summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--38041-8.txt15510
-rw-r--r--38041-8.zipbin0 -> 263914 bytes
-rw-r--r--38041-h.zipbin0 -> 359493 bytes
-rw-r--r--38041-h/38041-h.htm18538
-rw-r--r--38041-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 73828 bytes
-rw-r--r--38041.txt15510
-rw-r--r--38041.zipbin0 -> 263833 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
10 files changed, 49574 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/38041-8.txt b/38041-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1574c48
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,15510 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Celtic Romances
+
+Author: Unknown
+
+Translator: P. W. Joyce
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38041]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLD CELTIC ROMANCES
+
+
+
+
+ OLD
+ CELTIC ROMANCES
+
+ translated from the gaelic
+
+ BY
+
+ P.W. JOYCE, M.A., LL.D., T.C.D.
+ M.R.I.A.
+
+ _One of the Commissioners for the Publication of
+ the Ancient Laws of Ireland
+ President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries, Ireland_
+
+ Author of
+
+ "A SOCIAL HISTORY OF ANCIENT IRELAND"
+ "THE STORY OF ANCIENT IRISH CIVILISATION"
+ "A SHORT HISTORY OF IRELAND"
+ "A CHILD'S HISTORY OF IRELAND"
+ "IRISH NAMES OF PLACES"
+ "ANCIENT IRISH MUSIC"
+ AND OTHER WORKS RELATING TO IRELAND
+
+ "I shall tell you a pretty tale"
+ --Coriolanus.
+
+ DUBLIN
+ THE EDUCATIONAL CO.
+ OF IRELAND, LIMITED
+ 89 TALBOT STREET
+
+ LONDON
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND
+ COMPANY
+ 39 PATERNOSTER ROW
+
+ 1920
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Among the Celtic people of Ireland and the north-west of Scotland,
+story-telling has always been a favourite amusement. In the olden time,
+they had professional story-tellers, variously designated according to
+rank--ollaves, shanachies, filès, bards, etc.--whose duty it was to know
+by heart a number of old tales, poems, and historical pieces, and to
+recite them at festive gatherings, for the entertainment of the chiefs
+and their guests. These story-tellers were always well received at the
+houses of princes and chiefs, and treated with much consideration; and
+on occasions when they acquitted themselves well, so as to draw down the
+applause of the audience, they were often rewarded with costly presents.
+
+To meet the demand for this sort of entertainment, ingenious "men of
+learning," taking legends or historical events as themes, composed
+stories from time to time; of which those that struck the popular fancy
+were caught up and remembered, and handed down from one generation of
+story-tellers to another. In course of time, a body of romantic
+literature grew up, consisting chiefly of prose tales, which were
+classified, according to subject, into Battles, Voyages, Tragedies,
+Military Expeditions, Cattle-Raids, Courtships, Pursuits, Adventures,
+Visions, etc.[I.]
+
+Some of these tales were historical, _i.e._ founded on historical
+events, and corresponded closely with what is now called the historical
+romance; while others were altogether fictitious--pure creations of the
+imagination. But it is to be observed that even in the fictitious tales,
+the main characters are always historical, or such as were considered
+so. The old ollaves wove their fictions round Conor Mac Nessa and his
+Red Branch Knights, or Finn and his Fena, or Luga of the Long Arms and
+his Dedannans, or Conn the Hundred-fighter, or Cormac Mac Art; like the
+Welsh legends of Arthur and his Round Table, or the Arabian romances of
+Haroun-al-Raschid and his Court.
+
+The greater number of the tales were, as I have said, in prose. But some
+were in poetry; and in many of the prose tales the leading characters
+are often made to express themselves in verse, or some striking incident
+of the story is repeated in a poetical form. Not unfrequently the
+fragments of verse introduced into a prose tale are quotations from an
+older poetical version of the same tale; and hence it often happens that
+while the prose may be plain enough, the poetry is often archaic and
+obscure.
+
+At some very early period in Ireland--how early we have now no means of
+determining with certainty--Celtic thought began to be committed to
+writing; and as everything seems to have been written down that was
+considered worth preserving, manuscripts accumulated in course of time,
+which were kept either in monasteries, or in the houses of the
+hereditary professors of learning. But in the dark time of the Danish
+ravages, and during the troubled centuries that followed the
+Anglo-Norman invasion, the manuscript collections were gradually
+dispersed, and a large proportion lost or destroyed. Yet we have
+remaining--rescued by good fortune from the general wreck--a great body
+of manuscript literature. Our two most important collections are those
+in Trinity College and in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin; where we have
+manuscripts of various ages, from the year 1100 down to the present
+century, on every conceivable subject--Annals, History, Biography,
+Theology, Romance, Legend, Science, etc. These manuscripts, which, it
+should be remarked, are nearly all copies from older books, contain a
+vast collection of romantic literature: it may, indeed, be said that
+there is scarcely one important event in our early history, or one
+important native personage or native legend, that has not been made the
+subject of some fanciful story.
+
+The volume I now offer to the notice of the public contains eleven
+tales, selected and translated from the manuscripts of Trinity College
+and of the Royal Irish Academy. Some have been already published, with
+original text and _literal_ translation, and are to be found in the
+Transactions of various literary societies, where, however, they are
+inaccessible to the general run of readers; and even if they were
+accessible, they are almost unreadable, the translations having been
+executed, not for literary, but for linguistic purposes. Others have
+never been translated or given to the public in any shape or form till
+now.
+
+Of the whole collection of eleven tales, therefore, it may be said that
+they are quite new to the general mass of the reading public. And
+furthermore, this is the first collection of the old Gaelic prose
+romances that has ever been published in fair English translation.
+
+Scraps and fragments of some of these tales have been given to the world
+in popular publications, by writers who, not being able to read the
+originals, took their information from printed books in the English
+language. But I am forced to say that many of these specimens have been
+presented in a very unfavourable and unjust light--distorted to make
+them look _funny_, and their characters debased to the mere modern
+conventional stage Irishman. There is none of this silly and odious
+vulgarity in the originals of these fine old tales, which are high and
+dignified in tone and feeling--quite as much so as the old romantic
+tales of Greece and Rome.[II.]
+
+A translation may either follow the very words, or reproduce the life
+and spirit, of the original; but no translation can do both. If you
+render word for word, you lose the spirit; if you wish to give the
+spirit and manner, you must depart from the exact words, and frame your
+own phrases. I have chosen this latter course. My translation follows
+the original closely enough in narrative and incident; but so far as
+mere phraseology is concerned, I have used the English language freely,
+not allowing myself to be trammelled by too close an adherence to the
+very words of the text. The originals are in general simple in style;
+and I have done my best to render them into simple, plain, homely
+English. In short, I have tried to tell the stories as I conceive the
+old shanachies themselves would have told them, if they had used English
+instead of Gaelic.
+
+In the originals, the stories run on without break or subdivision;[III.]
+but I have thought it better to divide the longer ones into chapters,
+with appropriate headings.
+
+In almost all cases I had at my command several copies of the same
+story, some of them differing in phraseology and in minor points of
+detail, though agreeing, in the main, in narrative and incident. I found
+this a considerable advantage, as it gave me more freedom in the choice
+of expression.
+
+I have made full use of the literal translations of those tales that
+have been already published in the Transactions of the Ossianic Society,
+in the _Atlantis_, in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, and in
+the Journal of the Royal Historical and Archæological Association of
+Ireland. But, in order to secure the advantage of various readings, I
+compared, in every case, the published text with at least one copy of
+the story, in the Royal Irish Academy, in Trinity College, or in my own
+private manuscript collection.
+
+
+The ancient institution of professional story-telling held its ground
+both in Ireland and in Scotland down to a very recent period; and it is
+questionable if it be even yet quite extinct. Within my own memory,
+this sort of entertainment was quite usual among the farming classes of
+the south of Ireland. The family and workmen, and any neighbours that
+chose to drop in, would sit round the kitchen fire after the day's
+work--or perhaps gather in a barn on a summer or autumn evening--to
+listen to some local shanachie reciting one of his innumerable Gaelic
+tales. The story-teller never chose his own words--he always had the
+story by heart, and recited the words from memory, often gliding into a
+sort of recitative in poetical passages, or when he came to some
+favourite grandiose description abounding in high-sounding alliterative
+adjectives. And very interesting it was to mark the rapt attention of
+the audience, and to hear their excited exclamations when the speaker
+came to relate some mighty combat, some great exploit of the hero, or
+some other striking incident. Three years ago, I met a man in Kilkee,
+who had a great number of these stories by heart, and who actually
+repeated for me, without the slightest hitch or hesitation, more than
+half--and if I had not stopped him would have given me the whole--of
+"Cúirt an Mheadhon-Oidhche" ("The Midnight Court"), a poem about six
+times as long as Gray's "Elegy."
+
+I will now proceed to give a few particulars concerning these tales,
+including a short account of the manuscript or manuscripts from which
+each has been translated.
+
+
+THE THREE TRAGIC STORIES OF ERIN.
+
+Among the ancient Gaelic tales, three were known as "the three most
+sorrowful (tales) of story-telling," or "The Three Tragic Stories of
+Erin;" viz., "The Fate of the Children of Usna," "The Fate of the
+Children of Lir," and "The Fate of the Children of Turenn." I have not
+included the first in this volume, but a poetical version of it has been
+written and published by my brother.[IV.]
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR.
+
+Two translations of this tale have been published: one literal, with the
+Gaelic text, by Professor O'Curry, in the _Atlantis_ (Nos. vii. and
+viii.); and another, less literal, by Gerald Griffin, in his "Tales of a
+Jury-Room."
+
+The oldest known copies of the tale are, one in the Catholic University,
+Dublin, made by Andrew Mac Curtin, a well-known Gaelic scholar and
+scribe of the county Clare, who lived between 1680 and 1740; one in
+Trinity College, Dublin, made by Hugh O'Daly, in 1758; and one in the
+British Museum, made by Richard Tipper of Dublin, in 1718.[V.] There is
+also a very good copy in the Royal Irish Academy (23. C. 26), of which I
+made considerable use, written in or about 1782, by Peter O'Connell, a
+good Gaelic scholar of the county Clare. From a comparison of several of
+these versions, O'Curry made his copy of the text as published in the
+_Atlantis_.
+
+There may be, and there probably are, older copies, in Trinity College,
+in the British Museum, or elsewhere, if we knew only where to find them.
+And this observation applies to several of the tales that follow, of
+which we have at hand only modern copies.
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN.
+
+In the Book of Lecan (folio 28), which was compiled by the Mac Firbises,
+about A.D. 1416, is a short account, partly in prose and partly in
+verse, of the celebrated eric-fine imposed on the three sons of Turenn,
+by Luga of the Long Arms, for killing his father Kian; but this old book
+does not give the story of the quest for the fine. The full tale, text
+and literal translation, has been published by O'Curry in the
+_Atlantis_. There are several good copies in the Royal Irish Academy:
+one in 23. G. 10, transcribed by Patrick Brown of the county Clare, in
+1805; another in 23. E. 16, written out by Michael Oge O'Longan, in
+1797; and a third (imperfect) in 23. M. 47, copied by Andrew Mac Curtin,
+in 1734.
+
+There are references to these three sons of Turenn, and to the manner of
+their death, in two very old authorities, viz., Cormac's "Glossary"
+(about A.D. 900); and a poem by Flann of Monaster-boice (who died A.D.
+1056), a copy of which is in the Book of Leinster, written about A.D.
+1130.
+
+In the older references to the sons of Turenn, they are called Brian,
+Iuchar, Iucharba; but in some comparatively modern copies of the tale
+the names are a little different--for instance, Peter O'Connell calls
+them Uar, Iuchar, and Iucharba; and they vary still further in other
+copies. I have taken advantage of this variety to give the names in a
+more pronounceable form in my translation.
+
+In the original, this tale is introduced by an anecdote of Nuada of the
+Silver Hand and the two great Dedannan leeches, Midac and Armedda (see
+page 92, _infra_), which has nothing whatever to do with the story, and
+which I have omitted.
+
+
+THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH.
+
+"Leabhar na h-Uidhre," or "The Book of the Dun Cow," from which this and
+the two following tales are taken, is the oldest manuscript of
+miscellaneous Gaelic literature we possess. It was transcribed from
+older books by Maelmuire Mac Ceilechair, who died A.D. 1106; and it is
+now deposited in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin--or rather, I should
+say, a large fragment of it, for the book has suffered much mutilation.
+This venerable book may now be said to be in the hands of the public, as
+it has been lately reproduced in lithograph fac-simile, and published by
+the Council of the Royal Irish Academy, at the Government expense.
+
+The story of "The Overflowing of Lough Neagh" (called in the original
+"The Destruction of Eocho Mac Mairedo") has been published, with text
+and literal translation, by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe, in the Kilkenny
+Archæological Journal volume for 1870-1.
+
+In this story I have been obliged to make a few transpositions in the
+mere order of the incidents, for the narrative in the original is in
+some places very ill arranged.
+
+It is now nearly eight hundred years since this story was _transcribed_
+from some old authority into "The Book of the Dun Cow;" and it is
+singular that the tradition of the formation of Lough Neagh, by the
+overflow of an enchanted well which was neglected by the woman in charge
+of it, still maintains a vivid existence among the peasantry. (See on
+this subject the author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places,"
+Series I. 4th edition, page 176.)
+
+
+CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR, AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.
+
+This tale (called in the original "Echtra Condla Cain," "The Adventures
+of Connla the Comely") is taken from "The Book of the Dun Cow." It has
+been published, with text and literal translation, by the late J.
+O'Beirne Crowe, in the Kilkenny Archæological Journal (volume 1874-5,
+page 128).
+
+This is one of the many tales that illustrate the ancient and widespread
+superstition that fairies sometimes take away mortals to their palaces
+in the fairy forts and pleasant green hills;[19] of which the last story
+in this book--"Oisin in Tirnanoge"--is another example. This
+superstition prevailed in Ireland and the Scottish Highlands as far back
+as either history or tradition reaches; it flourished in full vigour
+within my own memory; and it is scarcely quite extinct--in Ireland at
+least--at the present day.[VI.] In connection with the antiquity of this
+superstition, it must be borne in mind that the present story was
+transcribed into "The Book of the Dun Cow" in or about the year 1100,
+from some older book; and that it relates to the time of Conn the
+Hundred-fighter, king of Ireland, who reigned in the second century of
+the Christian era.
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+Of this tale (which is now given to the public for the first time) the
+oldest copy is in "The Book of the Dun Cow" (about the year 1100); but
+it is imperfect at both beginning and end--a portion having been torn
+away when the book was mutilated at some former time. There is a perfect
+copy in the Yellow Book of Lecan, in Trinity College, Dublin, and
+another in the British Museum (MS. Harl. 5280).
+
+After I had made a rough translation of the greater part of this piece,
+I discovered a good literal translation in manuscript in the Royal Irish
+Academy, made by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe, which was of great use to
+me, as it helped to explain some strange terms, and to clear up some
+obscure passages.
+
+This voyage would appear from internal evidence to have been made in the
+beginning of the eighth century (O'Curry says about the year 700); for I
+think it likely that Maildun did actually go on a voyage, which was
+afterwards made the framework of the story. On my translation of this
+tale, Lord Tennyson founded his poem "The Voyage of Maeldune."
+
+Of the _Imrama_ or voluntary sea expeditions (to which the present story
+belongs) there are, according to O'Curry (Lect. MS. Mat. 289), only four
+remaining, all very ancient. Of these the best known is the "Voyage of
+St. Brendan," undertaken in the sixth century, which was at one time
+celebrated all over Europe, and which has been lately made the theme of
+a fine poem by Denis Florence McCarthy.
