The Golden Asse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about The Golden Asse.

The Golden Asse eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 277 pages of information about The Golden Asse.
halter, and would have me to turne on the right hand to her fathers house:  but I (knowing that the theeves were gone that way to fetch the residue of their pillage) resisted with my head as much as I might, saying within my selfe:  What wilt thou doe unhappy maiden?  Why wouldst thou goe so willingly to hell?  Why wilt thou runne into destruction by meane of my feet?  Why dost thou seek thine own harme, and mine likewise?  And while we strived together whether way we might take, the theeves returned, laiden with their pray, and perceived us a farre off by the light of the Moon:  and after they had known us, one of them gan say, Whither goe you so hastely?  Be you not afraid of spirits?  And you (you harlot) doe you not goe to see your parents?  Come on, we will beare you company?  And therewithall they tooke me by the hatter, and drave me backe againe, beating me cruelly with a great staffe (that they had) full of knobs:  then I returning againe to my ready destruction, and remembering the griefe of my hoofe, began to shake my head, and to waxe lame, but he that led me by the halter said, What, dost thou stumble?  Canst thou not goe?  These rotten feet of thine ran well enough, but they cannot walke:  thou couldest mince it finely even now with the gentlewoman, that thou seemedst to passe the horse Pegasus in swiftnesse.  In saying of these words they beat mee againe, that they broke a great staffe upon mee.  And when we were come almost home, we saw the old woman hanging upon a bow of a Cipresse tree; then one of them cut downe the bowe whereon shee hanged, and cast her into the bottome of a great ditch:  after this they bound the maiden and fell greedily to their victuals, which the miserable old woman had prepared for them.  At which time they began to devise with themselves of our death, and how they might be revenged; divers was the opinions of this divers number:  the first said, that hee thought best the Mayd should be burned alive:  the second said she should be throwne out to wild beasts:  the third said, she should be hanged upon a gibbet:  the fourth said she should be flead alive:  thus was the death of the poore Maiden scanned betweene them foure.  But one of the theeves after every man had declared his judgement, did speake in this manner:  it is not convenient unto the oath of our company, to suffer you to waxe more cruell then the quality of the offence doth merit, for I would that shee should not be hanged nor burned, nor throwne to beasts, nor dye any sodaine death, but by my council I would have her punished according to her desert.  You know well what you have determined already of this dull Asse, that eateth more then he is worth, that faineth lamenesse, and that was the cause of the flying away of the Maid:  my mind is that he shall be slaine to morrow, and when all the guts and entrailes of his body is taken out, let the Maide be sowne into his belly, then let us lay them upon a great stone against the broiling heate of the Sunne, so they shall both
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The Golden Asse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.