Lavator: Difference between revisions
From The Seven Sages of Rome
(Created page with "{{Inset Story |Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Epstein (1967); Hilka (1912) |Has Summary=A man who makes his living doing laundry washes clothes in the river, while his young son plays on the banks. The father does not caution his son, nor keep him from the riverside, and one day the child fall into the water. His father rushes in to try to save him, and slips into deep water; his brother shortly follows, trying to rescue them both, but all three are drowned. }}") |
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{{Inset Story | {{Inset Story | ||
|Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Epstein (1967); Hilka (1912) | |Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001); Epstein (1967); Hilka (1912); Clouston (1884) | ||
|Has Content Tag=Accidental death; Father/son relationships; Familial relationships | |||
|Has Summary=A man who makes his living doing laundry washes clothes in the river, while his young son plays on the banks. The father does not caution his son, nor keep him from the riverside, and one day the child fall into the water. His father rushes in to try to save him, and slips into deep water; his brother shortly follows, trying to rescue them both, but all three are drowned. | |Has Summary=A man who makes his living doing laundry washes clothes in the river, while his young son plays on the banks. The father does not caution his son, nor keep him from the riverside, and one day the child fall into the water. His father rushes in to try to save him, and slips into deep water; his brother shortly follows, trying to rescue them both, but all three are drowned. | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 21:21, 20 December 2024
A man who makes his living doing laundry washes clothes in the river, while his young son plays on the banks. The father does not caution his son, nor keep him from the riverside, and one day the child fall into the water. His father rushes in to try to save him, and slips into deep water; his brother shortly follows, trying to rescue them both, but all three are drowned.
Critical Literature |
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Nishimura (2001), Epstein (1967), Hilka (1912), Clouston (1884) |
Lavator appears in the following versions and secondary versions |
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Lavator appears in the following manuscripts |
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