+
+Another of these _Imrama_ is the "Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra," which
+has been described at some length by Professor O'Curry (Lect. MS. Mat.
+289). Of this I have a copy which I made from the MS. 23. M. 50, Royal
+Irish Academy (and which I afterwards carefully compared with another
+copy lent me by my friend, Mr. W.M. Hennessy). I made a translation of
+this story, intending to print it in the present volume; but as there is
+a much older and better copy in the ancient "Book of Fermoy," which I
+had not time to consult in detail, I have thought it better to hold back
+for the present the strange adventures of the sons of O'Corra. A
+beautiful poetical translation of the whole tale has been made by Mr.
+T.D. Sullivan of Dublin, and published in his volume of Poems.
+
+
+THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.
+
+The "Bruighean Caerthainn," or "The Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees,"
+which is now translated for the first time, is one of the most popular
+of the Gaelic romances. I had three of the Royal Irish Academy MSS.
+before me when translating it--viz., 23. C. 30, transcribed in 1733, by
+the Irish writer and lexicographer, Andrew Mac Curtin of the county
+Clare; 24. B. 15, written in 1841; and 23. L. 24, copied in 1766, by
+Dermot O'Mulqueen of the county Clare.
+
+This is one of a type of stories very common in Gaelic romantic
+literature:--One or more of the heroes are entrapped by some enchanter
+and held under a spell in a castle, or a cave, or a dungeon; till, after
+a series of adventures, they are released by the bravery or mother-wit
+of some of their companions. "The Chase of Slieve Fuad" and "The Chase
+of Slieve Cullinn" are two other examples of this class of Gaelic tales.
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+This is a humorous story of a trick--a very serious practical
+joke--played by Avarta, a Dedannan enchanter, on sixteen of the Fena,
+whom he carried off to "The Land of Promise;" and of the adventures of
+Finn, Dermat O'Dyna, and the others, in their pursuit of Avarta (who had
+taken the shape of the Gilla Dacker) to recover their companions. It may
+be regarded as belonging to the same class as the last story.
+
+O'Curry described the opening of this tale in his Lectures (MS. Mat.
+316); and he was the first, so far as I know, to draw attention to it. I
+think it strange that such a story should not have been noticed before
+by writers on Gaelic literature; for as a work of imagination, it seems
+to me a marvellous and very beautiful creation.
+
+The battles fought by the king of Sorca, aided by Finn and his Fena,
+against the King of the World, are described at much length in the
+original; but I have cut them down to a very short compass; and I have
+omitted altogether a long episode towards the end, which travels away
+from the main story.
+
+This tale has never been translated till now. I translated it chiefly
+from the Royal Irish Academy MS., 24. B. 28, a well-written manuscript,
+which was copied out by Edmond Terry, in 1728: but I kept another good
+copy beside me for comparison, viz., that contained in the Royal Irish
+Academy MS., 23. G. 21, written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan of
+Cork, father of Mr. Joseph O'Longan, now the Irish scribe in the Royal
+Irish Academy, and the transcriber in fac-simile of "Leabhar na
+h-Uidhre," "Leabhar Breac," and "Leabhar Laighneach."
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+This tale is one of those mentioned in the list contained in the Book of
+Leinster, which was written about A.D. 1130 (see note, page iv.); but
+though this proves the tale to be an ancient one, I have never come
+across a copy older than the last century.
+
+"The Pursuit of Dermat and Grania" has been published, with text and a
+very racy idiomatic literal translation, by Mr. Standish Hayes O'Grady,
+in the Transactions of the Ossianic Society for 1855, from a comparison
+of two manuscripts, one of 1780 and the other of 1842. In addition to
+Mr. O'Grady's published text, I made use of another good copy (MS. Royal
+Irish Academy, 23. G. 21) written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan,
+already spoken of.
+
+I cannot help believing that this fine story originally ended with the
+death of Dermat; though in all the current versions (including Mr.
+O'Grady's printed text) there is an additional part recounting the
+further proceedings of Grania and her sons, after the death of the hero.
+But this part is in every respect inferior to the rest--in language, in
+feeling, and in play of imagination. It seems to me very clear that it
+was patched on to the original story by some unskilful hand; and I have
+accordingly omitted it, and ended the story with the death of Dermat. I
+have also omitted two short episodes--that of the _cnumh_ or reptile of
+Corca Divna, as a mere excrescence; and Finn's expedition to Scotland
+for aid against Dermat. And, for the sake of clearness, I have slightly
+changed the place of that part of the tale which recounts the origin of
+the Fairy Quicken Tree of Dooros. There are one or two other trifling
+but very necessary modifications, which need not be mentioned here.
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN: THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD: OISIN IN
+TIRNANOGE.
+
+In the original Gaelic these are three poetical tales. All three have
+been printed, with Gaelic text and literal translation, in the
+Transactions of the Ossianic Society: the two first by the late John
+O'Daly, and "Oisin in Tirnanoge" by Professor O'Looney. There are many
+good copies of these tales in the manuscripts of the Royal Irish
+Academy; though of not one of them have I seen a copy older than the
+last century.
+
+"The Chase of Slieve Cullinn" (commonly known as "The Poem of the
+Chase") has been translated into English verse by Miss Brooke; and there
+is another metrical translation in the _Irish Penny Journal_ (page 93).
+And of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," Mr. T.D. Sullivan has given a graceful
+poetical rendering in his volume of Poems, already mentioned.
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
+
+In this edition there is an additional tale, "The Fate of the Sons of
+Usna," a notice of which will be found at page x, above.
+
+LYRE-NA-GRENA, LEINSTER ROAD, RATHMINES, 1907.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[I.] In the Book of Leinster, a manuscript now in Trinity College,
+Dublin, which was transcribed about the year 1130, there is a very
+interesting list of ancient historic tales--187 in all--classified in
+the manner indicated above, which an ollave was obliged to master, so as
+to be able to repeat any one of them from memory, whenever his patron
+required him to do so. (See O'Curry, "Lectures on the MS. Materials of
+Irish History," pages 243 and 584.)
+
+[II.] Macpherson never sinned in this way. He caught the true keynote;
+and his "Poems of Ossian," however perverted in other respects, are
+always dignified in thought and expression. Among other examples of the
+true interpretation of the spirit of these old romances, prose and
+poetry, I may mention Miss Brooke's "Reliques of Irish Poetry,"
+published in the end of the last century; the Rev. Dr. Drummond's
+"Ancient Irish Minstrelsy," published in 1852; Lady Ferguson's graceful
+and interesting book, "The Story of the Irish before the Conquest"
+(1868); and Mr. Standish O'Grady's ably written volume, the "History of
+Ireland" (Vol. I., The Heroic Period 1878).
+
+[III.] With one partial exception. In "The Book of the Dun Cow," "The
+Voyage of Maildun" is divided into parts or chapters, which are numbered
+on the margin in Roman numerals, each chapter relating to one particular
+island; but no spaces are left, and the chapters have no headings. In
+this tale I have followed the old sub-division.
+
+[IV.] "Deirdrè," by Robert D. Joyce, M.D., M.R.I.A. Boston: Roberts
+Brothers. Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son.
+
+[V.] O'Curry, _Atlantis_, Nos. vii. and viii., page 390.
+
+[VI.] See the ballad and air of "The Fairy King's Courtship," in the
+author's "Ancient Irish Music," page 1.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR; OR, THE FOUR WHITE SWANS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. Bove Derg chosen King of the Dedannans, 1
+
+ II. The Children of Lir, 4
+
+ III. The Four Children of Lir are turned into Four White 6
+ Swans by their Stepmother,
+
+ IV. The Four White Swans on Lake Darvra, 10
+
+ V. The Four White Swans on the Sea of Moyle, 18
+
+ VI. The Four White Swans on the Western Sea, 26
+
+ VII. The Children of Lir regain their Human Shape and die, 32
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN; OR, THE QUEST FOR THE ERIC-FINE.
+
+
+ I. The Lochlanns invade Erin, 37
+
+ II. The Murder of Kian, 42
+
+ III. Defeat and Flight of the Lochlanns, 47
+
+ IV. The Eric-Fine on the Sons of Turenn for the Slaying of 51
+ Kian,
+
+ V. The Sons of Turenn obtain Mannanan's Canoe, the 60
+ Wave-Sweeper,
+
+ VI. The Apples of the Garden of Hisberna, 63
+
+ VII. The Gifted Skin of the Pig, 67
+
+ VIII. The Blazing Spear of the King of Persia, 71
+
+ IX. The Chariot and Steeds of the King of Sigar, 74
+
+ X. The Seven Pigs of the King of the Golden Pillars, 78
+
+ XI. The Hound-Whelp of the King of Iroda, 81
+
+ XII. Return of the Sons of Turenn, with part of the 84
+ Eric-Fine,
+
+ XIII. The Cooking-Spit of the Women of Fincara, 87
+
+ XIV. The Three Shouts on Midkena's Hill, 89
+
+ XV. Return and Death of the Sons of Turenn, 91
+
+
+ THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH, AND THE STORY OF LIBAN
+ THE MERMAID. 97
+
+
+ CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN. 106
+
+
+ THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+
+ I. Maildun's Childhood and Youth. He begins his Voyage in 112
+ Quest of the Plunderers who slew his Father,
+
+ II. The First Island. Tidings of the Plunderers, 117
+
+ III. The Island of the Monstrous Ants, 119
+
+ IV. The Terraced Isle of Birds, 120
+
+ V. A Monster, 121
+
+ VI. The Demon Horse-Race, 122
+
+ VII. The Palace of Solitude, 124
+
+ VIII. The Island of the Wonderful Apple Tree, 125
+
+ IX. The Island of Bloodthirsty Quadrupeds, 126
+
+ X. An Extraordinary Monster, 127
+
+ XI. The Isle of Red-Hot Animals, 129
+
+ XII. The Palace of the Little Cat, 131
+
+ XIII. An Island that dyed Black and White, 133
+
+ XIV. The Island of the Burning River, 135
+
+ XV. The Miller of Hell, 136
+
+ XVI. The Isle of Weeping, 137
+
+ XVII. The Isle of the Four Precious Walls, 139
+
+ XVIII. The Palace of the Crystal Bridge, 139
+
+ XIX. The Isle of Speaking Birds, 143
+
+ XX. The Aged Hermit and the Human Souls, 143
+
+ XXI. The Island of the Big Blacksmiths, 145
+
+ XXII. The Crystal Sea, 147
+
+ XXIII. A Lovely Country beneath the Waves, 147
+
+ XXIV. An Island guarded by a Wall of Water, 148
+
+ XXV. A Water-Arch in the Air, 149
+
+ XXVI. The Silver Pillar of the Sea, 150
+
+ XXVII. An Island standing on One Pillar, 151
+
+ XXVIII. The Island Queen detains them with her Magic 152
+ Thread-Clew,
+
+ XXIX. The Isle of Intoxicating Wine-Fruits, 156
+
+ XXX. The Isle of the Mystic Lake, 157
+
+ XXXI. The Isle of Laughing, 163
+
+ XXXII. The Isle of the Blest, 164
+
+ XXXIII. The Hermit of the Sea-Rock, 164
+
+ XXXIV. Signs of Home, 174
+
+ XXXV. Maildun meets his Enemy, and arrives Home, 175
+
+
+ THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+ I. Colga, King of Lochlann, invades Erin, and is slain, 177
+
+ II. Midac, the Son of Colga, meditates Revenge, 181
+
+ III. Finn is entrapped by Midac, and held by Enchantment in 189
+ the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+
+ IV. Innsa, Finn's Foster Son, defends the Ford leading to 196
+ the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+
+ V. Ficna, the Son of Finn, defends the Ford, 203
+
+ VI. Dermat O'Dyna slays the Three Kings of the Island of 213
+ the Torrent, breaks the Spell with their Blood, and
+ frees Finn,
+
+ VII. The Fight at the Ford with the Foreign Army, 219
+
+
+ THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+ I. Arrival of the Gilla Dacker and his Horse, 223
+
+ II. Conan and Fifteen of the Fena are carried off by the 235
+ Gilla Dacker's Horse,
+
+ III. Pursuit, 239
+
+ IV. Dermat O'Dyna, in Quest of the Gilla Dacker, 245
+ encounters the Wizard-Champion at the Well,
+
+ V. Dermat O'Dyna in Tir-fa-tonn, 253
+
+ VI. Finn, in Quest of Dermat, fights many Battles, 259
+
+ VII. Finn and Dermat meet, 265
+
+ VIII. Conan and his Companions found and rescued, 267
+
+
+ THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+ I. Finn, the Son of Cumal, seeks the Princess Grania to 274
+ Wife,
+
+ II. Dermat O'Dyna secretly espouses the Princess Grania, 277
+
+ III. Flight and Pursuit, 285
+
+ IV. The Fastness of the Seven Narrow Doors, 289
+
+ V. The Three Sea-Champions and their Three Venomous 296
+ Hounds on the Track of Dermat and Grania,
+
+ VI. What Befell the Three Sea-Champions and their Three 305
+ Venomous Hounds,
+
+ VII. Sharvan, the Surly Giant, and the Fairy Quicken Tree 313
+ of Dooros,
+
+ VIII. The Attack of the Witch-Hag, 330
+
+ IX. Peace and Rest at Last, 332
+
+ X. The Death of Dermat, 334
+
+
+ THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN, 351
+
+
+ THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD, 362
+
+
+ OISIN IN TIRNANOGE; OR, THE LAST OF THE FENA, 385
+
+
+ THE VOYAGE OF THE SONS OF O'CORRA, 400
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE SONS OF USNA, 427
+
+
+ NOTES, 455
+
+
+ LIST OF PROPER NAMES, 471
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR;
+OR,
+_THE FOUR WHITE SWANS._
+
+ Silent, O Moyle, be the roar of thy water;
+ Break not, ye breezes, your chain of repose;
+ While murmuring mournfully, Lir's lonely daughter
+ Tells to the night-star her tale of woes.
+
+ MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+BOVE DERG CHOSEN KING OF THE DEDANNANS.
+
+
+After the battle of Tailltenn,[VII.] the Dedannans[1][VIII.] of the five
+provinces of Erin assembled in one place of meeting, to consider on
+their state, and to choose a king. For their chiefs said it was better
+for them to have one king over all, than to be divided, as they were,
+serving sundry lords and princes.
+
+Now of those who expected the sovereignty for themselves, the following
+chiefs were the noblest, namely:--Bove Derg,[IX.] son of the Dagda; his
+brother Angus, of Bruga on the Boyne, who, however, had no earnest wish
+to become king, preferring to remain as he was; Ilbrec of Assaroe; Lir
+of Shee Finnaha; and Midir the Haughty of Bri-Leth.[1]
+
+Then the chief people went into council, all except the five above
+named; and the decision they came to was to elect Bove Derg, son of the
+Dagda, king over the whole of the Dedannan race. When the election was
+made known, none of those who were disappointed took the matter to heart
+except Lir of Shee Finnaha alone. And when Lir found that the chiefs had
+chosen Bove Derg, he was greatly offended, and straightway left the
+assembly in anger, without taking leave of any one, and without showing
+any mark of respect or obedience to the new king.
+
+When the chiefs heard this, they were wroth; and they said they would
+follow him to Shee Finnaha,[X.] and slay him with spear and sword, and
+burn his house, because he did not yield obedience to the king they had
+elected in lawful council.
