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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| XX. |
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| XXVI. | FABLE XXVI. The Wolf and Ram: |
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| LXV. |
| LXVI. |
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| LXVIII. |
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| Truth in Fiction | ||
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.
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.
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.
| Truth in Fiction | ||