μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Adulteress outwits husband.

Deceptions. · Deceptions connected with adultery. · Adulteress outwits husband. · view the constellation · filed as K1510

Filed across the traditions
  • Irish myth *Cross
  • Icelandic Boberg
  • India Thompson-Balys.
  • general *Penzer V 106 n. 1
  • general *Bolte Frey 223f. No. 21
  • general *Hollander MLN XXVII 71
Within the index
32 finer motifs beneath it
Adulteress kills home-coming husband Wife of philanderer gets revenge by having an affair herself The husband locked out. An adulteress returns home late at night and her husband refuses to admit her. She threatens to throw herself into the well. The husband goes after her. She enters the house and bars him out The cut-off nose. (Lai of the Tresses.) A woman leaves her husband's bed and has another woman take her place. The husband addresses her, gets no answer and cuts off her nose (hair). In the morning the wife still has her nose (hair). The husband is made to believe that it has grown back by a miracle (or that he was dreaming) The wife's equivocal oath. A husband insists that his wife take oath that she has been intimate with no one but himself. The paramour masks as ass-driver. She hires an ass from him, falls down, and lets him pick her up. She then swears that no one has touched her except her husband and the ass-driver Adulteress gets rid of husband while she entertains lover The animal in the chest. The husband has locked the surprised paramour in a chest while he fetches his family as witness of his wife's unfaithfulness. She frees the lover, substitutes an animal, and discountenances the husband. (Cf. K1542, K1555, K1566, K1574.) The husband's good eye covered. The wife holds a cloth in front of his one good eye, so that he cannot see the paramour Paramour escapes by disguise The enchanted pear tree. The wife makes the husband, who has seen the adultery from the tree, believe that the tree is magic or that he has seen double Paramour successfully hidden from husband Husband in hanging tub to escape coming flood. The priest who has thus duped the husband enjoys the wife Underground passage to paramour's house. (Inclusa.) Woman goes from one to the other. Her husband is made to believe that the woman next door is her sister Adulteress falls in mud at lover's door. She deceives her husband by saying that she must enter and clean her dress The Lord above; the lord below. A husband returning home surprises a woman and her paramour and a numskull who has blundered in. The woman hides the numskull in the bed and the paramour under it. The husband, who is leaving on a journey, lifts his hands to heaven and says, "I commend you to the Lord above." – The numskull: "Commend her rather to the lord below!" Friar's trousers on adulteress's bed: relic to cure sickness. The husband is duped into believing that the friar has come to visit the sick The feigned wedding-feast. The husband returns unexpectedly to find his wife entertaining the paramour with a sumptuous feast. He is made to believe the feast is in honor of some newly-weds Wife confesses to disguised husband. She suspects the fraud and persuades him that she knew the ruse and was testing him. He begs forgiveness Husband transformed to goat must witness wife's adultery. The devil has let him see his wife's unfaithfulness in this way Gullible husband under the bed Gullible husband behind the tree. (Tristan and Isolt.) Husband goes to wife's love tryst and hides behind a tree. The wife, having learned of his presence, tells lover that he should not allow their innocent relations to lead to gossip. Husband is appeased Adulteress transforms her husband into an animal to get rid of him. (The Tsar's Dog.) Woman has husband made monk while he is drunk, so as to get rid of him Death feigned to meet paramour. Meetings in the grave (grave box) +8 more
Carried in tale types

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