μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Unjust umpire as trickster's confederate. (Cf. K455.7.)

Deceptions. · Thefts and cheats. · Other cheats. · Other cheats. · view the constellation · filed as K451

Filed across the traditions
  • Icelandic Boberg.
Within the index

Filed under Other cheats.

5 finer motifs beneath it
Unjust umpire decides a religious dispute. His confederate thus wins an absurd wager The wager that sheep are hogs. A trickster wagers with a sheep driver that the sheep he is driving are hogs. The next man to overtake them will act as umpire. The trickster's confederate now arrives and declares that they are hogs Concealed confederate as unjust witness. A rascal who has hidden with a simple man a treasure found by them carries it away secretly, trying to have his associate condemned on the witness of a tree in which his father is concealed Trickster's confederate gives fabulous appraisal to worthless piece of glass. Priest is duped into buying it as a diamond Confederate answers for corpse. Man poses as returned heir to dead man; pretends to address corpse for identification
Filed beside it
Double reward successfully claimed False claim of reward Money (or other things) acquired by blackmail Dream bread: the most wonderful dream. Three pilgrims agree that the one who has the most wonderful dream shall eat the last loaf. One eats it and declares that he dreamed that the others were dead and would not need it The emperor's new clothes. An impostor feigns to make clothes for the emperor and says that they are visible only to those of legitimate birth. The emperor and courtiers are all afraid to admit that they cannot see the clothes. Finally a child seeing the naked emperor reveals the imposture The heller thrown into others' money. A rascal sees robbers dividing their booty. He puts a red string through his only coin (a heller) and slips it into the others' money. He claims the money as his and says that he has marked it with a heller having a red string through it. The robbers divide Contraband gold discovered when king offers large price for gold Cheater marks coveted object with his name and later claims it. [Inadvertant duplication of J1162.3.] Unjust umpire misappropriates disputed goods Cheating through knowledge of the law Deception into giving false credit Trickster takes goods given in charity to his family Eavesdropping sexton duped into giving suppliant money. The trickster prays to the Virgin for a certain sum of money and promises repayment of double at the end of the month. The sexton throws the money to him, but never receives it back Owner bids on his own goods at auction. Rival buyer pays extravagant price The substituted porridge. In cooking dinner fox's porridge is light, bear's black. At dinner fox steals spoonful of bear's porridge and lets bear taste it. Bear believes that fox's porridge is as bad as his own Sham blood and brains. Fox covers his head with milk and says that his brains have been knocked out. Frightens bear
Travels with (Thompson’s cf.)
Greatest liar to get his supper free. Wager. Each lie is corroborated by a confederate, who poses as a newly arrived stranger
Carried in tale types

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