μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Cocks who crow about mistress's adultery killed. Discreet cock saves his life.

The wise and the foolish. · Wise and unwise conduct. · Prudence and Discretion. · Zeal – temperate and intemperate. · view the constellation · filed as J551.1

Cited in the index
  • general Pauli (ed. Bolte) No. 9
  • general Oesterley No. 68
  • general Herbert III 206.
Within the index

Filed under Intemperate zeal in truth-telling.

1 finer motif beneath it
Bird warns mistress against committing adultery: gets neck wrung
Filed beside it
Fool given the truth on his back. He tells his master what the servants have done during his absence. The servants whip him on his bare back, saying at each blow, "That is the truth." When the master returns and tells the fool to tell the truth, the latter replies, "There is nothing worse on earth than the truth." Doctor loses a horse for the sake of the truth. Overlord asks two doctors whether he is entitled to all the possessions of his retainers. One doctor unrighteously answers yes and receives a horse. The other who tells the truth receives nothing Man asked to tell truth says that his host, his hostess, and the cat have but three eyes between them. He is driven off for his truth telling Magpie tells a man that his wife has eaten an eel, which she said was eaten by the otter. The woman plucks his feathers out. When the magpie sees a bald man, she says, "You too must have tattled about the eel." Only youngest son tells king truth when asked where they got their food: banished Honest servant tells people that shop does not have many customers: dismissed
Carried in tale types

ask the rhapsode about this motif · search the shelf for “mistress's” · wander