Three poems from the
Greek Anthology refer to an otherwise unrecorded fable in which a hare on the run from hunting dogs leaps into the sea, only to be seized there by a 'sea-dog', a Mediterranean shark. The first two poems are by
Germanicus Caesar, the second of which ends poignantly, ::Beasts of water and land rage against me alike. ::Hares, may the air be your recourse; yet I fear ::You too, O Heaven, have a dog among your stars! In the course of his first poem, Germanicus refers directly to the Greek equivalent of the proverbial idiom that was to develop into the modern-day '
Out of the frying pan into the fire'. The subject of the hare's fate was subsequently taken up in Latin by
Ausonius in a four-line epigram reliant upon the Greek poems. The situation also figured in
Gilles Corrozet's
Hecatomographie (1540). This was an
Emblem book in which the story's significance was widened to the uncertainty of life in general under the title "Peril and danger on all sides" (see illustration). ==The Hare, the Hound and the Goatherd==