The Twin Brothers
Once there was a fisherman who had plenty of money but no
children. One day an old woman came to his wife and said: 'What use is all your
prosperity to you when you have no children?'
'It is God's will,' answered the fisherman's wife.
'Nay, my child, it is not God's will, but the fault of your
husband; for if he would but catch the little gold-fish you would surely have
children. To-night, when he comes home, tell him he must go back and catch the
little fish. He must then cut it in six pieces--one of these you must eat, and
your husband the second, and soon after you will have two children. The third
piece you must give to the dog, and she will have two puppies. The fourth piece
give to the mare, and she will have two foals. The fifth piece bury on the
right of the house door, and the sixth on the left, and two cypress trees will
spring up there.'
When the fisherman came home at evening his wife told him all
that the old woman had advised, and he promised to bring home the little
gold-fish. Next morning, therefore, he went very early to the water, and caught
the little fish. Then they did as the old woman had ordered, and in due time
the fisherman's wife had two sons, so like each other that no one could tell
the difference. The dog had two puppies exactly alike, the mare had two foals,
and on each side of the front door there sprang up two cypress trees precisely
similar.
When the two boys were grown up, they were not content to
remain at home, though they had wealth in plenty; but they wished to go out
into the world, and make a name for themselves. Their father would not allow
them both to go at once, as they were the only children he had. He said: 'First
one shall travel, and when he is come back then the other may go.'
So the one took his horse and his dog, and went, saying to
his brother: 'So long as the cypress trees are green, that is a sign that I am
alive and well; but if one begins to wither, then make haste and come to me.'
So he went forth into the world.
One day he stopped at the house of an old woman, and as at
evening he sat before the door, he perceived in front of him a castle standing
on a hill. He asked the old woman to whom it belonged, and her answer was: 'My
son, it is the castle of the Fairest in the Land!'
'And I am come here to woo her!'
'That, my son, many have sought to do, and have lost their
lives in the attempt; for she has cut off their heads and stuck them on the
post you see standing there.'
'And the same will she do to me, or else I shall be victor,
for to-morrow I go there to court her.'
Then he took his zither and played upon it so beautifully
that no one in all that land had ever heard the like, and the princess herself
came to the window to listen.
The next morning the Fairest in the Land sent for the old
woman and asked her, 'Who is it that lives with you, and plays the zither so
well?'
'It is a stranger, princess, who arrived yesterday evening,'
answered the old woman.
And the princess then commanded that the stranger should be
brought to her.
When he appeared before the princess she questioned him about
his home and his family, and about this and that; and confessed at length that
his zither-playing gave her great pleasure, and that she would take him for her
husband. The stranger replied that it was with that intent he had come.
The princess then said: 'You must now go to my father, and
tell him you desire to have me to wife, and when he has put the three problems
before you, then come back and tell me.'
The stranger then went straight to the king, and told him
that he wished to wed his daughter.
And the king answered: 'I shall be well pleased, provided you
can do what I impose upon you; if not you will lose your head. Now, listen; out
there on the ground, there lies a thick log, which measures more than two
fathoms; if you can cleave it in two with one stroke of your sword, I will give
you my daughter to wife. If you fail, then it will cost you your head.'
Then the stranger withdrew, and returned to the house of the
old woman sore distressed, for he could believe nothing but that next day he
must atone to the king with his head. And so full was he of the idea of how to
set about cleaving the log that he forgot even his zither.
In the evening came the princess to the window to listen to
his playing, and behold all was still. Then she called to him: 'Why are you so
cast down this evening, that you do not play on your zither?'
And he told her his trouble.
But she laughed at it, and called to him: 'And you grieve
over that? Bring quickly your zither, and play something for my amusement, and
early to-morrow come to me.'
Then the stranger took his zither and played the whole
evening for the amusement of the princess.
Next morning she took a hair from her locks and gave it to
him, saying: 'Take this hair, and wind it round your sword, then you will be
able to cleave the log in two.'
Then the stranger went forth, and with one blow cleft the log
in two.
But the king said: 'I will impose another task upon you,
before you can wed my daughter.'
'Speak on,' said the stranger.
'Listen, then,' answered the king; 'you must mount a horse
and ride three miles at full gallop, holding in each hand a goblet full of
water. If you spill no drop then I shall give you my daughter to wife, but
should you not succeed then I will take your life.'
Then the stranger returned to the house of the old woman, and
again he was so troubled as to forget his zither.
In the evening the princess came to the window as before to
listen to the music, but again all was still; and she called to him: 'What is
the matter that you do not play on your zither?'
Then he related all that the king had ordered him to do, and
the princess answered: 'Do not let yourself be disturbed, only play now, and
come to me to-morrow morning.'
Then next morning he went to her, and she gave him her ring,
saying: 'Throw this ring into the water and it will immediately freeze, so that
you will not spill any.'
The stranger did as the princess bade him, and carried the
water all the way.
Then the king said: 'Now I will give you a third task, and
this shall be the last. I have a negro who will fight with you to-morrow, and
if you are the conqueror you shall wed my daughter.'
The stranger returned, full of joy, to the house of the old
woman, and that evening was so merry that the princess called to him;: 'You
seem very cheerful this evening; what has my father told you that makes you so
glad?'
He answered: 'Your father has told me that to-morrow I must
fight with his negro. He is only another man like myself, and I hope to subdue
him, and to gain the contest.'
