
I Cocorni
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Rachel Harriette Busk
Roman Legends: A Collection Of The Fables And Folk-Lore Of Rome
Estes And Lauriat, Boston
1877
Italy
I Cocorni: jealousy, honour, cuckoldry, mockery, marriage, social satire, reputation, comic humiliation, suspicion, Roman humour
Public Domain (copyright expired)
n/a
I Cocorni
This story of Sor Cassandro led to others of the same nature, but without sufficient interest in the detail to put in print, though they seemed to illustrate the fact that an imaginative people will rapidly turn the most ordinary circumstances into a myth. For instance, one concerned a family named Cocorni, who seem to have been nothing more than successful grocers, the Twinings of Rome, and here is a specimen of the language used about them:--'When his daughter was old enough to marry, Cocorni would hear of no proposal for her. "No," said he; "no one marries my daughter but he who comes in a carriage and four to fetch her." And it really did happen that one came in a carriage and four and took her away;' as if it were such a great matter that it implied something supernatural.
Folktales, Fairytales, myths, legends, stories, fantasy