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The Horror Library

Moral Fable

2 stories

Brother Lustig

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·19 min read

This Grimm fairy tale follows Brother Lustig, a discharged soldier who encounters St. Peter in various guises and becomes entangled in a series of adventures involving miraculous healings, magical deceptions, and supernatural trials. Written in the 19th century as part of the Brothers Grimm's folk collection, the story exemplifies their signature blend of humor, moral ambiguity, and magical realism. Readers should expect a picaresque narrative filled with trickery, reversals of fortune, and the ultimate triumph of cunning over virtue.

The Ear of Corn

Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm·1912·2 min read

This Grimm fairy tale offers an etiological explanation for why corn produces fewer seeds than it once did in humanity's distant past. Written as moral instruction, the story presents a world where divine presence was direct and consequences for human ingratitude were swift and absolute. Readers should expect a brief, parable-like narrative that uses agricultural decline as a metaphor for spiritual and moral decay.