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 8, 2024.

Pages

44 Of a Dog and his Maister.

A Certayne man had a Dog whom he always fed with his owne handes, bicause he should loue him the more, and when he was bound he loosed him: But yet he cōmanded his seruant to tye him vp, & beat him, to the end the dog might perceiue he loued him, & that his seruant did not. The dogge taking it gréeuously to be dayly tyed and beaten, ranne away Whom when his mai∣ster rebuked as a churle, and forgetfull of al his

Page [unnumbered]

benefites, that he would runne away from hym which loued him so, and fed him, whom he neuer bound nor ette. Ah sir (sayde the Dogge) that your seruant dothe at your commaundement, I count it done by you.

MOR. Those are euill doers, which are cau∣sers of euill.

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