| In a certain country there was once great lamentation over a | |
| wild boar that laid waste the farmer's fields, killed the cattle, | |
| and ripped up people's bodies with his tusks. The king promised | |
| a large reward to anyone who would free the land from this plague, | |
| but the beast was so big and strong that no one dared to go near | |
| the forest in which it lived. At last the king gave notice | |
| that whosoever should capture or kill the wild boar should have | |
| his only daughter to wife. | |
| Now there lived in the country two brothers, sons of a poor man, | |
| who declared themselves willing to undertake the hazardous | |
| enterprise, the elder, who was crafty and shrewd, out of pride, | |
| the younger, who was innocent and simple, from a kind heart. | |
| The king said, in order that you may be the more sure of finding | |
| the beast, you must go into the forest from opposite sides. So | |
| the elder went in on the west side, and the younger on the east. | |
| When the younger had gone a short way, a little man stepped | |
| up to him. He held in his hand a black spear and said, I give | |
| you this spear because your heart is pure and good, with this | |
| you can boldly attack the wild boar, and it will do you no harm. | |
| He thanked the little man, shouldered the spear, and went on | |
| fearlessly. | |
| Before long he saw the beast, which rushed at him, but he held | |
| the spear towards it, and in its blind fury it ran so swiftly | |
| against it that its heart was cloven in twain. Then he took the | |
| monster on his back and went homewards with it to the king. | |
| As he came out at the other side of the wood, there stood at the | |
| entrance a house where people were making merry with wine and | |
| dancing. His elder brother had gone in here, and, thinking that | |
| after all the boar would not run away from him, was going to drink | |
| until he felt brave. But when he saw his young brother coming out | |
| of the wood laden with his booty, his envious, evil heart gave him | |
| no peace. He called out to him, come in, dear brother, rest and | |
| refresh yourself with a cup of wine. | |
| The youth, who suspected no evil, went in and told him about the | |
| good little man who had given him the spear wherewith he had slain | |
| the boar. | |
| The elder brother kept him there until the evening, and then they | |
| went away together, and when in the darkness they came to a | |
| bridge over a brook, the elder brother let the other go first, and | |
| when he was half-way across he gave him such a blow from behind | |
| that he fell down dead. He buried him beneath the bridge, took | |
| the boar, and carried it to the king, pretending that he had | |
| killed it, whereupon he obtained the king's daughter in marriage. | |
| And when his younger brother did not come back he said, the boar | |
| must have ripped up his body, and every one believed it. | |
| But as nothing remains hidden from God, so this black deed also | |
| was to come to light. | |
| Years afterwards a shepherd was driving his herd across the | |
| bridge, and saw lying in the sand beneath, a snow-white little | |
| bone. He thought that it would make a good mouth-piece, so | |
| he clambered down, picked it up, and cut out of it a mouth-piece | |
| for his horn, but when he blew through it for the first time, | |
| to his great astonishment, the bone began of its own accord to | |
| sing - | |
| ah, friend thou blowest upon my bone. | |
| Long have I lain beside the water, | |
| my brother slew me for the boar, | |
| and took for his wife the king's young daughter. | |
| What a wonderful horn, said the shepherd, it sings by itself, | |
| I must take it to my lord the king. And when he came with it to | |
| the king the horn again began to sing its little song. The | |
| king understood it all, and caused the ground below the bridge | |
| to be dug up, and then the whole skeleton of the murdered man | |
| came to light. The wicked brother could not deny the deed, and | |
| was sewn up in a sack and drowned. But the bones of the murdered | |
| man were laid to rest in a beautiful tomb in the churchyard. | |