Page:Turkish fairy tales and folk tales (1901).djvu/246

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Aleodor listened, for his heart was as kind as his hand was cunning; and he bound up the crow's wing. When he made ready to go on again, the crow said to him: "Take this feather, thou gallant youth! and whenever thou dost look at it and think of me, I will be with thee."

Then Aleodor took the feather and went on his way. He hadn't gone a hundred paces further when he stumbled upon an ant. He would have trodden upon it, when the ant said to him: "Spare my life, O Emperor Aleodor, and I'll deliver thee also from death! Take this little bit of membrane from my wing, and whenever thou dost think of me, I'll be with thee."

When Aleodor heard these words, and how the ant called him by his name, he raised his foot again and let the ant go where it would. He also went on his way, and after journeying for I know not how many days he came at last to the palace of the Green Emperor. There he knocked at the door, and stood waiting for some one to come out and ask him what he wanted.

He stood there one day, he stood there two days, but as for any one coming out to ask him what he wanted, there was no sign of it. When the third day dawned, however, the Green Emperor called to his servants and gave them a talking to that they were