Aesop's Phrases

Look at his hands and not at his eyes.

THE FOWLER AND THE BIRDS. by Ernest Griset.

A FOWLER, in killing some birds which he had caught in his nest, wounded his hand by accident so severely that he shed tears through the anguish he suffered. “See,” says a young bird, “he shows signs of pity for us.” “Don’t mind his tears,” said an old Bird, “but look at his bloody hands.”

Romulus4.7(Phaedrus paraphrase)=Pe576, Cax4.7, TMI J869.1
Odo of Cheriton 8


The Fox and the Woodcutter. 135 by Townsend

A FOX, running before the hounds, came across a Woodcutter felling an oak and begged him to show him a safe hiding-place. The Woodcutter advised him to take shelter in his own hut, so the Fox crept in and hid himself in a corner. The huntsman soon came up with his hounds and inquired of the Woodcutter if he had seen the Fox. He declared that he had not seen him, and yet pointed, all the time he was speaking, to the hut where the Fox lay hidden. The huntsman took no notice of the signs, but believing his word, hastened forward in the chase. As soon as they were well away, the Fox departed without taking any notice of the Woodcutter: whereon he called to him and reproached him, saying, "You ungrateful fellow, you owe your life to me, and yet you leave me without a word of thanks." The Fox replied, "Indeed, I should have thanked you fervently if your deeds had been as good as your words, and if your hands had not been traitors to your speech."

Pe22=Ch34, Ba50, L'Es104, TMI K2315, Type161, "The Fox and Woodcutter"
Phaedrus(Perotti's Appendix 28) "The hare and the herdsman"
Cax4.3 "The wulf and of the sheepherd and of the hunter"

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inserted by FC2 system