μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Genitals cut off through ignorance.

The wise and the foolish. · Fools (and other unwise persons). · Absurd disregard of facts. · Fatal disregard of anatomy. · view the constellation · filed as J1919.5

In our texts — keyword-matched, unreviewed
Within the index

Filed under Fatal disregard of anatomy – miscellaneous.

3 finer motifs beneath it
Ignorant bride castrates groom when jokingly told to do so Nun tells friar to get rid of offending member. He does so Fool undergoes castration to put on weight
Filed beside it
The remodelled stork. A trickster cuts off the bill and legs of a stork to make him look more like a real bird Where the ducks ford. A fool is asked where the river is fordable. He says, "Everywhere." The man tries to ride across and is almost drowned. The fool, "Those little ducks were able to cross here; why couldn't a big fellow like you?" The two extra pounds. A dog has eaten 14 pounds of butter; the fool squeezes 16 pounds from him Fool cuts off tails of oxen so that they will look like fine steeds Simpleton's ignorance of anatomy leads him to share his wife with a priest Fool believes that he has begot child with his sister by an earbox The man without a member: foolish wife gives her husband money to buy himself one Cowboy shoots his wife when she breaks her leg (or is injured in another way)
Carried in tale types

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