Revision as of 13:54, 11 December 2024
A merchant with a taste for fine foods sends a servant to buy bread, and is so delighted with the loaf that he brings back that he requests the same bread every day. Every day the servant buys a loaf from the same vendor woman, until one day she no longer is selling the bread. The merchant asks for the woman to be brought before him to explain her recipe. She arrives, and explains that her master was sick with a malignant ulcer, and that the doctor mixed flour with honeyed wine, spices, and sugar, and to use it as a plaster on the wound overnight. In the morning, she would take the plaster, bake it into bread and sell it. However, her master was now cured, so there was no more bread to be made. The merchant, hearing this, is nauseated and ill.
| Panes appears in the following versions and secondary versions
|
|
|
| Panes is narrated in the following occurrences
|
| Narrator |
Pages
|
| Fourth Master |
Berlin Staatsbibliothek Ms. lat. qu. 618, Hebrew Group A, Hebrew Group B, Hebrew Prints, Latin Mishle Sendebar, Mishle Sendebar
|
| Second Master |
Arabic Version A1001 (Thousand and One Nights), Arabic Version A101 (Hundred and One Nights), Berlin Staatsbibliothek Sprenger 1368, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3660, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3662, Leiden Universiteit Or. 14.303, Libro de los Engaños, Madrid Real Academia Española 'El Conde Lucanor', Ms. 15, Paris Bibliothèque nationale de France Arabe 3639, Paris Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3660, Paris Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3661, Paris Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3662, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Arabe 3670, Toronto Aga Khan Museum 00513, Tunis Bibliothèque nationale de Tunisie, MWT 04576
|
|
| Panes appears in the following manuscripts
|
|
|