+
+But Bove Derg would not permit them to do so. "This man," he said, "will
+defend his territory, and many will be slain; and I am none the less
+your king, although he has not submitted to me."
+
+Matters remained so for a long time. But at last a great misfortune
+happened to Lir, for his wife died after an illness of three days. This
+weighed heavily on him, and his heart was weary with sorrow after her.
+Her death, moreover, was a great event at that time, and was much spoken
+of throughout Erin.
+
+When the tidings reached the mansion of Bove Derg, where the chief men
+of the Dedannans were then assembled, the king said--
+
+"As Lir's wife is now dead, my friendship would be of service to him, if
+he were willing to accept it. For I have in my house three maidens, the
+most beautiful and the best instructed in all Erin, namely, Eve, Eva,
+and Alva, my own foster children, and daughters of Allil of Ara."[XI.]
+
+The Dedannans agreed to this, and said that their king had spoken wisely
+and truly.
+
+Messengers were accordingly sent to Lir, and they were told to say to
+him--
+
+"If thou art willing to submit to the king, he will give thee for a wife
+one of his three foster children; and thou shalt have his friendship for
+ever."
+
+It was pleasing to Lir to make this alliance; and accordingly he set out
+next day from Shee Finnaha with a company of fifty chariots; and they
+never halted or turned aside till they reached the palace of Bove Derg,
+on the shore of the Great Lake.[XII.] Their arrival gave much joy and
+happiness to the king and his household; for although Lir did not submit
+at first to Bove Derg, he was a good man, and was greatly beloved by
+the king himself and by all his subjects. So Lir and his followers got a
+kindly welcome; and they were supplied with everything necessary, and
+were well attended to that night.
+
+Next day, the three daughters of Allil of Ara sat on the same couch with
+the queen their foster mother; and the king said to Lir--
+
+"Take thy choice of the three maidens, and whichever thou choosest, she
+shall be thy wife."
+
+"They are all beautiful," said Lir, "and I cannot tell which of them is
+best; but I will take the eldest, for she must be the noblest of the
+three."
+
+Then the king said, "Eve is the eldest, and she shall be given to thee
+if it be thy wish."
+
+So Lir chose Eve for his wife, and they were wedded that day.
+
+Lir remained a fortnight in the king's palace, and then departed with
+his wife to his own house, Shee Finnaha, where he celebrated his
+marriage by a great royal wedding feast.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[VII.] Now Teltown, on the river Blackwater, between Kells and Navan, in
+Meath. (See note 1 at the end, for this battle.)
+
+[VIII.] The numbers refer to the notes at the end of the book.
+
+[IX.] At the end of the book will be found an alphabetical list of all
+the names of persons and places mentioned through the volume, with their
+Gaelic forms, and, in many cases, their meanings.
+
+[X.] Shee Finnaha, Lir's residence, is thought to have been situated
+near the boundary of Armagh and Monaghan, not far from Newtown Hamilton.
+
+[XI.] Ara, the islands of Aran, in Galway Bay.
+
+[XII.] The Great Lake, _i.e._ Lough Derg, on the Shannon, above
+Killaloe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE CHILDREN OF LIR.
+
+
+In course of time, Lir's wife bore him two children at a birth, a
+daughter and a son, whose names were Finola and Aed. A second time she
+brought forth twins, two sons, who were named Ficra and Conn: and she
+died in giving them birth. This was a cause of great anguish to Lir; and
+he would almost have died of grief, only that his mind was turned from
+his sorrow by his great love for his four little children.
+
+When the news of Eve's death reached the mansion of Bove Derg, the king
+was in deep grief, and the people of his household raised three great
+cries of lamentation for her. And when their mourning was ended, the
+king said--
+
+"We grieve for our foster child, both on her own account, and for the
+sake of the good man to whom we gave her; for we are thankful for his
+alliance and his friendship. But our acquaintance shall not be ended,
+and our alliance shall not be broken; for I will give him her sister to
+wife, my second foster child, Eva."
+
+Messengers were sent to Lir to Shee Finnaha, to tell him of this; and he
+consented. So after some time he came to the king's house to espouse
+her, and they were united; and he brought her home with him to his own
+house.
+
+The four children grew up under Eva's care. She nursed them with great
+tenderness, and her love for them increased every day. They slept near
+their father; and he would often rise from his own bed at the dawn of
+morning, and go to their beds, to talk with them and to fondle them.
+
+The king, Bove Derg, loved them almost as well as did their father. He
+went many times every year to Shee Finnaha to see them; and he used to
+bring them often to his palace, where he kept them as long as he could
+on each occasion, and he always felt sad when he sent them home.
+
+At this time, too, the Dedannans used to celebrate the Feast of Age[2]
+at the houses of their chiefs by turns; and whenever it happened that
+the festival was held at Shee Finnaha, these children were the delight
+and joy of the Dedannans. For nowhere could four lovelier children be
+found; so that those who saw them were always delighted with their
+beauty and their gentleness, and could not help loving them with their
+whole heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE FOUR CHILDREN OF LIR ARE TURNED INTO FOUR WHITE SWANS BY THEIR
+STEPMOTHER.
+
+
+Now when Eva saw that the children of Lir received such attention and
+affection from their father, and from all others that came to his house,
+she fancied she was neglected on their account; and a poisonous dart of
+jealousy entered her heart, which turned her love to hatred; and she
+began to have feelings of bitter enmity for her sister's children.
+
+Her jealousy so preyed on her that she feigned illness, and lay in bed
+for nearly a year, filled with gall and brooding mischief; and at the
+end of that time she committed a foul and cruel deed of treachery on the
+children of Lir.
+
+One day she ordered her horses to be yoked to her chariot, and she set
+out for the palace of Bove Derg, bringing the four children with her.
+
+Finola did not wish to go, for it was revealed to her darkly in a dream
+that Eva was bent on some dreadful deed of fratricide;[XIII.] and she
+knew well that her stepmother intended to kill her and her brothers that
+day, or in some other way to bring ruin on them. But she was not able to
+avoid the fate that awaited her.
+
+When they had gone some distance from Shee Finnaha on their way to the
+palace, Eva tried to persuade her attendants to kill the children. "Kill
+them, and you shall be rewarded with all the worldly wealth you may
+desire; for their father loves me no longer, and has neglected and
+forsaken me on account of his great love for these children."
+
+But they heard her with horror, and refused, saying, "We will not kill
+them. Fearful is the deed thou hast contemplated, O Eva; and evil will
+surely befall thee for having even thought of killing them."
+
+Then she took the sword to slay them herself; but her woman's weakness
+prevented her, and she was not able to strike them.
+
+So they set out once more, and fared on till they came to the shore of
+Lake Darvra,[XIV.] where they alighted, and the horses were unyoked.
+
+She led the children to the edge of the lake, and told them to go to
+bathe; and as soon as they had got into the clear water, she struck them
+one by one with a druidical[3] fairy wand, and turned them into four
+beautiful snow-white swans. And she addressed them in these words--
+
+ Out to your home, ye swans, on Darvra's wave;
+ With clamorous birds begin your life of gloom:
+ Your friends shall weep your fate, but none can save;
+ For I've pronounced the dreadful words of doom.
+
+After this, the four children of Lir turned their faces to their
+stepmother; and Finola spoke--
+
+"Evil is the deed thou hast done, O Eva; thy friendship to us has been a
+friendship of treachery; and thou hast ruined us without cause. But the
+deed will be avenged; for the power of thy witchcraft is not greater
+than the druidical power of our friends to punish thee; and the doom
+that awaits thee shall be worse than ours."
+
+ Our stepmother loved us long ago;
+ Our stepmother now has wrought us woe:
+ With magical wand and fearful words,
+ She changed us to beautiful snow-white birds;
+ And we live on the waters for evermore,
+ By tempests driven from shore to shore.
+
+Finola again spoke and said, "Tell us now how long we shall be in the
+shape of swans, so that we may know when our miseries shall come to an
+end."
+
+"It would be better for you if you had not put that question," said Eva;
+"but I shall declare the truth to you, as you have asked me. Three
+hundred years on smooth Lake Darvra; three hundred years on the Sea of
+Moyle, between Erin and Alban;[XV.] three hundred years at Irros Domnann
+and Inis Glora[XVI.] on the Western Sea. Until the union of Largnen, the
+prince from the north, with Decca, the princess from the south; until
+the Taillkenn[XVII.] shall come to Erin, bringing the light of a pure
+faith; and until ye hear the voice of the Christian bell. And neither by
+your own power, nor by mine, nor by the power of your friends, can ye be
+freed till the time comes."
+
+Then Eva repented what she had done; and she said, "Since I cannot
+afford you any other relief, I will allow you to keep your own Gaelic
+speech; and ye shall be able to sing sweet, plaintive, fairy music,
+which shall excel all the music of the world, and which shall lull to
+sleep all that listen to it. Moreover, ye shall retain your human
+reason; and ye shall not be in grief on account of being in the shape of
+swans."
+
+And she chanted this lay--
+
+ Depart from me, ye graceful swans;
+ The waters are now your home:
+ Your palace shall be the pearly cave,
+ Your couch the crest of the crystal wave,
+ And your mantle the milk-white foam!
+
+ Depart from me, ye snow-white swans
+ With your music and Gaelic speech:
+ The crystal Darvra, the wintry Moyle,
+ The billowy margin of Glora's isle;--
+ Three hundred years on each!
+
+ Victorious Lir, your hapless sire,
+ His lov'd ones in vain shall call;
+ His weary heart is a husk of gore,
+ His home is joyless for evermore,
+ And his anger on me shall fall!
+
+ Through circling ages of gloom and fear
+ Your anguish no tongue can tell;
+ Till Faith shall shed her heavenly rays,
+ Till ye hear the Taillkenn's anthem of praise,
+ And the voice of the Christian bell!
+
+Then ordering her steeds to be yoked to her chariot she departed
+westwards, leaving the four white swans swimming on the lake.
+
+ Our father shall watch and weep in vain;
+ He never shall see us return again.
+ Four pretty children, happy at home;
+ Four white swans on the feathery foam;
+ And we live on the waters for evermore,
+ By tempests driven from shore to shore.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XIII.] The word "fratricide" is the nearest English equivalent to the
+original word, _fionghal_, which means the murder of a relative.
+
+[XIV.] Lake Darvra, now Lough Derravaragh, in Westmeath.
+
+[XV.] The sea between Erin and Alban (Ireland and Scotland) was
+anciently called the Sea of Moyle, from the Moyle, or Mull, of Cantire.
+
+[XVI.] Irros Domnann; Erris, in the county Mayo. Inis Glora; a small
+island about five miles west from Belmullet, in the same county, still
+known by the same name.
+
+[XVII.] Taillkenn, a name given by the druids to St. Patrick.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON LAKE DARVRA.
+
+
+When Eva arrived at the house of Bove Derg, the chiefs bade her welcome;
+and the king asked her why she had not brought the Children of Lir to
+him.
+
+"Because," she replied, "Lir no longer loves thee; and he does not wish
+to intrust his children to thee, lest thou shouldst harm them."
+
+The king was greatly astonished and troubled at this, and he said, "How
+can that be? For I love those children better than I love my own."
+
+But he thought in his own mind that Eva had played some treachery on
+them. And he sent messengers with all speed northwards to Shee Finnaha,
+to inquire for the children, and to ask that they might be sent to him.
+
+When the messengers had told their errand, Lir was startled; and he
+asked, "Have the children not reached the palace with Eva?"
+
+They answered, "Eva arrived alone, and she told the king that you
+refused to let the children come."
+
+A sad and sorrowful heart had Lir when he heard this; and he now felt
+sure that Eva had destroyed his four lovely children. So, early next
+morning, his chariot was yoked for him, and he set out with his
+attendants for the king's palace; and they travelled with all speed till
+they arrived at the shore of Lake Darvra.
+
+The children of Lir saw the cavalcade approaching; and Finola spoke
+these words--
+
+ I see a mystic warrior band
+ From yonder brow approach the strand;
+ I see them winding down the vale,
+ Their bending chariots slow advancing;
+ I see their shields and gilded mail,
+ Their spears and helmets brightly glancing.
+
+ Ah! well I know that proud array;
+ I know too well their thoughts to-day:
+ The Dannan host and royal Lir;
+ Four rosy children they are seeking:
+ Too soon, alas! they find us here,
+ Four snowy swans like children speaking!
+
+ Come, brothers dear, approach the coast,
+ To welcome Lir's mysterious host.
+ Oh, woful welcome! woful day,
+ That never brings a bright to-morrow!
+ Unhappy father, doomed for aye
+ To mourn our fate in hopeless sorrow!
+
+When Lir came to the shore, he heard the birds speaking, and, wondering
+greatly, he asked them how it came to pass that they had human voices.
+
+"Know, O Lir," said Finola, "that we are thy four children, who have
+been changed into swans and ruined by the witchcraft of our stepmother,
+our own mother's sister, Eva, through her baleful jealousy."
+
+When Lir and his people heard this, they uttered three long mournful
+cries of grief and lamentation.
+
+After a time, their father asked them, "Is it possible to restore you to
+your own shapes?"
+
+"It is not possible," replied Finola; "no man has the power to release
+us until Largnen from the north and Decca from the south are united.
+Three hundred years we shall be on Lake Darvra; three hundred years on
+the sea-stream of Moyle; three hundred years on the Sea of Glora in the
+west. And we shall not regain our human shape till the Taillkenn come
+with his pure faith into Erin, and until we hear the voice of the
+Christian bell."
+
+And again the people raised three great cries of sorrow.
+
+"As you have your speech and your reason," said Lir, "come now to land,
+and ye shall live at home, conversing with me and my people."
+
+"We are not permitted to leave the waters of the lake, and we cannot
+live with our people any more. But the wicked Eva has allowed us to
+retain our human reason, and our own Gaelic speech; and we have also the
+power to chant plaintive, fairy music, so sweet that those who listen to
+us would never desire any other happiness. Remain with us to-night, and
+we will chant our music for you."
+
+Lir and his people remained on the shore of the lake; and the swans sang
+their slow, fairy music, which was so sweet and sad, that the people, as
+they listened, fell into a calm, gentle sleep.
+
+At the glimmer of dawn next morning, Lir arose, and he bade farewell to
+his children for a while, to seek out Eva.
+
+ The time has come for me to part:--
+ No more, alas! my children dear,
+ Your rosy smiles shall glad my heart,
+ Or light the gloomy home of Lir.
+
+ Dark was the day when first I brought
+ This Eva in my home to dwell!
+ Hard was the woman's heart that wrought
+ This cruel and malignant spell!
+
+ I lay me down to rest in vain;
+ For, through the livelong, sleepless night,
+ My little lov'd ones, pictured plain,
+ Stand ever there before my sight.
+
+ Finola, once my pride and joy;
+ Dark Aed, adventurous and bold;
+ Bright Ficra, gentle, playful boy;
+ And little Conn, with curls of gold;--
+
+ Struck down on Darvra's reedy shore,
+ By wicked Eva's magic power:
+ Oh, children, children, never more
+ My heart shall know one peaceful hour!
+
+Lir then departed, and travelled south-west till he arrived at the
+king's palace, where he was welcomed; and Bove Derg began to reproach
+him, in presence of Eva, for not bringing the children.
+
+"Alas!" said Lir; "it was not by me that the children were prevented
+from coming. But Eva, your own foster child, the sister of their mother,
+has played treachery on them; and has changed them by her sorcery into
+four white swans on Lake Darvra."
