"How dost thou feel?"
And the man replied:
"I feel just as if all my bones were already broken to bits!"
"That is just how I felt when thou didst take aim at me the second time," replied the eagle. "But now sit on my back once more."
The man did so, and the eagle flew with him as high as the small fleecy clouds, and then he shook him off, and down he fell headlong; but when he was but a hand"s breadth from the earth, the eagle again flew beneath him and held him up, and said to him:
"How dost thou feel now?"
And he replied:
"I feel as if I no longer belonged to this world!"
"That is just how I felt when thou didst aim at me the third time,"
replied the eagle. "But now," continued the bird, "thou art guilty no more. We are quits. I owe thee naught, and thou owest naught to me; so sit on my back again, and I"ll take thee to my master."
They flew on and on, they flew till they came to the eagle"s uncle. And the eagle said to the archer:
"Go to my house, and when they ask thee: "Hast thou not seen our poor child?" reply, "Give me the magic egg, and I"ll bring him before your eyes!""
So he went to the house, and there they said to him:
"Hast thou heard of our poor child with thine ears, or seen him with thine eyes, and hast thou come hither willingly or unwillingly?"
And he answered:
"I have come hither willingly!"
Then they asked:
"Hast thou smelt out anything of our poor youngster? for it is three years now since he went to the wars, and there"s neither sight nor sound of him more!"
And he answered:
"Give me the magic egg, and I"ll bring him straightway before your eyes!"
Then they replied:
""Twere better we never saw him than that we should give thee the magic egg!"
Then he went back to the eagle and said to him:
"They said: "Twere better we never saw him than that we should give thee the magic egg.""
Then the eagle answered:
"Let us fly on farther!"
They flew on and on till they came to the eagle"s brother, and the archer said just the same to him as he had said to the eagle"s uncle, and still he didn"t get the egg. Then they flew to the eagle"s father, and the eagle said to him:
"Go up to the hut, and if they ask for me, say that thou hast seen me and will bring me before their eyes."
So he went up to the hut, and they said to him:
"O Czarevich, we hear thee with our ears and see thee with our eyes, but hast thou come hither of thine own free will or by the will of another?"
And the archer answered:
"I have come hither of my own free will!"
Then they asked him:
"Hast thou seen our son? Lo, these four years we have not had news of him. He went off to the wars, and perchance he has been slain there."
And he answered them:
"I have seen him, and if thou wilt give me the magic egg, I will bring him before your eyes."
And the eagle"s father said to him:
"What good will such a thing do thee? We had better give thee the lucky penny!"
But he answered:
"I don"t want the lucky penny, give me the magic egg!"
"Come hither, then!" said he, "and thou shalt have it."
So he went into the hut. Then the eagle"s father rejoiced and gave him the egg and said to him:
"Take heed thou dost not break it anywhere on the road, and when thou gettest home, hedge it around and build a strong fence about it, and it will do thee good."
So he went homeward. He went on and on till a great thirst came upon him. So he stopped at the first spring he came to, and as he stooped to drink he stumbled and the magic egg was broken. Then he perceived that an ox had come out of the egg and was rolling away. He gave chase to the ox, but whenever he was getting close to one side of it, the other side of it got farther away from him. Then the poor fellow cried:
"I shall do nothing with it myself, I see."
At that moment an old she dragon came up to him and said:
"What wilt thou give me, O man, if I chase this ox back again into the egg for thee?"
And the archer replied:
"What can I give?"
The dragon said to him:
"Give me what thou hast at home without thy will and wit!"