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130
R. S. Boggs, Index of Spanish Folktales.
FFC 90
F. Cf Mt 1535 V a.
*G. Thief pretends to be religious and warns peasant to hide his money. Peasant tells him where money is hidden. Further down the road thief's companions steal peasant's money [K 365]. as 1. CTA p. 231.
1529. Cf Mt 754 *C and Mt *1852.
*1532. Boys steal from man's fig tree. He spends the night in the tree to guard it. Boys come dressed in white and say they ate from the fig tree when they were alive; now that they are dead, they come for the man. He flees and they eat figs [K 335]. as 1. LRAC no 60.
1535. II Cf Mt 1539.
III Cf Mt 1360 B and Mt 1539.
IV *c Impatient host strikes dead stepmother of man, who exacts hush money. Enemy kills grandmother but risks hanging.
V a Cf Mt 1525 A IV and F, Mt 1542 VI a and Mt 1737.
La enciclopedia 1880 época II año IV p. 176 no 6; see BP II 12.
J. E. Gillet, in Revue Hispanique 1926 LXVIII 174. Guatemala: A. Recinos JAF XXXI 476. New Mexico: Espinosa JAF XXVII 133. Porto Rico: Mason-Espinosa JAF XXXIV 144; XXXV 1.
an 1. ECPE no 173: III (Rabbit as messenger), IV b, II (Golddropping ass. Cf Mt 1539). as 1. LRAC no 42: Mt 1030 + Mt 1653 B + Mt 1535 II, V a b. 2. LRAC 67: III a (Crow). 3. LRAC no 160: Mt *166 + Mt 1535 V a. le 1. ECPE no 164: Mt *1020 + Mt 1007 + Mt 1535 V a. oc 1. ECPE no 172: III (Rabbit as messenger), IV b, V a b (Cliff). 2. ECPE no 174: Mt *1716 + Mt 1535 III (Rabbit as messenger), IV b, V a b. 3. ECPE no