(when he should rather take away the heavy sides, and
so ease me, or else lift them up to make them equall
with the other) he laid great stones upon the weaker
side to remedy the matter, yet could be not be contented
with this my great misery and immoderate burthens of
wood, but when hee came to any river (as there were
many by the way) he to save his feete from water,
would leape upon my loynes likewise, which was no
small loade upon loade. And if by adversity I
had fell downe in any dirty or myrie place, when he
should have pulled me out either with ropes, or lifted
me up by the taile, he would never helpe me, but lay
me on from top to toe with a mighty staffe, till he
had left no haire on all my body, no not so much as
on mine eares, whereby I was compelled by force of
blowes to stand up. The same hangman boy did invent
another torment for me: he gathered a great many
sharp thornes as sharp as needles and bound them together
like a fagot, and tyed them at my tayle to pricke
me, then was I afflicted on every side, for if I had
indeavoured to runne away, the thornes would have pricked
me, if I had stood still, the boy would have beaten
mee, and yet the boy beate mee to make me runne, whereby
I perceived that the hangman did devise nothing else
save only to kill me by some manner of meanes, and
he would sweare and threaten to do me worse harme,
and because hee might have some occasion to execute
his malicious minde, upon a day (after that I had
endeavoured too much by my patience) I lifted up my
heeles and spurned him welfavouredly. Then he
invented this vengeance against me, after that he
had well laded me with shrubs and rubble, and trussed
it round upon my backe, hee brought me out into the
way: then hee stole a burning coale out of a
mans house of the next village, and put it into the
middle of the rubbell; the rubbell and shrubs being
very dry, did fall on a light fire and burned me on
every side. I could see no remedy how I might
save my selfe, and in such a case it was not best for
me to stand still but fortune was favourable towards
me, perhaps to reserve me for more dangers, for I
espyed a great hole full of raine water that fell
the day before, thither I ranne hastily and plunged
my selfe therein, in such sort that I quenched the
fire, and was delivered from that present perill,
but the vile boy to excuse himselfe declared to all
the neighbours and shepheards about, that I willingly
tumbled in the fire as I passed through the village.
Then he laughed upon me saying: How long shall
we nourish and keepe this fiery Asse in vaine?
THE TWENTY-NINTH CHAPTER
How Apuleius was accused of Lechery by the boy.