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Æsop's Fables, Embellished with One Hundred and Eleven Emblematical Devices. cover

Æsop's Fables, Embellished with One Hundred and Eleven Emblematical Devices.

Chapter 115: Transcriber's note:
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About This Book

The volume gathers numerous short fables that use anthropomorphic animals and brief scenes to illustrate practical moral lessons about behaviour, prudence, vanity, greed, and justice. Each tale recounts a compact incident and is often followed by an explicit application that draws out a proverblike conclusion. Episodes range from trickery and greed to courage and folly, presented in plain narrative and aphoristic comment. The arrangement emphasizes accessible storytelling and didactic maxims, frequently reinforced by emblematic engravings that underline the intended moral.

THE TORTOISE AND THE EAGLE.

The Tortoise, weary of his condition, by which he was confined to creep upon the ground, and being ambitious to have a prospect, and look about him, gave out, that if any bird would take him up into the air, and show him the world, he would reward him with a discovery of many precious stones, which he knew were hidden in a certain place of the earth: the Eagle undertook to do as he desired, and, when he had performed his commission, demanded the reward; but finding the Tortoise could not make good his words, he stuck his talons into the softer parts of his body, and made him a sacrifice to his revenge.

APPLICATION.

As men of honour ought to consider calmly how far the things which they promise may be in their power, before they venture to make promises upon this account, because the non-performance of them will be apt to excite an uneasiness within themselves, and tarnish their reputation in the eyes of other people; so fools and cowards should be as little rash in this respect as possible, lest their impudent forgeries draw upon them the resentment of those whom they disappoint, and that resentment makes them undergo smart, but deserved, chastisement. The man who is so stupid a knave as to make a lying promise where he is sure to be detected, receives the punishment of his folly unpitied by all that know him.

FINIS.


Printed by C. WHITTINGHAM, Chiswick.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] Arist. Rhet. Lib. ii. chap. 21.

[2] Lib. ii. fab. 9. and Lib. iii. fab. 19.

[3] Phæd. Lib. i. fab. 2.

[4] Spect. No. 183.

[5] Fab. liv.

[6] Tatler, No. 147.

Transcriber's note:

The header "Fable I" has been added.

Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been preserved except in obvious cases of typographical error.

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