+
+The king was confounded and grieved at this news; and when he looked at
+Eva, he knew by her countenance that what Lir had told him was true; and
+he began to upbraid her in a fierce and angry voice.
+
+"The wicked deed thou hast committed," said he, "will be worse for thee
+than for the children of Lir; for their suffering shall come to an end,
+and they shall be happy at last."
+
+Again he spoke to her more fiercely than before; and he asked her what
+shape of all others, on the earth, or above the earth, or beneath the
+earth, she most abhorred, and into which she most dreaded to be
+transformed.
+
+And she, being forced to answer truly, said, "A demon of the
+air."[XVIII.]
+
+"That is the form you shall take," said Bove Derg; and as he spoke he
+struck her with a druidical magic wand, and turned her into a demon of
+the air. She opened her wings, and flew with a scream upwards and away
+through the clouds; and she is still a demon of the air, and she shall
+be a demon of the air till the end of time.
+
+Then Bove Derg and the Dedannans assembled on the shore of the lake, and
+encamped there; for they wished to remain with the birds, and to listen
+to their music. The Milesian people[XIX.] came and formed an encampment
+there in like manner; for historians say that no music that was ever
+heard in Erin could be compared with the singing of these swans.
+
+And so the swans passed their time. During the day they conversed with
+the men of Erin, both Dedannans and Milesians, and discoursed lovingly
+with their friends and fellow nurselings; and at night they chanted
+their slow, sweet, fairy music, the most delightful that was ever heard
+by men; so that all who listened to it, even those who were in grief, or
+sickness, or pain, forgot their sorrows and their sufferings, and fell
+into a gentle, sweet sleep, from which they awoke bright and happy.
+
+So they continued, the Dedannans and the Milesians, in their
+encampments, and the swans on the lake, for three hundred years.[XX.]
+And at the end of that time, Finola said to her brothers--
+
+"Do you know, my dear brothers, that we have come to the end of our time
+here; and that we have only this one night to spend on Lake Darvra?"
+
+When the three sons of Lir heard this, they were in great distress and
+sorrow; for they were almost as happy on Lake Darvra, surrounded by
+their friends, and conversing with them day by day, as if they had been
+in their father's house in their own natural shapes; whereas they should
+now live on the gloomy and tempestuous Sea of Moyle, far away from all
+human society.
+
+Early next morning, they came to the margin of the lake, to speak to
+their Father and their friends for the last time, and to bid them
+farewell; and Finola chanted this lay--
+
+ I.
+
+ Farewell, farewell, our father dear!
+ The last sad hour has come:
+ Farewell, Bove Derg! farewell to all,
+ Till the dreadful day of doom![XXI.]
+ We go from friends and scenes beloved,
+ To a home of grief and pain;
+ And that day of woe
+ Shall come and go,
+ Before we meet again!
+
+ II.
+
+ We live for ages on stormy Moyle,
+ In loneliness and fear;
+ The kindly words of loving friends
+ We never more shall hear.
+ Four joyous children long ago;
+ Four snow-white swans to-day;
+ And on Moyle's wild sea
+ Our robe shall be
+ The cold and briny spray.
+
+ III.
+
+ Far down on the misty stream of time,
+ When three hundred years are o'er,
+ Three hundred more in storm and cold,
+ By Glora's desolate shore;
+ Till Decca fair is Largnen's spouse;
+ Till north and south unite;
+ Till the hymns are sung,
+ And the bells are rung,
+ At the dawn of the pure faith's light.
+
+ IV.
+
+ Arise, my brothers, from Darvra's wave,
+ On the wings of the southern wind;
+ We leave our father and friends to-day
+ In measureless grief behind.
+ Ah! sad the parting, and sad our flight
+ To Moyle's tempestuous main;
+ For the day of woe
+ Shall come and go,
+ Before we meet again!
+
+The four swans then spread their wings, and rose from the surface of the
+water in sight of all their friends, till they reached a great height in
+the air, then resting, and looking downwards for a moment, they flew
+straight to the north, till they alighted on the Sea of Moyle between
+Erin and Alban.
+
+The men of Erin were grieved at their departure, and they made a law,
+and proclaimed it throughout the land, that no one should kill a swan in
+Erin from that time forth.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XVIII.] demon of the air was held in great abhorrence by the ancient
+Irish.
+
+[XIX.] The Milesian people; the colony who conquered and succeeded the
+Dedannans. (See note 1 at end.)
+
+[XX.] The Dedannans were regarded as gods, and were immortal or
+semi-immortal. (See note 1 at the end.)
+
+[XXI.] It must be remembered that the children of Lir had some obscure
+foreknowledge of the coming of Christianity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE SEA OF MOYLE.
+
+
+As to the children of Lir, miserable was their abode and evil their
+plight on the Sea of Moyle. Their hearts were wrung with sorrow for
+their father and their friends; and when they looked towards the steep,
+rocky, far-stretching coasts, and saw the great, dark wild sea around
+them, they were overwhelmed with fear and despair. They began also to
+suffer from cold and hunger, so that all the hardships they had endured
+on Lake Darvra appeared as nothing compared with their suffering on the
+sea-current of Moyle.
+
+And so they lived, till one night a great tempest fell upon the sea.
+Finola, when she saw the sky filled with black, threatening clouds, thus
+addressed her brothers--
+
+"Beloved brothers, we have made a bad preparation for this night; for it
+is certain that the coming storm will separate us; and now let us
+appoint a place of meeting, or it may happen that we shall never see
+each other again."
+
+And they answered, "Dear sister, you speak truly and wisely; and let us
+fix on Carricknarone, for that is a rock that we are all very well
+acquainted with."
+
+And they appointed Carricknarone as their place of meeting.
+
+Midnight came, and with it came the beginning of the storm. A wild,
+rough wind swept over the dark sea, the lightnings flashed, and the
+great waves rose, and increased their violence and their thunder.
+
+The swans were soon scattered over the waters, so that not one of them
+knew in what direction the others had been driven. During all that night
+they were tossed about by the roaring winds and waves, and it was with
+much difficulty they preserved their lives.
+
+Towards morning the storm abated, and the sea became again calm and
+smooth; and Finola swam to Carricknarone. But she found none of her
+brothers there, neither could she see any trace of them when she looked
+all round from the summit of the rock over the wide face of the sea.
+
+Then she became terrified, for she thought she should never see them
+again; and she began to lament them plaintively in these words--
+
+ The heart-breaking anguish and woe of this life
+ I am able no longer to bear:
+ My wings are benumbed with this pitiless frost;
+ My three little brothers are scattered and lost;
+ And I am left here to despair.
+
+ My three little brothers I never shall see
+ Till the dead shall arise from the tomb:
+ How I sheltered them oft with my wings and my breast,
+ And I soothed their sorrows and lulled them to rest,
+ As the night fell around us in gloom!
+
+ Ah, where are my brothers, and why have I lived,
+ This last worst affliction to know?
+ What now is there left but a life of despair?--
+ For alas! I am able no longer to bear
+ This heart-breaking anguish and woe.[XXII.]
+
+Soon after this she looked again over the sea, and she saw Conn coming
+towards the rock, with his head drooping, and his feathers all drenched
+with the salt spray; and she welcomed him with joyful heart.
+
+Not long after, Ficra appeared, but he was so faint with wet and cold
+and hardship, that he was scarce able to reach the place where Finola
+and Conn were standing; and when they spoke to him he could not speak
+one word in return. So Finola placed the two under her wings, and she
+said--
+
+"If Aed were here now, all would be happy with us."
+
+In a little time they saw Aed coming towards them, with head erect and
+feathers all dry and radiant and Finola gave him a joyful welcome. She
+then placed him under the feathers of her breast, while Conn and Ficra
+remained under her wings; and she said to them--
+
+"My dear brothers, though ye may think this night very bad, we shall
+have many like it from this time forth."
+
+So they continued for a long time on the Sea of Moyle, suffering
+hardships of every kind, till one winter night came upon them, of great
+wind and of snow and frost so severe, that nothing they ever before
+suffered could be compared to the misery of that night. And Finola
+uttered these words--
+
+ Our life is a life of woe;
+ No shelter or rest we find:
+ How bitterly drives the snow;
+ How cold is this wintry wind!
+
+ From the icy spray of the sea,
+ From the wind of the bleak north east,
+ I shelter my brothers three,
+ Under my wings and breast.
+
+ Our stepmother sent us here,
+ And misery well we know:--
+ In cold and hunger and fear;
+ Our life is a life of woe!
+
+Another year passed away on the Sea of Moyle; and one night in January,
+a dreadful frost came down on the earth and sea, so that the waters were
+frozen into a solid floor of ice all round them. The swans remained on
+Carricknarone all night, and their feet and their wings were frozen to
+the icy surface, so that they had to strive hard to move from their
+places in the morning; and they left the skin of their feet, the quills
+of their wings, and the feathers of their breasts clinging to the rock.
+
+"Sad is our condition this night, my beloved brothers," said Finola,
+"for we are forbidden to leave the Sea of Moyle; and yet we cannot bear
+the salt water, for when it enters our wounds, I fear we shall die of
+pain."
+
+And she spoke this lay--
+
+ Our fate is mournful here to-day;
+ Our bodies bare and chill,
+ Drenched by the bitter, briny spray,
+ And torn on this rocky hill!
+
+ Cruel our stepmother's jealous heart
+ That banished us from home;
+ Transformed to swans by magic art,
+ To swim the ocean foam.
+
+ This bleak and snowy winter day,
+ Our bath is the ocean wide;
+ In thirsty summer's burning ray,
+ Our drink the briny tide.
+
+ And here 'mid rugged rocks we dwell,
+ In this tempestuous bay;
+ Four children bound by magic spell;--
+ Our fate is sad to-day!
+
+They were, however, forced to swim out on the stream of Moyle, all
+wounded and torn as they were; for though the brine was sharp and
+bitter, they were not able to avoid it. They stayed as near the coast as
+they could, till after a long time the feathers of their breasts and
+wings grew again, and their wounds were healed.
+
+After this they lived on for a great number of years, sometimes visiting
+the shores of Erin, and sometimes the headlands of Alban. But they
+always returned to the sea-stream of Moyle, for it was destined to be
+their home till the end of three hundred years.
+
+One day they came to the mouth of the Bann, on the north coast of Erin,
+and looking inland, they saw a stately troop of horsemen approaching
+directly from the south-west. They were mounted on white steeds, and
+clad in bright-coloured garments, and as they wound towards the shore
+their arms glittered in the sun.
+
+"Do ye know yonder cavalcade?" said Finola to her brothers.
+
+"We know them not," they replied; "but it is likely they are a party of
+the Milesians, or perchance a troop of our own people, the Dedannans."
+
+They swam towards the shore, to find out who the strangers were; and the
+cavalcade on their part, when they saw the swans, knew them at once, and
+moved towards them till they were within speaking distance.
+
+Now these were a party of the Dedannans; and the chiefs who commanded
+them were the two sons of Bove Derg, the Dedannan king, namely, Aed the
+Keen-witted, and Fergus the Chess-player, with a third part of the Fairy
+Host.[XXIII.] They had been for a long time searching for the children
+of Lir along the northern shores of Erin, and now that they had found
+them, they were joyful; and they and the swans greeted each other with
+tender expressions of friendship and love. The children of Lir inquired
+after the Dedannans, and particularly after their father Lir, and Bove
+Derg, and all the rest of their friends and acquaintances.
+
+"They are all well," replied the chiefs; "and they and the Dedannans in
+general are now gathered together in the house of your father, at Shee
+Finnaha, celebrating the Feast of Age,[2] pleasantly and agreeably.
+Their happiness would indeed be complete, only that you are not with
+them, and that they know not where you have been since you left Lake
+Darvra."
+
+"Miserable has been our life since that day," said Finola; "and no
+tongue can tell the suffering and sorrow we have endured on the Sea of
+Moyle."
+
+And she chanted these words--
+
+ Ah, happy is Lir's bright home to-day,
+ With mead and music and poet's lay:
+ But gloomy and cold his children's home,
+ For ever tossed on the briny foam.
+
+ Our wreathèd feathers are thin and light
+ When the wind blows keen through the wintry night:
+ Yet oft we were robed, long, long ago,
+ In purple mantles and furs of snow.
+
+ On Moyle's bleak current our food and wine
+ Are sandy sea-weed and bitter brine:
+ Yet oft we feasted in days of old,
+ And hazel-mead drank from cups of gold.
+
+ Our beds are rocks in the dripping caves;
+ Our lullaby song the roar of the waves:
+ But soft rich couches once we pressed,
+ And harpers lulled us each night to rest.
+
+ Lonely we swim on the billowy main,
+ Through frost and snow, through storm and rain:
+ Alas for the days when round us moved
+ The chiefs and princes and friends we loved!
+
+ My little twin brothers beneath my wings
+ Lie close when the north wind bitterly stings,
+ And Aed close nestles before my breast;
+ Thus side by side through the night we rest.
+
+ Our father's fond kisses, Bove Derg's embrace,
+ The light of Mannanan's[1] godlike face,
+ The love of Angus[1]--all, all are o'er;
+ And we live on the billows for evermore!
+
+After this they bade each other farewell, for it was not permitted to
+the children of Lir to remain away from the stream of Moyle. As soon as
+they had parted, the Fairy Cavalcade returned to Shee Finnaha, where
+they related to the Dedannan chiefs all that had passed, and described
+the condition of the children of Lir. And the chiefs answered--
+
+"It is not in our power to help them; but we are glad that they are
+living; and we know that in the end the enchantment will be broken, and
+that they will be freed from their sufferings."
+
+As to the children of Lir, they returned to their home on the Sea of
+Moyle, and there they remained till they had fulfilled their term of
+years.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXII.] Many of these old poems begin and end with the same line or
+couplet.
+
+[XXIII.] Fairy host; _i.e._ the Dedannans. (See note 1 at the end of the
+book.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE WESTERN SEA.
+
+
+And when their three hundred years were ended, Finola said to her
+brothers--
+
+"It is time for us to leave this place, for our period here has come to
+an end."
+
+ The hour has come; the hour has come;
+ Three hundred years have passed:
+ We leave this bleak and gloomy home,
+ And we fly to the west at last!
+
+ We leave for ever the stream of Moyle;
+ On the clear, cold wind we go;
+ Three hundred years round Glora's isle,
+ Where wintry tempests blow!
+
+ No sheltered home, no place of rest,
+ From the tempest's angry blast:
+ Fly, brothers, fly, to the distant west,
+ For the hour has come at last!
+
+So the swans left the Sea of Moyle, and flew westward, till they reached
+Irros Domnann and the sea round the isle of Glora. There they remained
+for a long time, suffering much from storm and cold, and in nothing
+better off than they were on the Sea of Moyle.
+
+It chanced that a young man named Ebric, of good family, the owner of a
+tract of land lying along the shore, observed the birds and heard their
+singing. He took great delight in listening to their plaintive music,
+and he walked down to the shore almost every day, to see them and to
+converse with them; so that he came to love them very much, and they
+also loved him. This young man told his neighbours about the speaking
+swans, so that the matter became noised abroad; and it was he who
+arranged the story, after hearing it from themselves, and related it as
+it is related here.
+
+Again their hardships were renewed, and to describe what they suffered
+on the great open Western Sea would be only to tell over again the story
+of their life on the Moyle. But one particular night came, of frost so
+hard that the whole face of the sea, from Irros Domnann to Achill, was
+frozen into a thick floor of ice; and the snow was driven by a
+north-west wind. On that night it seemed to the three brothers that they
+could not bear their sufferings any longer, and they began to utter loud
+and pitiful complaints. Finola tried to console them, but she was not
+able to do so, for they only lamented the more; and then she herself
+began to lament with the others.
