<< Home Page | Phaedrus Index

Aesop's Fables: Phaedrus

Appendix XVII. Aesopus et domina (Perry 545)

Quam noceat saepe uerum dicere

Aesopus turpi cum seruiret feminae,
quae se expingendo totum tricaret diem,
uestem uniones aurum argentum sumeret,
nec inueniret digito qui se tangeret,
"Licetne paucis?" inquit. "Dicas." "Censeo,
quiduis efficies, cultum se deposueris."
"Adeone per me uideor tibi meliuscula?"
"Immo, ni dederis, sponda cessabit tua."
"At non cessabunt latera" respondit "tua";
et obiurgari iussit ferulis garrulum.
Post paulo armillam tollit fur argenteam.
Eam non apparere ut dictum est mulieri,
omnes furore plena uocat, et uerbera
proponit grauia, uerum si non dixerint.
"Aliis minare; me" inquit "non falles, era;
flagris sum caesus , uerum quia dixi modo."


Latin text from Phaedrus at The Latin Library (Ad Fontes), English translations from The Fables of Phaedrus Translated into English Verse by Christopher Smart (London: 1913). Ben Perry, Babrius and Phaedrus (Loeb), contains the Latin texts of Phaedrus, with a facing English translation, along with a valuable appendix listing all the Aesop's fables attested in Greek and/or in Latin. Invaluable.