“Come along with me: let us have a cup together once more.”
“Let us go.”
“I am so glad to have met you again, let us toast the occasion.”
So they went into an izbá,[[1]] and they had a drink and a talk. “Well, good-bye; time I went home!”
“Stay, where are you going? Come and stay the night with me.”
“No, brother, do not ask me: it is no good. I have business at home to-morrow and must be there early.”
“Well, good-bye.”
“But why should you go on foot? Better come on my horse, and he will gallop along gaily.”
“Thank you very much.”
So he sat on the horse, and the horse galloped away like a whirlwind.