+
+After a time, Finola spoke to them and said, "My dear brothers, believe
+in the great and splendid God of truth, who made the earth with its
+fruits, and the sea with its wonders; put your trust in Him, and He will
+send you help and comfort."
+
+"We believe in Him," said they.
+
+"And I also," said Finola, "believe in God, who is perfect in
+everything, and who knows all things."
+
+And at the destined hour they all believed, and the Lord of heaven sent
+them help and protection; so that neither cold nor tempest molested them
+from that time forth, as long as they abode on the Western Sea.
+
+So they continued at the point of Irros Domnann, till they had fulfilled
+their appointed time there. And Finola addressed the sons of Lir--
+
+"My dear brothers, the end of our time here has come; we shall now go to
+visit our father and our people."
+
+And her brothers were glad when they heard this.
+
+Then they rose lightly from the face of the sea, and flew eastward with
+joyful hopes, till they reached Shee Finnaha. But when they alighted
+they found the place deserted and solitary, its halls all ruined and
+overgrown with rank grass and forests of nettles; no houses, no fire, no
+mark of human habitation.
+
+Then the four swans drew close together, and they uttered three loud
+mournful cries of sorrow.
+
+And Finola chanted this lay--
+
+ What meaneth this sad, this fearful change,
+ That withers my heart with woe?
+ The house of my father all joyless and lone,
+ Its halls and its gardens with weeds overgrown,--
+ A dreadful and strange overthrow!
+
+ No conquering heroes, no hounds for the chase,
+ No shields in array on its walls,
+ No bright silver goblets, no gay cavalcades,
+ No youthful assemblies or high-born maids,
+ To brighten its desolate halls!
+
+ An omen of sadness--the home of our youth
+ All ruined, deserted, and bare.
+ Alas for the chieftain, the gentle and brave;
+ His glories and sorrows are stilled in the grave,
+ And we left to live in despair!
+
+ From ocean to ocean, from age unto age,
+ We have lived to the fulness of time;
+ Through a life such as men never heard of we've passed,
+ In suffering and sorrow our doom has been cast,
+ By our stepmother's pitiless crime!
+
+The children of Lir remained that night in the ruins of the palace--the
+home of their forefathers, where they themselves had been nursed; and
+several times during the night they chanted their sad, sweet, fairy
+music.
+
+Early next morning they left Shee Finnaha, and flew west to Inis Glora,
+where they alighted on a small lake. There they began to sing so sweetly
+that all the birds of the district gathered in flocks round them on the
+lake, and on its shore, to listen to them; so that the little lake came
+to be called the Lake of the Bird-flocks.
+
+During the day the birds used to fly to distant points of the coast to
+feed, now to Iniskea of the lonely crane,[XXIV.] now to Achill, and
+sometimes southwards to Donn's Sea Rocks,[XXV.] and to many other
+islands and headlands along the shore of the Western Sea, but they
+returned to Inis Glora every night.
+
+They lived in this manner till holy Patrick came to Erin with the pure
+faith; and until Saint Kemoc came to Inis Glora.
+
+The first night Kemoc came to the island, the children of Lir heard his
+bell at early matin time, ringing faintly in the distance. And they
+trembled greatly, and started, and ran wildly about; for the sound of
+the bell was strange and dreadful to them, and its tones filled them
+with great fear. The three brothers were more affrighted than Finola, so
+that she was left quite alone; but after a time they came to her, and
+she asked them--
+
+"Do you know, my brothers, what sound is this?"
+
+And they answered, "We have heard a faint, fearful voice, but we know
+not what it is."
+
+"This is the voice of the Christian bell," said Finola; "and now the end
+of our suffering is near; for this bell is the signal that we shall soon
+be freed from our spell, and released from our life of suffering; for
+God has willed it."
+
+And she chanted this lay--
+
+ Listen, ye swans, to the voice of the bell,
+ The sweet bell we've dreamed of for many a year;
+ Its tones floating by on the night breezes, tell
+ That the end of our long life of sorrow is near!
+
+ Listen, ye swans, to the heavenly strain;
+ 'Tis the anchoret tolling his soft matin bell:
+ He has come to release us from sorrow, from pain,
+ From the cold and tempestuous shores where we dwell!
+
+ Trust in the glorious Lord of the sky;
+ He will free us from Eva's druidical spell:
+ Be thankful and glad, for our freedom is nigh,
+ And listen with joy to the voice of the bell!
+
+Then her brothers became calm; and the four swans remained listening to
+the music of the bell, till the cleric had finished his matins.
+
+"Let us sing our music now," said Finola.
+
+And they chanted a low, sweet, plaintive strain of fairy music, to
+praise and thank the great high King of heaven and earth.
+
+Kemoc heard the music from where he stood; and he listened with great
+astonishment. But after a time it was revealed to him that it was the
+children of Lir who sang that music; and he was glad, for it was to seek
+them he had come.
+
+When morning dawned he came to the shore of the lake, and he saw the
+four white swans swimming on the water. He spoke to them, and asked them
+were they the children of Lir.
+
+They replied, "We are indeed the children of Lir, who were changed long
+ago into swans by our wicked stepmother."
+
+"I give God thanks that I have found you," said Kemoc; "for it is on
+your account I have come to this little island in preference to all the
+other islands of Erin. Come ye now to land, and trust in me; for it is
+in this place that you are destined to be freed from your enchantment."
+
+So they, filled with joy on hearing the words of the cleric, came to the
+shore, and placed themselves under his care. He brought them to his own
+house, and, sending for a skilful workman, he caused him to make two
+bright, slender chains of silver; and he put a chain between Finola and
+Aed, and the other chain he put between Ficra and Conn.
+
+So they lived with him, listening to his instructions day by day, and
+joining in his devotions. They were the delight and joy of the cleric,
+and he loved them with his whole heart; and the swans were so happy that
+the memory of all the misery they had suffered during their long life on
+the waters caused them neither distress nor sorrow now.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIV.] Iniskea; a little rocky island near the coast of Erris, in Mayo.
+"The lonely crane of Iniskea" was one of the "Wonders of Ireland."
+According to an ancient legend, which still lives among the peasantry of
+Mayo, a crane--one lonely bird--has lived on the island since the
+beginning of the world, and will live there till the day of judgment.
+
+[XXV.] Donn's Sea Rocks--called in the text _Teach-Dhuinn_, or Donn's
+House, which is also the present Irish name; a group of three rocks off
+Kenmare Bay, where Donn, one of the Milesian brothers, was drowned.
+These remarkable rocks are now called in English the "Bull, Cow, and
+Calf."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE CHILDREN OF LIR REGAIN THEIR HUMAN SHAPE AND DIE.
+
+
+The king who ruled over Connaught at this time was Largnen, the son of
+Colman; and his queen was Decca, the daughter of Finnin,[XXVI.] king of
+Munster,--the same king and queen whom Eva had spoken of in her prophecy
+long ages before.
+
+Now word was brought to queen Decca regarding these wonderful speaking
+swans, and their whole history was related to her; so that even before
+she saw them, she could not help loving them, and she was seized with a
+strong desire to have them herself. So she went to the king, and
+besought him that he would go to Kemoc and get her the swans. But
+Largnen said that he did not wish to ask them from Kemoc. Whereupon
+Decca grew indignant; and she declared that she would not sleep another
+night in the palace till he had obtained the swans for her. So she left
+the palace that very hour, and fled southwards towards her father's
+home.
+
+Largnen, when he found she had gone, sent in haste after her, with word
+that he would try to procure the swans; but the messengers did not
+overtake her till she had reached Killaloe. However, she returned with
+them to the palace; and as soon as she had arrived, the king sent to
+Kemoc to request that he would send the birds to the queen; but Kemoc
+refused to give them.
+
+Largnen became very angry at this; and he set out at once for the
+cleric's house. As soon as he had come, he asked the cleric whether it
+was true that he had refused to give the swans to the queen. And when
+Kemoc answered that it was quite true, the king, being very wroth, went
+up to where the swans stood, and seizing the two silver chains, one in
+each hand, he drew the birds from the altar, and turned towards the door
+of the church, intending to bring them by force to the queen; while
+Kemoc followed him, much alarmed lest they should be injured.
+
+The king had proceeded only a little way, when suddenly the white
+feathery robes faded and disappeared; and the swans regained their human
+shape, Finola being transformed into an extremely old woman, and the
+three sons into three feeble old men, white-haired and bony and
+wrinkled.
+
+When the king saw this, he started with affright, and instantly left the
+place without speaking one word; while Kemoc reproached and denounced
+him very bitterly.
+
+As to the children of Lir, they turned towards Kemoc; and Finola spoke--
+
+"Come, holy cleric, and baptise us without delay, for our death is near.
+You will grieve after us, O Kemoc; but in truth you are not more
+sorrowful at parting from us than we are at parting from you. Make our
+grave here and bury us together; and as I often sheltered my brothers
+when we were swans, so let us be placed in the grave--Conn standing near
+me at my right side, Ficra at my left, and Aed before my face."[XXVII.]
+
+ Come, holy priest, with book and prayer;
+ Baptise and shrive us here:
+ Haste, cleric, haste, for the hour has come,
+ And death at last is near!
+
+ Dig our grave--a deep, deep grave,
+ Near the church we loved so well;
+ This little church, where first we heard
+ The voice of the Christian bell.
+
+ As oft in life my brothers dear
+ Were sooth'd by me to rest--
+ Ficra and Conn beneath my wings,
+ And Aed before my breast;
+
+ So place the two on either hand--
+ Close, like the love that bound me;
+ Place Aed as close before my face,
+ And twine their arms around me.
+
+ Thus shall we rest for evermore,
+ My brothers dear and I:
+ Haste, cleric, haste, baptise and shrive,
+ For death at last is nigh!
+
+Then the children of Lir were baptised, and they died immediately. And
+when they died, Kemoc looked up; and lo, he saw a vision of four lovely
+children, with light, silvery wings, and faces all radiant with joy.
+They gazed on him for a moment; but even as they gazed, they vanished
+upwards, and he saw them no more. And he was filled with gladness, for
+he knew they had gone to heaven; but when he looked down on the four
+bodies lying before him, he became sad and wept.
+
+And Kemoc caused a wide grave to be dug near the little church; and the
+children of Lir were buried together, as Finola had directed--Conn at
+her right hand, Ficra at her left, and Aed standing before her face. And
+he raised a grave-mound over them, placing a tombstone on it, with
+their names graved in Ogam;[XXVIII.] after which he uttered a lament for
+them, and their funeral rites were performed.
+
+
+So far we have related the sorrowful story of the Fate of the Children
+of Lir.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXVI.] These are well-known historical personages, who flourished in
+the seventh century.
+
+[XXVII.] Among the ancient Celtic nations, the dead were often buried
+standing up in the grave. It was in this way Finola and her brothers
+were buried.
+
+[XXVIII.] Ogam, a sort of writing, often used on sepulchral stones to
+mark the names of the persons buried.
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN;
+
+OR,
+
+_THE QUEST FOR THE ERIC-FINE._
+
+ For the blood that we spilled,
+ For the hero we killed,
+ Toil and woe, toil and woe, till the doom is fulfilled!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LOCHLANNS INVADE ERIN.
+
+
+When the Dedannans[1] held sway in Erin, a prosperous free-born king
+ruled over them, whose name was Nuada of the Silver Hand.[4]
+
+In the time of this king, the Fomorians,[5] from Lochlann,[6] in the
+north, oppressed the Dedannans, and forced them to pay heavy tributes;
+namely, a tax on kneading-troughs, a tax on querns, and a tax on baking
+flags; and besides all this, an ounce of gold for each man of the
+Dedannans. These tributes had to be paid every year at the Hill of
+Usna;[XXIX.] and if any one refused or neglected to pay his part, his
+nose was cut off by the Fomorian tyrants.
+
+At this time a great fair-meeting was held by the king of Ireland, Nuada
+of the Silver Hand, on the Hill of Usna. Not long had the people been
+assembled, when they saw a stately band of warriors, all mounted on
+white steeds, coming towards them from the east; and at their head, high
+in command over all, rode a young champion, tall and comely, with a
+countenance as bright and glorious as the setting sun.
+
+This young warrior was Luga of the Long Arms.[7] He was accompanied by
+his foster brothers, namely, the sons of Mannanan Mac Lir; and the troop
+he led was the Fairy Host from the Land of Promise.[8]
+
+Now in this manner was he arrayed. He rode the steed of Mannanan Mac
+Lir,[8] namely, Enbarr of the Flowing Mane: no warrior was ever killed
+on the back of this steed, for she was as swift as the clear, cold wind
+of spring, and she travelled with equal ease on land and on sea. He wore
+Mannanan's coat of mail: no one could be wounded through it, or above
+it, or below it. He had on his breast Mannanan's breast-plate, which no
+weapon could pierce. His helmet had two glittering precious stones set
+in front, and one behind; and whenever he took it off, his face shone
+like the sun on a dry day in summer. Mannanan's sword, The Answerer,
+hung at his left side: no one ever recovered from its wound; and those
+who were opposed to it in the battle-field were so terrified by looking
+at it, that their strength left them till they became weaker than a
+woman in deadly sickness.
+
+This troop came forward to where the king of Erin sat surrounded by the
+Dedannans, and both parties exchanged friendly greetings.
+
+A short time after this they saw another company approaching, quite
+unlike the first, for they were grim and fierce and surly looking;
+namely, the tax-gatherers of the Fomorians, to the number of nine nines,
+who were coming to demand their yearly tribute from the men of Erin.
+When they reached the place where the king sat, the entire assembly--the
+king himself among the rest--rose up before them. For the whole Dedannan
+race stood in great dread of these Fomorian tax-collectors; so much so
+that no man dared even to chastise his own son without first seeking
+their consent.
+
+Then Luga of the Long Arms spoke to the king and said, "Why have ye
+stood up before this hateful-looking company, when ye did not stand up
+for us?"
+
+"We durst not do otherwise," replied the king; "for if even an infant of
+a month old remained seated before them, they would deem it cause enough
+for killing us all."
+
+When Luga heard this he brooded in silence for a little while, and then
+he said, "Of a truth, I feel a great desire to kill all these men!"
+
+Then he mused again, and after a time, said, "I am strongly urged to
+kill these men!"
+
+"That deed would doubtless bring great evil on us," said the king, "for
+then the Fomorians would be sure to send an army to destroy us all."
+
+But Luga, after another pause, started up, exclaiming, "Long have ye
+been oppressed in this manner!" and so saying, he attacked the
+Fomorians, dealing red slaughter among them. Neither did he hold his
+hand till he had slain them all except nine. These he spared, because
+they ran with all speed and sat nigh the king, that he might protect
+them from Luga's wrath.
+
+Then Luga put his sword back into its scabbard, and said, "I would slay
+you also, only that I wish you to go and tell your king, and the
+foreigners in general, what you have seen."
+
+These nine men accordingly returned to their own country, and they told
+their tale to the Fomorian people from beginning to end--how the
+strange, noble-faced youth had slain all the tax-collectors except nine,
+whom he spared that they might bring home the story.
+
+When they had ended speaking, the king, Balor[9] of the Mighty Blows and
+of the Evil Eye, asked the chiefs, "Do ye know who this youth is?"
+
+And when they answered, "No," Kethlenda,[9] Balor's queen, said--
+
+"I know well who the youth is: he is the Ildana,[XXX.] Luga of the Long
+Arms, the son of your daughter and mine; and it has been long foretold
+that when he should appear in Erin, our sway over the Dedannans should
+come to an end."
