Once
there were two brothers who inherited their father’s land. The brothers divided
the land in half and each one farmed his own section. Over time, the older
brother married and had six children, while the younger brother never married.
One
night, the younger brother lay awake. “It’s not fair that each of us has half
the land to farm,” he thought. “My brother has six children to feed and I have
none. He should have more grain than I do.”
So
that night the younger brother went to his silo, gathered a large bundle of
wheat, and climbed the hill that separated the two farms and over to his
brother’s farm. Leaving the wheat in his brother’s silo, the younger brother
returned home, feeling pleased with himself.
Earlier
that very same night, the older brother was also lying awake. “It’s not fair
that each of us has half the land to farm,” he thought. “In my old age my wife
and I will have our grown children to take care of us, not to mention
grandchildren, while my brother will probably have none. He should at least
sell more grain from the fields now so he can provide for himself with dignity
in his old age.”
So
that night, too, he secretly gathered a large bundle of wheat, climbed the
hill, left it in his brother’s silo, and returned home, feeling pleased with
himself.
The
next morning, the younger brother was surprised to see the amount of grain in
his barn unchanged. “I must not have taken as much wheat as I thought,” he
said, bemused. “Tonight I’ll be sure to take more.”
That
very same moment, his older brother was also standing in his barn, musing much
the same thoughts.
After
night fell, each brother gathered a greater amount of wheat from his barn and
in the dark, secretly delivered it to his brother’s barn. The next morning, the
brothers were again puzzled and perplexed. “How can I be mistaken?” each one
scratched his head. “There’s the same amount of grain here as there was before
I cleared the pile for my brother. This is impossible! Tonight I’ll make no
mistake – I’ll take the pile down to the very floor. That way I’ll be sure the
grain gets delivered to my brother.”
The
third night, more determined than ever, each brother gathered a large pile of
wheat from his barn, loaded it onto a cart, and slowly pulled his haul through
the fields and up the hill to his brother’s barn. At the top of the hill, under
the shadow of a moon, each brother noticed a figure in the distance. Who could
it be?
When
the two brothers recognized the form of the other brother and the load he was
pulling behind, they realized what had happened. Without a word, they dropped
the ropes to their carts and embraced.
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