μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Execution escaped by use of special permissions granted the condemned.

The wise and the foolish. · Cleverness. · Clever persons and acts. · Cleverness in the law court. · Clever means of avoiding legal punishment. · view the constellation · filed as J1181

Within the index

Filed under Clever means of avoiding legal punishment.

4 finer motifs beneath it
Execution: man induced to kill self. King may not execute Brahmin, but gets him drunk and brings about his death Execution evaded by using three wishes. King ordains that guest who turns his plate shall be executed, but orders that anyone so condemned shall have three wishes granted. One of the wishes: to have all blinded who saw him turn the plate. He is freed Execution evaded by having three wishes granted: to be emperor, judge and the emperor's son-in-law during the last week of his life. As judge he frees himself and is in reality freed Condemned man wins pardon by clever remark. Fool is allowed to jump off cliff (balcony) as punishment. Master expresses surprise that in three trials he has failed to hurl himself from the height. The jester offers the prince four trials. Amused prince pardons the jester
Filed beside it
Punishment escaped by discomfiting condemner Execution escaped by invoking laws of hospitality No second punishment for same offense Execution escaped by story-telling. Cf. Browning's "Balaustion's Adventure." Clever means of avoiding legal punishment – miscellaneous
Travels with (Thompson’s cf.)
Chooses to die of old age. Criminal given choice of deaths. (Cf. J1181.)
Carried in tale types

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