+
+Then the chief people of the Fomorians held council; namely, Balor of
+the Mighty Blows, and his twelve sons, and his queen Kethlenda of the
+Crooked Teeth; Ebb and Sencab, the grandsons of Neid; Sotal of the Large
+Heels; Luath the Long-bodied; Luath the Story-teller; Tinna the Mighty,
+of Triscadal; Loskenn of the Bare Knees; Lobas, the druid; besides the
+nine prophetic poets and philosophers of the Fomorians.
+
+After they had debated the matter for some time, Bres, the son of Balor,
+arose and said, "I will go to Erin with seven great battalions of the
+Fomorian army, and I will give battle to the Ildana, and I will bring
+his head to you to our palace of Berva."[6]
+
+The Fomorian chiefs thought well of this proposal, and it was agreed to.
+
+So the ships were got ready for Bres; abundant food and drink and war
+stores were put into them, their seams were calked with pitch, and they
+were filled with sweet-smelling frankincense. Meantime the two Luaths,
+that is to say, Luath the Story-teller and Luath of the Long Body, were
+sent all over Lochlann to summon the army. And when all the fighting men
+were gathered together, they arrayed themselves in their battle-dresses,
+prepared their arms, and set out for Erin.
+
+Balor went with them to the harbour where they were to embark, and when
+they were about to go on board, he said to them--
+
+"Give battle to the Ildana, and cut off his head. And after ye have
+overcome him and his people, put your cables round this island of Erin,
+which gives us so much trouble, and tie it at the sterns of your ships:
+then sail home, bringing the island with you, and place it on the north
+side of Lochlann, whither none of the Dedannans will ever follow it."
+
+Then, having hoisted their many-coloured sails and loosed their
+moorings, they sailed forth from the harbour into the great sea, and
+never slackened speed or turned aside from their course till they
+reached the harbour of Eas-Dara.[XXXI.] And as soon as they landed, they
+sent forth an army through West Connaught, which wasted and spoiled the
+whole province.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIX.] The Hill of Usna, in the parish of Conry, in Westmeath, one of
+the royal residences of Ireland.
+
+[XXX.] Luga of the Long Arms is often called The Ildana, _i.e._ the Man
+of many sciences, to signify his various accomplishments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE MURDER OF KIAN.
+
+
+Now the king of Connaught at that time was Bove Derg, the son of the
+Dagda,[XXXII.] a friend to Luga of the Long Arms. It chanced that Luga
+was then at Tara,[XXXIII.] and news was brought to him that the
+Fomorians had landed at Eas-Dara, and were spoiling and wasting the
+province. He immediately got ready his steed, Enbarr of the Flowing
+Mane; and early in the morning, when the point of night met the day, he
+went to the king and told him that the foreigners had landed, and that
+they had wasted and plundered the province of Bove Derg.
+
+"I shall give them battle," said Luga; "and I wish to get from thee some
+help of men and arms."
+
+"I will give no help," said the king; "for I do not wish to avenge a
+deed that has not been done against myself."
+
+When Luga heard this reply he was wroth, and departing straightway from
+Tara, he rode westward. He had not travelled long when he saw at a
+distance three warriors, fully armed, riding towards him. Now these were
+three brothers, the sons of Canta; namely, Kian and Cu and Kethen; and
+Kian was Luga's father. And they saluted each other, and conversed
+together for a time.
+
+"Why art thou abroad so early?" said they.
+
+"Cause enough have I," replied Luga; "for the Fomorians have landed in
+Erin, and have wasted the province of Bove Derg, the son of the Dagda.
+It is well indeed that I have met you, for I am about to give them
+battle, and I wish now to know what aid I shall get from you."
+
+"We will go into the battle with you," said they; "and each of us will
+ward off from you a hundred of the Fomorian warriors."
+
+"That, indeed, is good help," said Luga; "but, for the present, I wish
+you to go to the several places throughout Erin where the Fairy
+Host[XXXIV.] are abiding, and summon them all to me."
+
+The three brothers accordingly separated, Cu and Kethen going south,
+while Luga's father, Kian, turned his face northwards, and rode on till
+he came to Moy Murthemna.[XXXV.] He had not been long travelling over
+the plain when he saw three warriors, clad in armour and fully armed,
+coming towards him. These were three Dedannan chiefs, the sons of
+Turenn, and their names were Brian, Ur, and Urcar. Now these three and
+the three sons of Canta were at deadly feud with each other, on account
+of an old quarrel, and whenever they met there was sure to be a fight
+for life or death.
+
+As soon as Kian saw these three, he said, "If my two brothers were now
+with me, we should have a brave fight; but as they are not, and as I am
+only one against three, it is better to avoid the combat." So saying, he
+looked round, and seeing near him a herd of swine he struck himself with
+a golden druidical[3] wand, and changed himself into a pig; and he
+quickly joined the herd.
+
+No sooner had he done so than Brian, the eldest of the sons of Turenn,
+said to his brothers, "Tell me, my brothers, do you know what has become
+of the warrior that we saw just now approaching us on the plain?"
+
+"We saw him," said they, "but we know not whither he has gone."
+
+"You deserve great blame," said he, "that you are not more watchful
+while traversing the country during this time of war. Now I know what
+has happened to this warrior; he has changed himself, by a druidical
+spell, into a pig; and he is now among yonder herd. And whoever he may
+be, of this be sure--he is no friend of ours."
+
+"This is an unlucky matter," said they; "for as these pigs belong to one
+of the Dedannans, it would be wrong for us to kill them; and even if we
+should do so, the enchanted pig might escape after all."
+
+"But," answered Brian, "I think I can manage to distinguish any
+druidical beast from a natural one; and if you had attended well to your
+learning, you would be able to do the same."
+
+Saying this, he struck his brothers one after the other with his golden
+druidical wand, and turned them into two fleet, slender, sharp-nosed
+hounds. The moment he had done so they put their noses to the earth,
+and, yelping eagerly, set off towards the herd on the trail of their
+enemy. When they had come near, the druidical pig fell out from the
+herd, and made towards a thick grove that grew hard by; but Brian was
+there before him, and drove his spear through his chest.
+
+The pig screamed and said, "You have done an ill deed to cast your spear
+at me, for you know well who I am."
+
+"Your voice, methinks, is the voice of a man," said Brian; "but I know
+not who you are."
+
+And the pig answered, "I am Kian, the son of Canta; and now I ask you to
+give me quarter."
+
+Ur and Urcar, who had regained their shape and come up, said, "We will
+give you quarter indeed, and we are sorry for what has happened to you."
+
+But Brian, on the other hand, said, "I swear by the gods of the air,
+that if your life returned to you seven times, I would take it from you
+seven times."
+
+"Then," said Kian, "as you will not grant me quarter, allow me first to
+return to my own shape."
+
+"That we will grant you," said Brian; "for I often feel it easier to
+kill a man than to kill a pig."
+
+Kian accordingly took his own shape; and then he said, "You indeed, ye
+sons of Turenn, are now about to slay me; but even so, I have outwitted
+you. For if you had slain me in the shape of a pig, you would have to
+pay only the eric-fine[10] for a pig; whereas, now that I am in my own
+shape, you shall pay the full fine for a man. And there never yet was
+killed, and there never shall be killed, a man for whom a greater fine
+shall be paid, than you will have to pay for me. The weapons with which
+I am slain shall tell the deed to my son; and he will exact the fine
+from you."
+
+"You shall not be slain with the weapons of a warrior," said Brian; and
+so saying, he and his brothers laid aside their arms, and smote him
+fiercely and rudely with the round stones of the earth, till they had
+reduced his body to a disfigured mass; and in this manner they slew him.
+
+They then buried him a man's height in the earth; but the earth, being
+angry at the fratricide,[XXXVI.] refused to receive the body, and cast
+it up on the surface. They buried him a second time, and again the body
+was thrown up from beneath the clay. Six times the sons of Turenn buried
+the body of Kian a man's height in the earth, and six times did the
+earth cast it up, refusing to receive it. But when they had buried him
+the seventh time, the earth refused no longer, and the body remained in
+the grave.
+
+Then the sons of Turenn prepared to go forward after Luga of the Long
+Arms to the battle. But as they were leaving the grave, they thought
+they heard a faint, muffled voice coming up from the ground beneath
+their feet--
+
+ The blood you have spilled,
+ The hero you've killed,
+ Shall follow your steps till your doom be fulfilled!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXI.] Eas-Dara, now Ballysodare, in the county Sligo.
+
+[XXXII.] See page 1.
+
+[XXXIII.] Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the kings of Ireland.
+
+[XXXIV.] Fairy Host, _i.e._ the Dedannans. (See notes 1 and 8 at end.)
+
+[XXXV.] Moy Murthemna, a plain in the county of Louth.
+
+[XXXVI.] Fratricide; Gaelic, _fionghal_, the murder of a relative. (See
+note, page 7.) The sons of Turenn and the sons of Canta appear to have
+been related to each other (see the third stanza of the poem, page 94).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DEFEAT AND FLIGHT OF THE LOCHLANNS.
+
+
+Now as to Luga. After parting from his father, he journeyed westward
+till he reached Ath-Luan,[XXXVII.] thence to Ros-Coman, and over
+Moy-Lurg to the Curlieu Hills, and to the mountain of Kesh-Corran, till
+he reached the "Great Plain of the Assembly," where the foreigners were
+encamped, with the spoils of Connaught around them.
+
+As he drew nigh to the Fomorian encampment, Bres, the son of Balor,
+arose and said--
+
+"A wonderful thing has come to pass this day; for the sun, it seems to
+me, has risen in the west."
+
+"It would be better that it were so," said the druids,[3] "than that
+matters should be as they are."
+
+"What else can it be, then?" asked Bres.
+
+"The light you see," replied the druids, "is the brightness of the face,
+and the flashing of the weapons of Luga of the Long Arms, our deadly
+enemy, he who slew our tax-gatherers, and who now approaches."
+
+Then Luga came up peacefully and saluted them.
+
+"How does it come to pass that you salute us," said they, "since you
+are, as we know well, our enemy?"
+
+"I have good cause for saluting you," answered Luga; "for only one half
+of my blood is Dedannan; the other half comes from you; for I am the son
+of the daughter of Balor of the Mighty Blows, your king.[7] And now I
+come in peace, to ask you to give back to the men of Connaught all the
+milch cows you have taken from them."
+
+"May ill luck follow thee," said one of the Fomorian leaders, in a voice
+loud and wrathful, "until thou get one of them, either a milch cow or a
+dry cow!"
+
+And the others spoke in a like strain.
+
+Then Luga put a druidical spell upon the plundered cattle; and he sent
+all the milch cows home, each to the door of her owner's house,
+throughout all that part of Connaught that had been plundered. But the
+dry cows he left, so that the Fomorians might be cumbered, and that they
+might not leave their encampment till the Fairy Host should arrive to
+give them battle.
+
+Luga tarried three days and three nights near them, and at the end of
+that time the Fairy Host arrived, and placed themselves under his
+command. They encamped near the Fomorians, and in a little time Bove
+Derg, son of the Dagda, joined them with twenty-nine hundred men.
+
+Then they made ready for the fight. The Ildana put on Mannanan's coat of
+mail and his breast-plate; he took also his helmet, which was called
+Cannbarr, and it glittered in the sun with dazzling brightness; he slung
+his broad, dark-blue shield from his shoulder at one side; his long,
+keen-edged sword hung at his thigh; and lastly, he took his two long,
+heavy-handled spears, which had been tempered in the poisonous blood of
+adders. The other kings and chiefs of the men of Erin arrayed their men
+in battle ranks; hedges of glittering spears rose high above their
+heads; and their shields, placed edge to edge, formed a firm fence
+around them.
+
+Then at the signal they attacked the Fomorians, and the Fomorians, in no
+degree dismayed, answered their onset. At first a cloud of whizzing
+javelins flew from rank to rank across the open space, and as the
+warriors rushed together in closer conflict, their spears were shivered
+in their hands. Then they drew their gold-hilted swords, and fought foot
+to foot and shield to shield, so that a forest of bright flashes rose
+high above their helmets, from the clashing of their keen-tempered
+weapons.
+
+In the midst of the fight, Luga looked round, and seeing at some
+distance, Bres, surrounded by his Fomorian warriors, dealing havoc and
+death among the Dedannans, he rushed through the press of battle, and
+attacked first Bres's guards so fiercely that in a few moments twenty of
+them fell beneath his blows.
+
+Then he struck at Bres himself, who, unable to withstand his furious
+onset, cried aloud--
+
+"Why should we be enemies, since thou art of my kin? Let there be peace
+between us, for nothing can withstand thy blows. Let there be peace, and
+I will undertake to bring my Fomorians to assist thee at Moytura,[11]
+and I will promise never again to come to fight against thee."
+
+And Bres swore by the sun and the moon, by the sea and land, and by all
+the elements,[XXXVIII.] to fulfil his engagement; and on these
+conditions Luga granted him his life.
+
+Then the Fomorians, seeing their chief overcome, dropped their arms, and
+sued for quarter. The Fomorian druids and men of learning next came to
+Luga to ask him to spare their lives; and Luga answered them--
+
+"So far am I from wishing to slay you, that in truth, if you had taken
+the whole Fomorian race under your protection, I would have spared
+them."
+
+And after this, Bres, the son of Balor, returned to his own country with
+his druids, and with those of his army who had escaped from the battle.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXVII.] _Ath-Luan_, now Athlone; _Ros-Coman_, now Roscommon;
+_Moy-Lurg_, a plain in the county Roscommon; Curlieu Hills, a range of
+hills near Boyle, in Roscommon; Kesh-Corran, a well-known mountain in
+Sligo. The "Great Plain of the Assembly" must have been near
+Ballysodare, in Sligo.
+
+[XXXVIII.] A usual form of oath among the ancient Irish. (See, for an
+account of this oath, the author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of
+Places," Series II. chap. XIV.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE ERIC-FINE ON THE SONS OF TURENN FOR THE SLAYING OF KIAN.
+
+
+Towards the close of the day, when the battle was ended, Luga espied two
+of his near friends; and he asked them if they had seen his father,
+Kian, in the fight. And when they answered, "No," Luga said--
+
+"My father is not alive; for if he lived he would surely have come to
+help me in the battle. And now I swear that neither food nor drink will
+I take till I have found out who has slain him, and the manner of his
+death."
+
+Then Luga set out with a small chosen band of the Fairy Host, and he
+halted not till he reached the place where he had parted from his
+father. And from that he travelled on to the plain of Murthemna, where
+Kian had been forced to take the shape of a pig to avoid the sons of
+Turenn, and where they had slain him.
+
+When he had come near to the very spot, he walked some little way before
+his companions, and the stones of the earth spoke beneath his feet, and
+said--
+
+"Here thy father lies, O Luga. Grievous was Kian's strait when he was
+forced to take the shape of a pig on seeing the three sons of Turenn;
+and here they slew him in his own shape!"
+
+ The blood that they spilled,
+ The hero they killed,
+ Shall darken their lives till their doom be fulfilled!
+
+Luga stood for a while silent, pondering on these words. But as his
+companions came up, he told them what had happened; and having pointed
+out the spot from which the voice came, he caused the ground to be dug
+up. There they found the body, and raised it to the surface; and when
+they had examined it, they saw that it was covered all over with gory
+wounds and bruises.
+
+Then Luga spoke after a long silence, "A cruel and merciless death has
+my beloved father suffered at the hands of the sons of Turenn!"
