Regina: Difference between revisions

From The Seven Sages of Rome
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{{Inset Story
{{Inset Story
|Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Steinmetz (1999)
|Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Steinmetz (1999)
|Has Motif=Slander: wife falsely accused; Adultery; Revenge; Failed/rejected seduction; Dog; Violent punishment; Dwarf; Murder; Evidence; False evidence of unchastity/criminality; Deception; Deceitful lover; Judgement
|Has Motif=Slander: wife falsely accused; Adultery; Revenge; Failed/rejected seduction; Dog; Violent punishment; Dwarf; Murder; Evidence; False evidence of unchastity/criminality; Deception; Deceitful lover; Judgement; Setting: nature; Disposal of corpse; Deceitful advisor; Judicial duel; Misinterpretation
|Has Summary='''The Queen'''
|Has Summary='''The Queen'''


The queen of France is propositioned by the king's marshal, who will not accept her refusals until at last she threatens to tell the king. Furious at being denied, the marshal waits until the queen is asleep, then deposits a sleeping dwarf beside her in the bed and summons the king to see the staged scene. The king immediately seizes the dwarf and slams him into the wall with such force that he dies, and then condemns his wife to be burned at the stake. The king's cousin, and young nobleman from Austria, defends the queen. It is arranged that she will flee into exile, and a knight conducts her out of the castle and into the forest. However, the marshal kills the knight, and the queen finds shelter with a charcoal burner in the woods. The murdered knight's dog alerts the court to the marshal's crime, and the dog and the marshal fight a duel. The marshal is found guilty, and the king sends for his wife to be restored to the court.
The queen of France is propositioned by the king's marshal, who will not accept her refusals until at last she threatens to tell the king. Furious at being denied, the marshal waits until the queen is asleep, then deposits a sleeping dwarf beside her in the bed and summons the king to see the staged scene. The king immediately seizes the dwarf and slams him into the wall with such force that he dies, and then condemns his wife to be burned at the stake. The king's cousin, a young nobleman from Austria, defends the queen. It is arranged that she will flee into exile, and a knight conducts her out of the castle and into the forest. However, the marshal kills the knight, and the queen finds shelter with a charcoal burner in the woods. The murdered knight's dog alerts the court to the marshal's crime, and the dog and the marshal fight a duel. The marshal is found guilty, and the king sends for his wife to be restored to the court.  
 
 
[From Steinmetz (1999); added by Jane Bonsall.]
|Has Note=For another story of a dog avenging his murdered master, see [[Corpus Delicti|Corpus Delicti.]]
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Latest revision as of 13:54, 26 November 2025

The Queen

The queen of France is propositioned by the king's marshal, who will not accept her refusals until at last she threatens to tell the king. Furious at being denied, the marshal waits until the queen is asleep, then deposits a sleeping dwarf beside her in the bed and summons the king to see the staged scene. The king immediately seizes the dwarf and slams him into the wall with such force that he dies, and then condemns his wife to be burned at the stake. The king's cousin, a young nobleman from Austria, defends the queen. It is arranged that she will flee into exile, and a knight conducts her out of the castle and into the forest. However, the marshal kills the knight, and the queen finds shelter with a charcoal burner in the woods. The murdered knight's dog alerts the court to the marshal's crime, and the dog and the marshal fight a duel. The marshal is found guilty, and the king sends for his wife to be restored to the court.


[From Steinmetz (1999); added by Jane Bonsall.]

Note

For another story of a dog avenging his murdered master, see Corpus Delicti.

Critical Literature
Nishimura (2001)Steinmetz (1999)
Regina appears in the following versions and secondary versions