μῦθοι Mythoi
Motif

Robber does penance. (Cf. Q212.)

Rewards and punishments. · Kinds of punishment. · Penances. · view the constellation · filed as Q520.2

Filed across the traditions
  • Spanish Exempla Keller
  • Italian Novella *Rotunda.
  • general *Types 756B
  • general **Andrejev FFC LXIX 81, 118ff., 236ff
Within the index

Filed under Penances.

Filed beside it
Substitutions for penances Murderer does penance. (Cf. Q171.1.1, Q211.) Life-long penance for brother-sister marriage King who loved to give death sentence accepts penance of always postponing sentence until thirty days period of examination has passed Penance in wilderness as punishment for men who left holy orders to marry. (Cf. Q226.) Warrior retires to a cloister which he later defends against robbers Tedious penances. (Cf. H1110, Q500.) Self-torture as penance Humiliating penances. (Cf. Q470.) Fearful penances Dangerous penances Pilgrimage as penance Penance: inviting one Brahmin for dinner every Wednesday Negative penances Penance: resisting temptation. (Cf. T330.) Sitting (standing) in uncomfortable position as penance
Travels with (Thompson’s cf.)
Theft punished. (Cf. Q221.8, Q413.1, Q428.2, Q431.15, Q451.0.4, Q451.1.1, Q451.2.2, Q451.4.1, Q451.5.2, Q451.6.2, Q451.7.0.2.2, Q458.0.3, Q458.2.2, Q467.2, Q469.10.2, Q520.2, Q551.2.3.ff., Q551.6.4, Q551.7.2, Q552.4, Q552.6, Q552.19.3, Q554.1, Q558.6, Q559.10, Q597.3.)
Carried in tale types

ask the rhapsode about this motif · search the shelf for “penance” · wander