+
+He kissed his father's face three times, and again spoke, grieving, "Ill
+fare the day on which my father was slain! Woful is this deed to me, for
+my eyes see not, my ears hear not, and my heart's pulse has ceased to
+beat, for grief. Why, O ye gods whom I worship, why was I not present
+when this deed was done? Alas! an evil thing has happened, for the
+Dedannans have slain their brother Dedannan. Ill shall they fare of this
+fratricide, for its consequences shall follow them, and long shall the
+crime of brother against brother continue to be committed in Erin!"
+
+And he spoke this speech--
+
+ A dreadful doom my father found
+ On that ill-omened even-tide;
+ And here I mourn beside the mound,
+ Where, whelmed by numbers, Kian died,--
+ This lonely mound of evil fame,
+ That long shall bear the hero's name!
+
+ Alas! an evil deed is done,
+ And long shall Erin rue the day:
+ There shall be strife 'twixt sire and son,
+ And brothers shall their brothers slay;
+ Vengeance shall smite the murderers too,
+ And vengeance all their race pursue!
+
+ The light has faded from mine eyes;
+ My youthful strength and power have fled
+ Weary my heart with ceaseless sighs;
+ Ambition, hope, and joy are dead;
+ And all the world is draped in gloom--
+ The shadow of my father's tomb!
+
+Then they placed the hero again in the grave, and they raised a tomb
+over him with his name graved in Ogam;[XXXIX.] after which his
+lamentation lays were sung, and his funeral games were performed.
+
+When these rites were ended, Luga said to his people, "Go ye now to
+Tara, where the king of Erin sits on his throne with the Dedannans
+around him; but do not make these things known till I myself have told
+them."
+
+So Luga's people went straightway to Tara, as he had bade them; but of
+the murder of Kian they said naught. Luga himself arrived some time
+after, and was received with great honour, being put to sit high over
+the others, at the king's side; for the fame of his mighty deeds at the
+battle of the Assembly Plain had been noised over the whole country, and
+had come to the ears of the king.
+
+After he was seated, he looked round the hall, and saw the sons of
+Turenn in the assembly. Now these three sons of Turenn exceeded all the
+champions in Tara, in comeliness of person, in swiftness of foot, and in
+feats of arms; and, next to Luga himself, they were the best and bravest
+in the battles against the Fomorians; wherefore they were honoured by
+the king beyond most others.
+
+Luga asked the king that the chain of silence[XL.] should be shaken; and
+when it was shaken, and when all were listening in silence, he stood up
+and spoke--
+
+"I perceive, ye nobles of the Dedannan race, that you have given me your
+attention, and now I have a question to put to each man here present:
+What vengeance would you take of the man who should knowingly and of
+design kill your father?"
+
+They were all struck with amazement on hearing this, and the king of
+Erin said--
+
+"What does this mean? For that your father has not been killed, this we
+all know well!"
+
+"My father has indeed been killed," answered Luga; "and I see now here
+in this hall those who slew him. And furthermore, I know the manner in
+which they put him to death, even as they know it themselves."
+
+The sons of Turenn, hearing all this, said nothing; but the king spoke
+aloud and said--
+
+"If any man should wilfully slay my father, it is not in one hour or in
+one day I would have him put to death; but I would lop off one of his
+members each day, till I saw him die in torment under my hands!"
+
+All the nobles said the same, and the sons of Turenn in like manner.
+
+"The persons who slew my father are here present, and are joining with
+the rest in this judgment," said Luga; "and as the Dedannans are all now
+here to witness, I claim that the three who have done this evil deed
+shall pay me a fitting eric-fine for my father. Should they refuse, I
+shall not indeed transgress the king's law nor violate his protection;
+but of a certainty they shall not leave this hall of Micorta[XLI.] till
+the matter is settled."
+
+And the king of Erin said, "If I had killed your father, I should be
+well content if you were willing to accept an eric-fine from me."
+
+Now the sons of Turenn spoke among themselves; and Ur and Urcar said,
+"It is of us Luga speaks this speech. He has doubtless found out that we
+slew his father; and it is better that we now acknowledge the deed, for
+it will avail us naught to hide it."
+
+Brian, however, at first set his face against this, saying that he
+feared Luga only wanted an acknowledgment from them in presence of the
+other Dedannans, and that afterwards he might not accept a fine. But the
+other two were earnest in pressing him, so that he consented, and then
+he spoke to Luga--
+
+"It is of us thou speakest all these things, Luga; for it has been said
+that we three have been at enmity with the three sons of Canta. Now, as
+to the slaying of thy father Kian, let that matter rest; but we are
+willing to pay an eric-fine for him, even as if we had killed him."
+
+"I shall accept an eric-fine from you," said Luga, "though ye indeed
+fear I shall not. I shall now name before this assembly the fine I ask,
+and if you think it too much, I shall take off a part of it.
+
+"The first part of my eric-fine is three apples; the second part is the
+skin of a pig; the third is a spear; the fourth, two steeds and a
+chariot; the fifth, seven pigs; the sixth, a hound-whelp; the seventh, a
+cooking-spit; and the eighth, three shouts on a hill. That is my eric,"
+said Luga; "and if ye think it too much, say so now, that I may remit a
+part; but if not, then it will be well that ye set about paying it."
+
+"So far," said Brian, "we do not deem it too great. It seems, indeed, so
+small that we fear there is some hidden snare in what you ask, which may
+work us mischief."
+
+"I do not deem my eric too small," said Luga; "and now I engage here,
+before the assembled Dedannans, that I will ask no more, and that I will
+seek no further vengeance for my father's death. But, as I have made
+myself answerable to them for the faithful fulfilment of my promise, I
+demand the same guarantee from you, that you also be faithful to me."
+
+"Alas that you should doubt our plighted word!" said the sons of Turenn.
+"Are we not ourselves sufficient guarantee for the payment of an
+eric-fine greater even than this?"
+
+"I do not deem your word sufficient guarantee," answered Luga; "for
+often have we known great warriors like you to promise a fine before all
+the people, and afterwards to go back of their promise."
+
+And the sons of Turenn consented, though unwillingly, for they grieved
+that their word should be doubted. So they bound themselves on either
+side--Luga not to increase his claims; and the sons of Turenn, on their
+part, to pay him the full fine. And the king of Erin and Bove Derg, son
+of the Dagda, and the nobles of the Dedannans in general, were witnesses
+and sureties of this bond.
+
+Then Luga stood up and said, "It is now time that I give you a full
+knowledge of this eric-fine.
+
+"The three apples I ask are the apples of the Garden of
+Hisberna,[XLII.] in the east of the world, and none others will I have.
+There are no apples in the rest of the world like them, for their beauty
+and for the secret virtues they possess. Their colour is the colour of
+burnished gold; they have the taste of honey; and if a wounded warrior
+or a man in deadly sickness eat of them, he is cured immediately. And
+they are never lessened by being eaten, being as large and perfect at
+the end as at the beginning. Moreover any champion that possesses one of
+them may perform with it whatsoever feat he pleases, by casting it from
+his hand, and the apple will return to him of itself. And though you are
+three brave warriors, ye sons of Turenn, methinks you will not find it
+easy to bring away these apples; for it has been long foretold that
+three young champions from the Island of the West would come to take
+them by force, so that the king has set guards to watch for your coming.
+
+"The pig's skin I seek from you belongs to Tuis, the king of Greece.
+When the pig was alive, every stream of water through which she walked
+was turned into wine for nine days, and all sick and wounded people that
+touched her skin were at once cured, if only the breath of life
+remained. Now the king's druids told him that the virtue lay, not in the
+pig herself, but in her skin; so the king had her killed and skinned,
+and he has her skin now. This, too, ye valiant champions, is a part of
+my eric-fine which you will find it hard to get, either by force or by
+friendship.
+
+"The spear I demand from you is the venomed spear of Pezar, king of
+Persia. Its name is Slaughterer. In time of peace, its blazing, fiery
+head is always kept in a great caldron of water, to prevent it from
+burning down the king's palace; and in time of war, the champion who
+bears it to the battle-field can perform any deed he pleases with it.
+And it will be no easy matter to get this spear from the king of Persia.
+
+"The two steeds and the chariot belong to Dobar, king of Sigar.[XLIII.]
+The chariot exceeds all the chariots in the world for beauty of shape
+and goodliness of workmanship. The two noble steeds have no equal for
+strength and fleetness, and they travel with as much ease on sea as on
+land.
+
+"The seven pigs I demand are the pigs of Asal, the king of the Golden
+Pillars. Whoever eats a part of them shall not suffer from ill health or
+disease; and even though they should be killed and eaten to-day, they
+will be alive and well to-morrow.
+
+"The hound-whelp belongs to the king of Iroda,[XLIV.] and his name is
+Failinis. He shines as brightly as the sun in a summer sky; and every
+wild beast of the forest that sees him falls down to the earth powerless
+before him.
+
+"The cooking-spit belongs to the warlike women of the island of Fincara.
+They are thrice fifty in number, and woe to the champion who approaches
+their house; for each of them is a match for three good warriors in
+single combat; and they never yet gave a cooking-spit to any one without
+being overcome in battle.
+
+"The hill on which I require you to give three shouts is the Hill of
+Midkena, in the north of Lochlann.[6] Midkena and his sons are always
+guarding this hill, for they are under gesa[12] not to allow any one to
+shout on it. Moreover, it was they that instructed my father in
+championship and feats of arms, and they loved him very much; so that
+even if I should forgive you his death they would not. And, though you
+should be able to procure all the rest of the eric-fine, you will not, I
+think, succeed in this, for they will be sure to avenge on you my
+father's death.
+
+"And this, ye sons of Turenn, is the eric-fine I demand from you!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXIX.] A kind of writing. (See note, page 36.)
+
+[XL.] Chain of silence; a chain, probably hung with little bells, which
+the lord of a mansion shook when he wished to get silence and attention.
+
+[XLI.] Mic[=o]'rta; the name of the great banqueting hall of Tara, the
+ruins of which are to be seen to this day.
+
+[XLII.] The Garden of the Hesperides.
+
+[XLIII.] Sigar, _i.e._ Sicily.
+
+[XLIV.] Iroda was the name given by the Irish to some country in the far
+north of Europe, probably Norway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE SONS OF TURENN OBTAIN MANNANAN'S CANOE, "THE WAVE-SWEEPER."
+
+
+The sons of Turenn were so astounded on hearing this eric-fine that they
+spoke not one word; but rising up, they left the meeting, and repaired
+to the house of their father Turenn.
+
+He heard their story to the end, and then said, "Your tidings are bad,
+my sons, and I fear me you are doomed to meet your death in seeking what
+the Ildana asks. But the doom is a just one, for it was an evil thing to
+kill Kian. Now as to this eric-fine: it cannot be obtained by any living
+man without the help of either Luga himself or of Mannanan Mac Lir;[8]
+but if Luga wishes to aid you, ye shall be able to get it. Go ye now,
+therefore, and ask him to lend you Mannanan's steed, Enbarr of the
+Flowing Mane. If he wishes you to get the full eric-fine, he will lend
+you the steed; otherwise he will refuse, saying that she does not belong
+to him, and that he cannot lend what he himself has got on loan. Then,
+if ye obtain not the steed, ask him for the loan of Mannanan's canoe,
+the Wave-sweeper, which would be better for you than the steed; and he
+will lend you that, for he is forbidden to refuse a second request."
+
+So the sons of Turenn returned to Luga, and having saluted him, they
+said--
+
+"It is not in the power of any man to obtain this eric-fine without thy
+own aid, O Luga; we ask thee, therefore, to lend us Mannanan's steed,
+Enbarr of the Flowing Mane."
+
+"That steed is not my own," said Luga; "and I cannot lend that which I
+have myself obtained on loan."
+
+"If that be so," said Brian, "then I pray thee lend us Mannanan's canoe,
+the Wave-sweeper."
+
+"I shall lend you that," replied Luga; "it lies at Bruga of the
+Boyne;[XLV.] and ye have my consent to take it."
+
+So they came again to their father, and this time Ethnea, their sister,
+was with him; and they told them that Luga had given them the canoe.
+
+"I have much fear," said Turenn, "that it will avail you little against
+the dangers of your quest. Nevertheless, Luga desires to obtain that
+part of the eric that will be useful to him at the battle of
+Moytura,[11] and so far he will help you. But in seeking that which is
+of no advantage to him, namely, the cooking-spit, and the three shouts
+on Midkena's Hill, therein he will give you no aid, and he will be glad
+if ye perish in your attempts to obtain it."
+
+They then set out for Bruga of the Boyne, accompanied by their sister
+Ethnea, leaving Turenn lamenting after them. The canoe they found lying
+in the river; and Brian went into it and said--
+
+"It seems to me that only one other person can sit here along with me;"
+and he began to complain very bitterly of its smallness. He ceased,
+however, at the bidding of Ethnea, who told him that the canoe would
+turn out large enough when they came to try it, and that it was under
+strict command not to let any one grumble at its smallness. And she went
+on to say--
+
+"Alas, my beloved brothers, it was an evil deed to slay the father of
+Luga of the Long Arms! and I fear you will suffer much woe and hardship
+on account of it."
+
+ ETHNEA.
+
+ The deed was a dark one, a deed full of woe,
+ Your brother Dedannan to slay;
+ And hard and relentless the heart of your foe,
+ The bright-faced Ildana, that forced you to go,
+ This eric of vengeance to pay!
+
+ THE BROTHERS.
+
+ Oh, cease, sister Ethnea, cease thy sad wail;
+ Why yield to this terror and gloom?
+ Long, long shall the poets remember the tale,
+ For our courage and valour and swords shall prevail,
+ Or win us a glorious tomb!
+
+ ETHNEA.
+
+ Then search ye, my brothers, go search land and sea;
+ Go search ye the isles of the East.--
+ Alas, that the cruel Ildana's decree
+ Has banished my three gentle brothers from me,
+ On this fearful and perilous quest!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLV.] Bruga of the Boyne, the palace of Angus, the great Dedannan
+magician, was situated on the north shore of the Boyne, not far from
+Slane. (See note 1 at end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE APPLES OF THE GARDEN OF HISBERNA.
+
+
+After this the three brothers entered the canoe, which they now found
+large enough to hold themselves and their arms, and whatsoever else they
+wished to bring; for this was one of its secret gifts. They then bade
+their sister farewell, and, leaving her weeping on the shore, they rowed
+swiftly till they had got beyond the beautiful shores and bright
+harbours of Erin, out on the open sea.
+
+Then the two younger brothers said, "Now our quest begins: what course
+shall we take?"
+
+Brian answered, "As the apples are the first part of the fine, we shall
+seek them first."
+
+And then he spoke to the canoe, "Thou canoe of Mannanan, thou Sweeper of
+the waves, we ask thee and we command thee, that thou sail straightway
+to the Garden of Hisberna!"
+
+The canoe was not unmindful of the voice of its master, and obeyed the
+command without delay, according to its wont. It took the shortest way
+across the deep sea-chasms, and, gliding over the green-sided waves more
+swiftly than the clear, cold wind of March, it stayed not in its course
+till it reached the harbour near the land of Hisberna.
+
+Brian now spoke to his brothers, "Be sure that this quest is a perilous
+one, since we know that the best champions of the country, with the king
+at their head, are always guarding the apples. And now in what manner,
+think you, is it best for us to approach the garden?"
