¶ The xiij fable maketh mencyon of the fader and of his thre children
 
E is not wyse / whiche for to haue 
vanyte and his plesyr taketh debate 
or stryf / As hit appiereth by this 
fable / Of a man whiche hadde 
thre children / and at the houre 
of his dethe he byquethed / and gaf to them his 
herytage or lyuehode / that is to wete a grete 
pere tree / a gote & a mylle /  ¶ And whanne 
the fader was deed / the bretheren assembled 
them thre to gyder / and wente before the Juge 
for to parte their lyuehode / and sayd to the 
Juge / My lord the Juge / Oure fader is dede 
whiche hath byquethed to vs thre bretheren al 
his herytage and as moche of hit shold haue 
the one as the other And thenne the Juge 
demaunded / what was theyr lyuehode / And 
they ansuerd a pere tree / a gote and a mylle / 
And thenne the Juge sayd to them / that they 
shold sette and make partyes egal of your lyuelede / And the one to haue as moche of hit as 
the other / hit is a thynge moche dyffycyle to 
doo / but to your aduys how shold ye parte it / And thenne the eldest of the three bretheren
spake and sayd / I shalle take fro the pere tree 
alle that is croked and vpright / And the second 
sayd / I shalle take fro the pere tree alle that is 
grene and drye / And the thyrd sayd I shalle 
haue alle the rote / the pulle or maste and alle 
the branches of the pere tree / ¶ And thenne 
the Juge sayd to them / He that thenne shalle 
haue the most parte of the tree / lete hym be 
Juge / For I no none other may know ne 
vnderstande who shalle haue the more or lesse 
parte / And therfore he that can or shalle proue 
more openly / that he hath the most parte shal 
be lord of the tree / ¶ And after the Juge demaunded 
of them / how that theyr fader had 
deuysed to them the gote / And they sayd to 
hym / he that shalle make the fayrest prayer and 
request must haue the gote / And thene the 
fyrste broder made his request / and sayd in this 
manere / wold god that the goot were now soo 
grete that she myght drynke alle the water 
whiche is vnder the cope of heuen / And that 
whanne she hadde dronken it / she shold yet be 
sore thursty   ¶ The fecond sayd / I suppose that 
the gote shalle be myn / For a fayrer demaunde 
or request than thyn is I shalle now make / ¶ I 
wold / that alle the hempe / and alle the Flaxe 
and alle the wulle of the worlde were made in one threed alone / And that the Gote were so 
grete / that with that same threde men myght 
not bynde one of his legges / ¶ Thenne sayd 
thirdde / yet shalle be myn the gote / ¶ For I 
wolde/  that he were soo grete / that yf an Egle 
were at the vppermoft of the heuen / he myght 
occupye and haue thenne as moche place as the 
Egle myght loke and see in hyght / in lengthe and 
in breed / ¶ And thenne the Juge sayde to them 
thre / who is he of yow thre / that hath maade the 
fayrest prayer / Certaynly I nor none other canne 
not saye ne gyue the Jugement / And therfore 
the goote shalle be bylongynge to hym that of 
hit shalle say the trouthe   ¶ And the Mylle how 
was hit deuysed by your Fader for to be parted 
amonge yow thre / ¶ And they ansuerde and 
sayde to the Juge / He that shalle be moost lyer / 
mooste euylle and most slowe ought to haue hit / 
¶ Thenne say the eldest sone / I am moost slowfull
/ For many yeres I haue dwellyd in a grete 
hous / and laye vnder the conduytes of the same / 
oute of the whiche felle vpon me alle the fowle 
waters / as pysse / dysshe water / and alle other 
fylthe that wonderly stanke / In so moche that 
al my flesshe was roten therof / and myn eyen 
al blynd / and the durt vnder my back was a foot 
hyghe / And yet by my grete slouthe I hadde 
leuer to abyde there / than to tourne me / and 
haue lyfte me vp ¶ The second sayd I suppose wel / that the 
mylle shalle be myn / For yf I had fasted twenty 
yere / And yf I hadde come to a table couerd of 
al maner of precious and delyate metes / therof 
I myght wel ete yf I wold take of the best / I 
am so slothfull that I maye not ete Withoute 
one shold putte the mete in to my mouthe / 
¶ And the thyrde sayd / the mylle shalle be myn / For I am yet a gretter lyar and more slouthfull / than ony of yow bothe / For yf I hadde ben athurst vnto the dethe / And yf I found thenne my self within a fayre water into the neck / I wold rather deye / than to meue ones my heed for to drynke therof only one drop / ¶ Thenne sayd the Juge to them / Ye wote not what ye saye / For I nor none other maye not wel vnderstande yow / But the cause I remytte and put amonge yow thre / And thus they wente withoute ony sentence / For to folysshe demaunde behoueth a folysshe ansuere.
¶ And therfore they ben fooles that wylle plete suche vanyte one ageynste other/ And many one ben fallen therfore in grete pouerte / For for a lytyl thynge ought to be made a lytyl plee