The fable concerns a trumpeter who is taken by the enemy in battle and pleads to be spared on the grounds that he bears no weapons. His captors tell him that encouraging others to fight by means of his trumpet is even worse. In the Latin version by
Avianus, an old soldier is disposing of his weapons in a fire and the trumpet asks to be spared but is disposed of in the same way. In the
Renaissance,
Andrea Alciato included the story among his
Emblemata under the heading
Parem delinquentis et suasoris culpam esse (The fault belongs alike to the wrongdoer and the persuader) and was followed by the English emblematist
Geoffrey Whitney in asserting that those who encourage a crime are equally guilty. The
Neo-Latin poets
Hieronymus Osius and
Pantaleon Candidus also follow Alciato in stating that, though the trumpeter is equally at fault, he causes greater harm. Most illustrators of the fables pictured ancient battle scenes, but
Thomas Bewick updated it by dressing the trumpeter in the uniform of his times.
Brooke Boothby also modernised the fable in his poetic version, which ends with the line "The poor Trumpeter was shot".
William Somervile similarly chooses a contemporary setting, making his "Captive Trumpeter" the French prisoner of "a party of hussars" and condemning him to an ignominious death. ::Thou by the hangman shalt expire. ::'Tis just, and not at all severe, ::To stop the breath that blew the fire. Other poems of the time reserve their final lines for enforcing the moral. A school edition of 1773 concludes severely, ::Peace breakers should be thoroughly detested, ::Their contrivances expos'd, their plans arrested. Boothby's contemporary, H.Steers, agrees: ::The world no greater scoundrel bears ::Than one who sets folk by the ears. Another poet of that decade, the moralistic
Fortescue Hitchins, devotes no less than fourteen lines to drawing the fable's lesson, applying it in addition to grumblers and gossips. It was appreciation of the arguments employed in the fable and the belief that "musical elements lurk in gifted oratorical arguments" that later inspired the composer
Jerzy Sapieyevski to feature it as the fifth piece in his
Aesop Suite for brass quintet and narrator (1984), where great use is made of
counterpointing. ==References==