μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

King: What is your mother doing? Youth: She does for another what the latter cannot do for her. (Lays out a corpse.)

Tests. · Tests of cleverness. · Riddles. · Enigmatic statements. · view the constellation · filed as H583.4

Cited in the index
  • general *De Vries FFC LXXIII 124ff.
Within the index

Filed under Clever youth (maiden) answers king's inquiry in riddles. (Cf. H561.4.)

6 finer motifs beneath it
King: What is your mother doing? Youth: She shows the light of the world to one who has not yet seen it. (Assists at a birth.) King: What is your mother doing? Youth: She is baking the bread we ate last week. (To pay back borrowed bread.) (Cf. H583.2.4.) King: What is your mother doing? Youth: She cuts off the heads of the well to cure the sick. (Kills chickens to feed her sick mother.) King: What is your mother doing? Youth: She drives away the hungry and compels the filled to eat. (Drives away the hungry hens and stuffs the geese.) King: What are your mother and father doing? Girl: Mother is separating earth (being a midwife), and father is mixing earth (at a funeral) King: What is your mother doing? Girl: She has gone to turn one into two (to split peas)
Filed beside it
King: What do you see? Youth: One and a half men and a horse's head. (Himself, the legs of the king on horseback in the door, and the horse's head.) King: What is your father doing? Youth: He is in the vineyard and is doing good and bad. (He prunes vines and sometimes cuts good and sometimes lets bad ones stay.) King: What is your brother doing? Youth: He hunts; he throws away what he catches and what he does not catch he carries with him. (Hunts for lice on his body.) King: What is your sister doing? Youth: She is mourning last year's laughter. (Nurses child, the fruit of last year's love affair.) King: What are you doing? Youth: I boil those which come and go. (Beans which keep rising and falling in water.) King: Where shall I tie my horse? Maiden: Between summer and winter. (Between wagon and sleigh.) Maiden (to king): The house has neither eyes nor ears. (No child at window nor dog in yard to announce king's approach: he therefore finds her not dressed to receive him.) Maiden (to king): Shall I feed you with loss or gain. (A slaughtered hen or milk.) Girl to king: Should it (the flood) come I shall not come; should it not come, I shall come
Carried in tale types

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