[Legends of the Middle Ages by H.A. Guerber]@TWC D-Link book
Legends of the Middle Ages

CHAPTER III
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As shuns a bad conscience Light and day, so the fox fought shy of the nobles assembled.
One and all had complaints to make, he had all of them injured; Grimbart the badger, his brother's son, alone was excepted." [Sidenote: Complaints against Reynard.] The complaint was voiced by Isegrim the wolf, who told with much feeling how cruelly Reynard had blinded three of his beloved children, and how shamefully he had insulted his wife, the fair lady Gieremund.

This accusation had no sooner been formulated than Wackerlos the dog came forward, and, speaking French, pathetically described the finding of a little sausage in a thicket, and its purloining by Reynard, who seemed to have no regard whatever for his famished condition.
The tomcat Hintze, who at the mere mention of a sausage had listened more attentively, now angrily cried out that the sausage which Wackerlos had lost belonged by right to him, as he had concealed it in the thicket after stealing it from the miller's wife.

He added that he too had had much to suffer from Reynard, and was supported by the panther, who described how he had once found the miscreant cruelly beating poor Lampe the hare.
"Lampe he held by the collar, Yes, and had certainly taken his life, if I by good fortune Had not happened to pass by the road.

There standing you see him.
Look and see the wounds of the gentle creature, whom no one Ever would think of ill treating." [Sidenote: Vindication of Reynard.] The king, Nobel, was beginning to look very stern as one after another rose to accuse the absent Reynard, when Grimbart the badger courageously began to defend him, and artfully turned the tables upon the accusers.

Taking up their complaints one by one, he described how Reynard, his uncle, once entered into partnership with Isegrim.


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