Page:Turkish fairy tales and folk tales (1901).djvu/206

 While they were on the road the serpent stopped at a spring and said to the youth: "Wait while I bathe in this water, and whatever may happen, fear not!" With that the serpent plunged into the water, and immediately there arose such a terrible storm, such a tempest, such a hurricane, with lightning-flash upon lightning-flash, and thunder-bolt upon thunder-bolt, that the Day of Judgment could not well be worse. Presently the serpent came out of the bath, and then all was quiet again.

They went a long way, and they went a little way, they took coffee, they smoked their chibooks, they gathered violets on the road, till at last they drew near to a house, and then the serpent said: "In a short time we shall arrive at my mother's house. When she opens the door, say thou art my kinsman, and she will invite thee into the house. She will offer thee coffee but do not drink it, she will offer thee meat but do not eat it; but there's a little bit of a mirror hanging up in the corner of the door, ask my mother for that!"

So they came to the house, and no sooner had the Peri knocked at the door than his mother came and opened it. "Come, my brother!" said the serpent to the youth behind him.—"Who is thy brother?" asked his mother.—"He who hath saved my life," replied her son, and with that he told her the whole