But the princess answered: 'This is the hardest of all. I
myself am the black man, for I swallow a drink that changes me into a negro of
unconquerable strength. Go to-morrow morning to the market, buy twelve buffalo
hides and wrap them round your horse; fasten this cloth round you, and when I
am let loose upon you to-morrow show it to me, that I may hold myself back and
may not kill you. Then when you fight me you must try to hit my horse between
the eyes, for when you have killed it you have conquered me.'
Next morning, therefore, he went to the market and bought the
twelve buffalo hides which he wrapped round his horse. Then he began to fight
with the black man, and when the combat had already lasted a long time, and
eleven hides were torn, then the stranger hit the negro's horse between the
eyes, so that it fell dead, and the black man was defeated.
Then said the king: 'Because you have solved the three
problems I take you for my son-in-law.'
But the stranger answered: 'I have some business to conclude
first; in fourteen days I will return and bring the bride home.'
So he arose and went into another country, where he came to a
great town, and alighted at the house of an old woman. When he had had supper
he begged of her some water to drink, but she answered: 'My son, I have no
water; a giant has taken possession of the spring, and only lets us draw from
it once a year, when we bring him a maiden. He eats her up, and then he lets us
draw water; just now it is the lot of the king's daughter, and to-morrow she
will be led forth.'
The next day accordingly the princess was led forth to the
spring, and bound there with a golden chain. After that all the people went
away and she was left alone.
When they had gone the stranger went to the maiden and asked
her what ailed her that she lamented so much, and she answered that the reason
was because the giant would come and eat her up. And the stranger promised that
he would set her free if she would take him for her husband, and the princess
joyfully consented.
When the giant appeared the stranger set his dog at him, and
it took him by the throat and throttled him till he died; so the princess was
set free.
Now when the king heard of it he gladly consented to the
marriage, and the wedding took place with great rejoicings. The young
bridegroom abode in the palace one hundred and one weeks. Then he began to find
it too dull, and he desired to go out hunting. The king would fain have
prevented it, but in this he could not succeed. Then he begged his son-in-law
at least to take sufficient escort with him, but this, too, the young man
evaded, and took only his horse and his dog.
He had ridden already a long way, when he saw in the distance
a hut, and rode straight towards it in order to get some water to drink. There
he found an old woman from whom he begged the water. She answered that first he
should allow her to beat his dog with her little wand, that it might not bite
her while she fetched the water. The hunter consented; and as soon as she had
touched the dog with her wand it immediately turned to stone. Thereupon she
touched the hunter and also his horse, and both turned to stone. As soon as
that had happened, the cypress trees in front of his father's house began to
wither. And when the other brother saw this, he immediately set out in search
of his twin. He came first to the town where his brother had slain the giant,
and there fate led him to the same old woman where his brother had lodged. When
she saw him she took him for his twin brother, and said to him: 'Do not take it
amiss of me, my son, that I did not come to wish you joy on your marriage with
the king's daughter.'
The stranger perceived what mistake she had made, but only
said: 'That does not matter, old woman,' and rode on, without further speech,
to the king's palace, where the king and the princess both took him for his
twin brother, and called out: 'Why have you tarried so long away? We thought
something evil had befallen you.'
When night came and he slept with the princess, who still
believed him to be her husband, he laid his sword between them, and when
morning came he rose early and went out to hunt. Fate led him by the same way
which his brother had taken, and from a distance he saw him and knew that he
was turned to stone. Then he entered the hut and ordered the old woman to
disenchant his brother. But she answered: 'Let me first touch your dog with my
wand, and then I will free your brother.'
He ordered the dog, however, to take hold of her, and bite
her up to the knee, till she cried out: 'Tell your dog to let me go and I will
set your brother free!'
But he only answered: 'Tell me the magic words that I may
disenchant him myself;' and as she would not he ordered his dog to bite her up
to the hip.
Then the old woman cried out: 'I have two wands, with the
green one I turn to stone, and with the red one I bring to life again.'
So the hunter took the red wand and disenchanted his brother,
also his brother's horse, and his dog, and ordered his own dog to eat the old
woman up altogether.
While the brothers went on their way back to the castle of
the king, the one brother related to the other how the cypress tree had all at
once dried up and withered, how he had immediately set out in search of his
twin, and how he had come to the castle of his father-in-law, and had claimed
the princess as his wife. But the other brother became furious on hearing this,
and smote him over the forehead till he died, and returned alone to the house
of his father-in-law.
When night came and he was in bed the princess asked him:
'What was the matter with you last night, that you never spoke a word to me?'
Then he cried out: 'That was not me, but my brother, and I
have slain him, because he told me by the way that he had claimed you for his
wife!'
'Do you know the place where you slew him?' asked the
princess, 'and can you find the body?'
'I know the place exactly.'
'Then to-morrow we shall ride thither,' said the princess.
Next morning accordingly they set out together, and when they had come to the
place, the princess drew forth a small bottle that she had brought with her,
and sprinkled the body with some drops of the water so that immediately he
became alive again.
When he stood up, his brother said to him: 'Forgive me, dear
brother, that I slew you in my anger.' Then they embraced and went together to
the Fairest in the Land, whom the unmarried brother took to wife.
Then the brothers brought their parents to live with them,
and all dwelt together in joy and happiness.
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