A Schole of wise conceytes wherein as euery conceyte hath wit, so the most haue much mirth : set forth in common places by order of the alphabet / translated out of diuers Greeke and Latine wryters by Thomas Blage ...

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Title
A Schole of wise conceytes wherein as euery conceyte hath wit, so the most haue much mirth : set forth in common places by order of the alphabet / translated out of diuers Greeke and Latine wryters by Thomas Blage ...
Publication
Printed at London :: By Henrie Binneman,
1572.
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Subject terms
Fables, Greek.
Fables, Latin.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A99901.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A Schole of wise conceytes wherein as euery conceyte hath wit, so the most haue much mirth : set forth in common places by order of the alphabet / translated out of diuers Greeke and Latine wryters by Thomas Blage ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A99901.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

187 Of a Dog.

A Certein man had two Dogs, wherof the one he taught to hunt, ye other to kéepe hys house, if it chaunced the hounde to catche any thing, hée which kept within was partaker thereof, the o∣ther being offended, cast oft in his felowes téeth that he dayly tooke paynes, and the other did no∣thing, and yet he was fed with his trauaile: his fellowe aunswered and saide: Blame not mée but my Maister, which neuer taught me to labor but to eate that an other hath swet for.

MOR. Yong men which knowe nothing, are not to be blamed, séeing their Parentes brought them vp so.

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