μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Hare and tortoise race: sleeping hare. In a race between the fast and the slow animal, the fast animal sleeps on the road and allows the slow animal to pass him.

Deceptions. · Contests won by deception. · Athletic contest won by deception. · view the constellation · filed as K11.3

Filed across the traditions
  • N. Am. Indian (Ojibwa) Schoolcraft Algic Researches 181, (Cherokee): Mooney RBAE XIX 290 No. 43
  • West Indies Flowers 494
  • Bahama Parsons MAFLS XIII 102
  • general *Dh IV 66ff.
  • general *BP III 341ff.
  • general Jacobs Aesop 162 No. 68
  • general Haupt Zs. f. deutsches Altertum XII (1865) 527
  • general *Wienert FFC LVI 44 (ET 22), 135 (ST 412)
  • general Halm Aesop No. 420. Japanese: Ikeda
  • general Ainu: Chamberlain, B. Aino Folktales (London, 1888) No. 14
  • general Africa (West Africa): Cronise and Ward Cunnie Rabbit, Mr. Spider and the Other Beef (London, 1903) 155f.
  • general American Negro (Pennsylvania): Parsons JAFL XXX 214, (North Carolina): Parsons JAFL XXX 174, (South Carolina): Parsons MAFLS XVI 79, (Florida): Parsons JAFL XXX 226.
Within the index

Filed under Race won by deception.

Filed beside it
Man challenges devil to race. Cheats him Race won by deception: relative helpers. One of the contestants places his relatives (or others that resemble him) in the line of the race. The opponent always thinks the trickster is just ahead of him. (Told of animals or of men; often of the hare and the turtle.) Race won by deception: riding on the back. One contestant rides on the other's back. (Cf. K25.1.) Race won by deception: chariot disabled. A rival in a chariot race inserts linchpins of wax instead of those of bronze in the hero's chariot. The latter is dragged to death Race won by deception: sham-sick trickster. The trickster feigns lameness and receives a handicap in the race. He then returns and eats up the food which is the prize Race won by deception: rabbit as "little son" substitute. A man challenged by an ogre to a running race persuades the ogre to race with his little son instead. By this he means a rabbit. (Cf. K12.2, K15.1.) Race won by deception: blinding opponent by spitting pepper into face Race won by deception: bow and arrow. Certain goal to be touched. Man shoots arrow and wins Obstacle race between deer and hare. Hare accused of removing obstacles from his course
Carried in tale types

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