μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Aristotle and Phyllis: philosopher as riding horse for woman. The philosopher warns the king against uxoriousness. In revenge the queen beguiles the philosopher into letting her ride him on all-fours. The king comes and sees.

Deceptions. · Deception into humiliating position. · Humiliated or baffled lovers. · view the constellation · filed as K1215

Filed across the traditions
  • Indonesia Voorhoeve 164 No. 170, Bezemer Javaansche en Maleische Fabelen en Legenden 170f.
  • general *Type 1501
  • general **Moth Aristoteles-sagnet
  • general **Borgeld Aristoteles en Phyllis (Groningen, 1902)
  • general **Sarton Isis XIV (1930) 8ff.
  • general *Basset 1001 Contes II 140
  • general *G. Paris Romania XI 138
  • general *Wesselski Hodscha Nasreddin II 203 No. 402
  • general Bédier Fabliaux 204, 386, 448
  • general *Herbert Catalogue III 87
  • general Chavannes III 236
  • general *RTP XV 110
  • general von der Hagen I xxv, 17

…and 4 more.

Within the index

Filed under Humiliated or baffled lovers.

Filed beside it
Vergil in the basket. A lover who is to be pulled up to his mistress's window is left hanging in the basket in the public gaze Lover left standing in snow while his mistress is with another. He later tricks her into standing a whole day in July in a tower naked exposed to the sun and flies Terrorizing the paramour (importunate lover) Hercules spins for his beloved. Is forced to dress as woman and discharge womanly duties including spinning Hidden paramour taken to his own wife. He hides in a chest. The chest is taken by a creditor who unwittingly delivers it to the paramour's wife Tale of the basin. Lover caught on magic basin and left in embarrassing position Importunate lovers led astray Woman tricks importunate lover with the head of a pike. Thereafter he thinks the vagina is toothed Mistress deceives lover with a substitute Lover given rump to kiss. Sometimes the trick is played by a rival lover. (Chaucer's Miller's Tale) Lover put off by deceptive respite Woman humiliates would-be lover. Knowing that he has deceived another by paying her with gilded coin she answers: "You will have to pay in better coin than is your wont!" Chaste woman refers lover to her husband for permission Lover deceived by false suicide agreement. The woman persuades her lover to jump from a cliff; she will follow. She does not jump Lover humiliated by his impotence King tricked into sleeping with hag
Carried in tale types

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