABLE XXVI. The Wolf and Ram:
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FABLE XXVI. The Wolf and Ram:

Or, Suspicion gives Security.

A Wolf, that hardly scap'd pursuing Hounds,
And cou'd do little else but lick his Wounds,
Desir'd a Ram, that at a distance stood,
To bring him Water from the neighb'ring Flood:
For if he might some help for Drink entreat,
Himself, he said, wou'd make a shift for Meat.
The Ram, that guess'd what Shift he meant, reply'd,
That friendly Office should not be deny'd;
But that I fear, if I should prove so kind,
The Meat you mean, wou'd not be far to find.

35

The MORAL.

‘Dissembling Villains wou'd, by Art, prevail
‘To gain their Ends, when open Measures fail:
‘But Wise Men (apprehensive of the Cheat)
‘Taught by Suspicion, their Designs defeat.