Voluptaria: Difference between revisions
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{{Inset Story | {{Inset Story | ||
|Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001) | |Has Critical Literature=Nishimura (2001) | ||
|Has | |Has Motif=Cross dressing; Cross dressing: woman in men’s clothes; Adultery; Military conflict; Imprisonment; Poison; Accidental death; Murder; Sword; Violent punishment; Woman tricked/coerced into sex; Revenge; Bathing; Genitalia; Food and drink; Rape | ||
|Has Summary='''Pleasure''' | |Has Summary='''Pleasure''' | ||
Revision as of 19:13, 4 March 2025
Pleasure
A knight announces to his beautiful wife that he must go away to war in Prussia. His grieving wife asks to accompany him, and she disguises herself as a man to fight alongside him. The two fight side by side, but one day they are captured by a pagan king. They are held in prison until the king's birthday arrives - and in a show of magnanimity, he decides to free the prisoners, and orders them to bathe. They refuse initially, but at last must comply, and the second 'knight' is revealed to be a woman. The pagan king immediately desires the wife, and has her husband tied to a column to watch as he has sex with her. He falls into a drunken sleep, and the knight asks his wife to untie him, but she refuses, and falls alseep in turn. While the king and the wife sleep, the husband sees that a poisonous spider falls into their wine. They awaken, the king drinks the wine, and dies in agony. The wife decides to slash the king with her husband's sword to shift the blame to him, but she swings wildly and instead severs her husband's ties. He takes her back to their home, and tells his friends the story of their adventures as if they had happened to someone else, asking what should be done to such a woman. They all say that the woman should be killed (locked in a cellar and starved to death), and so he does.
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Nishimura (2001) notes that close analogues are found in under the motif headings TMI K1837.6 and TU5358 (woman disguised as a knight), and in the following narratives:
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Critical Literature |
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Nishimura (2001) |
Voluptaria appears in the following versions and secondary versions |
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Voluptaria is narrated in the following occurrences | ||||
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Voluptaria appears in the following manuscripts |
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This inset story appears in no manuscripts of the database |