Sapia Liccarda

Sapia Liccarda

Sapia Liccarda is an Italian literary fairy tale written by Giambattista Basile in the "Pentamerone". It is not known whether he had a specific source, either literary or oral, for this tale. [Jack Zipes, "The Great Fairy Tale Tradition: From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm", p 524, ISBN 0-393-97636-X]

Italo Calvino identified a Florentine tale, The King in the Basket, in his "Italian Folktales" as a variant on it, while noting the vast difference in tone. [Italo Calvino, Italian Folktales p 734 ISBN 0-15-645489-0]

ynopsis

A rich merchant had three daughters, Bella, Cenzolla, and the youngest, Sapia Liccarda. He went on a trip and nailed up all the windows so they could not lean out and gossip, and gave them rings that would stain if they did something shameful. The older sisters managed to lean out anyway.

The king's castle was across the way, and his three sons, Cecciariello, Grazuloo, and Tore, flirted with the three daughters. The older two seduced the older two, but Sapia Liccarda gave Tore the slip, and increased his desire for her. The older two became pregnant. They craved the king's bread, and Sapia Liccarda went to the king's castle to beg it, with a flax comb on her back. She got it, and when Tore tried to seize her, the comb scratched his hand. Then they craved pears, and she went to the royal garden to get them. Tore saw her and climbed a tree to get her the pears, but when he tried to climb down and seize her, she took away the ladder. Finally, the older sisters were delivered of their sons, and Sapia Liccarda went to the castle for the third time, to leave each baby in his father's bed, and a stone in Tore's. The older two were pleased to have such fine young sons, and Tore was jealous of them.

The merchant returned and found the rings of his older two daughters stained. He was ready to beat them when the king's sons asked him to let them marry his daughters. He agreed.

Sapia Liccarda, thinking Tore angry with her, made a fine statue of herself in sugar paste and left it in her bed. Tore came in and stabbed the statue, and said he would suck her blood as well, but when he tasted the sugar paste, it was so sweet that he lamented his wickedness. Sapia Liccarda told him the truth, and they made their peace in the bed.

The King in the Basket

In Calvino's version, the daughters are instructed to lower a basket to buy whatever they need, and the king tricks them into lifting them up. The youngest, Leonetta, gets her sisters to lower her and plays tricks in his castle. The king asks the merchant to marry one of his daughters and knows that Leonetta is the prankster by her willingness. The sugar figure on the wedding night appears identically in the tale. [Italo Calvino, Italian Folktales p 323 ISBN 0-15-645489-0]

ee also

*Clever Maria

References


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Giambattista Basile — (1566 or 1575 – February 23, 1632) was an Italian poet, courtier, and fairy tale collector. Biography Born to a Neapolitan middle class family, Basile was, during his career, a courtier and soldier to various Italian princes, including the doge… …   Wikipedia

  • Clever Maria — is a Portuguese fairy tale. Andrew Lang included it in The Crimson Fairy Book.[1] Synopsis [clarification needed] A merchant had three daughters, and the youngest, Maria, was the most beautiful. The king gave each daughter a pot of basil and… …   Wikipedia

  • List of fairy tales — This is a list of fairy tales, the dates of their earliest known printed version, the author and, if known, the collection of tales in which it was published. It should be noted, however, that not all stories listed below would be categorized as… …   Wikipedia

  • Pentamerone — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Le Conte des contes. Pentamerone Le Conte des contes Grannonia et le Renard illustration de Warwick Goble extraite de Stories from the Pentamerone, Macmillan, Londres, 1911 Auteur …   Wikipédia en Français

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