+
+"It seems to us," answered his brothers, "that we had better go straight
+and attack these champions, and either bring away the apples, or fall
+fighting for them. For we cannot escape the dangers that lie before us;
+and if we are doomed to fall in one of these adventures, it may,
+perchance, be better for us to die here than to prolong our hardships."
+
+But Brian answered, "Not so, my brothers; for it becomes a warrior to be
+prudent and wary as well as brave. We should now act so that the fame of
+our skill and valour may live after us, and that future men may not say,
+'These sons of Turenn did not deserve to be called brave champions, for
+they were senseless and rash, and sought their own death by their
+folly.' In the present case, then, what I counsel is this: Let us take
+the shape of strong, swift hawks; and as we approach the garden, have ye
+care of the light, sharp lances of the guards, which they will certainly
+hurl at us: avoid them actively and cunningly, and when the men have
+thrown all, let us swoop down and bring away an apple each."
+
+They approved this counsel; and Brian, striking his two brothers and
+himself with a druidical magic wand, all three were changed into three
+beautiful hawks. Then, flying swiftly to the garden, they began to
+descend in circles towards the tops of the trees; but the sharp-eyed
+guards perceived them, and with a great shout they threw showers of
+venomous darts at them. The hawks, however, mindful of Brian's warning,
+watched the spears with keen glances, and escaped them every one, until
+the guards had thrown all their light weapons. Then, swooping suddenly
+down on the trees, the two younger brothers carried off an apple each,
+and Brian two, one between his talons and the other in his beak; and the
+three rose again into the air without wound or hurt of any kind. Then,
+directing their course westward, they flew over the wide sea with the
+speed of an arrow.
+
+The news spread quickly through the city, how three beautiful hawks had
+carried off the apples; and the king and his people were in great wrath.
+Now the king had three daughters, very skilful in magic and cunning in
+counsel; and they forthwith transformed themselves into three
+swift-winged, sharp-taloned griffins, and pursued the hawks over the
+sea. But the hawks, when they saw they were pursued, increased their
+speed, and flew like the wind, and left their pursuers so far behind
+that they appeared to the griffins like three specks on the sky. Then
+the angry griffins let fly from their eyes, and from their open beaks,
+bright flashes of flame straight forward, which overtook and blinded the
+hawks, and scorched them, so that they could bear the heat no longer.
+
+"Evil is our state now," said Ur and Urcar, "for these sheets of flame
+are burning us, and we shall perish if we do not get relief."
+
+"I will try whether I cannot relieve you," said Brian; and with that he
+struck his brothers and himself with his golden druidical wand; and all
+three were instantly turned into swans. The swans dropped down on the
+sea; and when the griffins saw the hawks no longer straight before them,
+they gave up the chase. And the sons of Turenn went safely to their
+canoe, bringing the apples with them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE GIFTED SKIN OF THE PIG.
+
+
+After resting a little while, they held council as to their next
+journey; and what they resolved on was to go to Greece, to seek the skin
+of the pig, and to bring it away, either by consent or by force. So they
+went into the canoe, and Brian spoke--
+
+"Thou canoe of Mannanan, thou Sweeper of the Waves, we ask thee and we
+command thee that thou sail with us straightway to Greece!"
+
+And the canoe, obeying as before, glided swiftly and smoothly over the
+waves, till the sons of Turenn landed near the palace of the king of
+Greece.
+
+"In what shape, think you, should we go to this court?" said Brian.
+
+"We think it best," answered the others, "to go in our own shapes; that
+is to say, as three bold champions."
+
+"Not so," said Brian. "It seems best to me that we should go in the
+guise of learned poets from Erin; for poets are held in much honour and
+respect by the great nobles of Greece."
+
+"It is, indeed, hard for us to do that," answered his brothers, "for as
+to poems, we neither have any, nor do we know how to compose them."
+
+However, as Brian would have it so, they consented, though unwillingly;
+and, tying up their hair after the manner of poets, they knocked at the
+door of the palace. The door-keeper asked who was there.
+
+"We are skilful poets from Erin," said Brian, "and we have come to
+Greece with a poem for the king."
+
+The door-keeper went and gave the message.
+
+"Let them be brought in," said the king, "for it is to seek a good and
+bountiful master whom they may serve faithfully that they have come so
+far from Erin."
+
+The sons of Turenn were accordingly led in to the banquet hall, where
+sat the king surrounded by his nobles; and, bowing low, they saluted
+him; and he saluted them in return, and welcomed them. They sat at the
+table among the company, and joined the feast at once, drinking and
+making merry like the others; and they thought they had never seen a
+banquet hall so grand, or a household so numerous and mirthful.
+
+At the proper time the king's poets arose, according to custom, to
+recite their poems and their lays for the company. And when they had
+come to an end, Brian, speaking low, said to his brothers--
+
+"As we have come here as poets, it is meet that we should practise the
+poetic art like the others; therefore now arise, and recite a poem for
+the king."
+
+"We have no poems," they replied, "and we do not wish to practise any
+art except the art we have learned and practised from our youth, namely,
+to fight like brave champions, and to take by valour and force of arms
+that which we want, if we be stronger than our enemies, or to fall in
+battle if they be the stronger."
+
+"That is not a pleasant way of making poetry," said Brian; and with that
+he arose and requested attention for his poem. And when they sat
+listening, he said--
+
+ To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:
+ Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:
+ Thy bounty, great monarch, shall gladden the bard;
+ And the _Imnocta-fessa_ I claim as reward.
+
+ Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;
+ A bard unrequited--how dreadful a foe!
+ Thy bounty shall add to thy wealth and thy fame;
+ And the _Imnocta-fessa_ is all that I claim.
+
+"Your poem would doubtless be thought a very good one," said the king,
+"if we were able to judge of it; but it is unlike all other poems I have
+ever heard, for I do not in the least understand its sense."
+
+"I will unfold its sense," said Brian.
+
+ To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:
+ Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:
+
+"This means that as the oak excels all the other trees of the forest, so
+dost thou excel all the other kings of the world for greatness,
+nobility, and generosity.
+
+"'_Imnocta-fessa._' _Imnocta_ means 'skin,' and _fessa_ 'a pig.' That is
+to say; thou hast, O king, the skin of a pig, which I desire to get from
+thee as a guerdon for my poetry.
+
+ Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;
+ A bard unrequited--how dreadful a foe!
+
+"_O_ means 'an ear;' that is to say, thou and I shall be ear to ear
+fighting with each other for the skin, if thou give it not of thy own
+free will.
+
+"And that, O king, is the sense of my poem."
+
+"Thy poem would have been a very good one," said the king, "and I would
+have given it due meed of praise if my pig's skin had not been mentioned
+in it. But it is a foolish request of thine, O ferdana,[XLVI.] to ask
+for that skin; for, even though all the poets and men of science of
+Erin, and all the nobles of the whole world were to demand it from me, I
+would refuse it. Nevertheless, thou shalt not pass unrewarded, for I
+will give thee thrice the full of the skin of red gold--one for thyself,
+and one for each of thy brothers."
+
+"Thy ransom is a good one, O king," said Brian; "but I am a near-hearted
+and suspicious man, and I pray thee let me see with my eyes thy servants
+measure the gold, lest they deal unfairly with me."
+
+The king agreed to this; so his servants went with the three sons of
+Turenn to the treasure-room, and one of them drew forth the skin from
+its place, to measure the gold. As soon as Brian caught sight of it, he
+sprang suddenly towards the servant, and, dashing him to the ground with
+his right hand, he snatched the skin with his left, and bound it hastily
+over his shoulders.
+
+Then the three drew their keen swords, and rushed into the banquet hall.
+The king's nobles, seeing how matters stood, surrounded and attacked
+them; but the sons of Turenn, nothing daunted by the number of their
+foes, hewed down the foremost and scattered the rest, so that scarce one
+of the whole party escaped death or deadly wounds.
+
+Then at last Brian and the king met face to face, nor was either slow to
+answer the challenge of the other. They fought as great champions fight,
+and it was long doubtful which should prevail; but the end of the combat
+was, that the king of Greece fell by the overpowering valour of Brian,
+the son of Turenn.
+
+After this victory, the three brothers rested in the palace till they
+had regained their strength, and healed up their wounds by means of the
+apples and the pig's skin; and at the end of three days and three nights
+they found themselves able to undertake the next adventure.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVI.] Ferdana, a poet; literally, "a man of verse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE BLAZING SPEAR OF THE KING OF PERSIA.
+
+
+So, after holding council, they resolved to go to seek the spear of the
+king of Persia; and Brian reminded his brothers that now, as they had
+the apples and the skin to aid them, it would be all the easier to get
+the spear, as well as the rest of the fine.
+
+Leaving now the shores of Greece with all its blue streams, they went on
+board the canoe, which, at Brian's command, flew across the wide seas;
+and soon they made land near the palace of Pezar, king of Persia. And
+seeing how they had fared so well in their last undertaking, they
+resolved to put on the guise of poets this time also.
+
+And so they put the poet's tie on their hair, and, passing through the
+outer gate, they knocked at the door of the palace. The door-keeper
+asked who they were, and from what country they had come.
+
+"We are poets from Erin," answered Brian; "and we have brought a poem
+for the king."
+
+So they were admitted and brought to the presence of the king, who
+seated them among the nobles of his household; and they joined in the
+drinking and the feasting and the revelry.
+
+The king's poets now arose, and chanted their songs for the king and his
+guests. And when the applause had ceased, Brian, speaking softly, said
+to his brothers--
+
+"Arise, now, and chant a poem for the king."
+
+But they answered, "Ask us not to do that which we are unable to do; but
+if you wish us to exercise the art we have learned from our youth, we
+shall do so, namely, the art of fighting and overcoming our foes."
+
+"That would be an unusual way of reciting poetry," said Brian; "but I
+have a poem for the king, and I shall now chant it for him."
+
+So saying, he stood up; and when there was silence, he recited this
+poem--
+
+ In royal state may Pezar ever reign,
+ Like some vast yew tree, monarch of the plain;
+ May Pezar's mystic javelin, long and bright,
+ Bring slaughter to his foes in every fight!
+
+ When Pezar fights and shakes his dreadful spear,
+ Whole armies fly and heroes quake with fear:
+ What shielded foe, what champion can withstand,
+ The blazing spear in mighty Pezar's hand!
+
+"Your poem is a good one," said the king; "but one thing in it I do not
+understand, namely, why you make mention of my spear."
+
+"Because," answered Brian, "I wish to get that spear as a reward for my
+poem."
+
+"That is a very foolish request," said the king, "for no man ever
+escaped punishment who asked me for my spear. And as to your poetry, the
+highest reward I could now bestow on you, and the greatest favour these
+nobles could obtain for you, is that I should spare your life."
+
+Thereupon Brian and his brothers started up in great wrath and drew
+their swords, and the king and his chiefs drew their swords in like
+manner; and they fought a deadly fight. But Brian at last, drawing forth
+one of his apples, and taking sure aim, cast it at the king and struck
+him on the forehead; so that Pezar fell, pierced through the brain.
+
+After this Brian fought on more fiercely than before, dealing
+destruction everywhere around him; but when the chiefs saw that their
+king had fallen, they lost heart and fled through the doors, till at
+length none remained in the banquet hall but the three sons of Turenn.
+
+Then they went to the room where the spear was kept; and they found it
+with its head down deep in a great caldron of water, which hissed and
+bubbled round it. And Brian, seizing it boldly in his hand, drew it
+forth; after which the three brothers left the palace and went to their
+canoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CHARIOT AND STEEDS OF THE KING OF SIGAR.
+
+
+Resting now for some days from their toil, they resolved to seek the
+steeds and chariot of the king of Sigar; for this was the next part of
+the Ildana's eric-fine. So they commanded the canoe, and the canoe,
+obedient to their behest, glided swiftly and smoothly over the green
+waves till they landed in Sigar. Brian bore the great, heavy, venomed
+spear in his hand; and the three brothers were of good heart, seeing how
+they had succeeded in their last quest, and that they had now three
+parts of the fine.
+
+"In what shape think you we should go to this court?" said Brian.
+
+"How should we go," answered the others, "but in our own shapes, namely,
+as three hostile champions, who have come to get the chariot and
+steeds, either by force or by good will?"
+
+"That is not what seems best to me," said Brian. "My counsel is, that we
+go as soldiers from Erin, willing to serve for pay; and should the king
+take us into his service, it is likely we shall find out where the
+chariot and steeds are kept."
+
+His brothers having agreed to this, the three set out for the palace.
+
+It happened that the king was holding a fair-meeting on the broad, level
+green before the palace; and when the three warriors came near, the
+people made way for them. They bowed low to the king; and he asked them
+who they were, and from what part of the world they had come.
+
+"We are valiant soldiers from Erin," they answered, "seeking for service
+and pay among the great kings of the world."
+
+"Do you wish to enter my service?" asked the king: and they answered,
+"Yes." So they made a covenant with each other--the king to place them
+in a post of honour and trust, and they to serve him faithfully, and to
+name their own reward. Whereupon the brothers entered the ranks of the
+king's body-guard.
+
+They remained in the palace for a month and a fortnight, looking round
+and carefully noting everything; but they saw nothing of the chariot and
+steeds. At the end of that time Brian said to his brothers--
+
+"It fares ill with us here, my brothers; for we know nothing of the
+chariot and steeds at this hour, more than when we first came hither."
+
+The others said this was quite true, and asked if he meant to do
+anything in the matter.
+
+"This is what I think we should do," answered Brian. "Let us put on our
+travelling array, and take our arms of valour in our hands; and in this
+fashion let us go before the king, and tell him that unless he shows us
+the chariot and steeds, we shall leave his service."
+
+This they did without delay; and when they had come before the king, he
+asked them why they came to his presence so armed and in travelling
+gear.
+
+"We will tell thee of that, O king," answered Brian. "We are valiant
+soldiers from Erin, and into whatsoever lands we have travelled, we have
+been trusted with the secret counsels of the kings who have taken us
+into their service; and we have been made the guardians of their rarest
+jewels and of all their gifted arms of victory. But as to thee, O king,
+thou hast not so treated us since we came hither; for thou hast a
+chariot and two steeds, which exceed all the chariots and steeds in the
+world, and yet we have never seen them."
+
+"A small thing it is that has caused you to prepare for departure," said
+the king; "and there is, moreover, no need that you should leave my
+service; for I would have shown you those steeds the day you came, had I
+only known that you wished it. But ye shall see them now; for I have
+never had in my service soldiers from a distant land, in whom I and my
+people have placed greater trust than we have placed in you."
+
+He then sent for the steeds, and had them yoked to the chariot--those
+steeds that were as fleet as the clear, cold wind of March, and which
+travelled with equal speed on land and on sea.
+
+Brian, viewing them narrowly, said aloud, "Hear me, O king of Sicily. We
+have served thee faithfully up to this time; and now we wish to name our
+own pay, according to the covenant thou hast made with us. The guerdon
+we demand is yonder chariot and steeds; these we mean to have, and we
+shall ask for nothing more."
+
+But the king, in great wrath, said, "Foolish and luckless men! Ye shall
+certainly die because you have dared to ask for my steeds!"
+
+And the king and his warriors drew their swords, and rushed towards the
+sons of Turenn to seize them.
+
+They, on the other hand, were not taken unaware; and a sore fight began.
+And Brian, watching his opportunity, sprang with a sudden bound into the
+chariot, and, dashing the charioteer to the ground, he seized the reins
+in his left hand; then, raising the venomed spear of Pezar in his right,
+he smote the king with its fiery point in the breast, so that he fell
+dead. And the three brothers dealt red slaughter among the king's
+guards, till those who were not slain scattered and fled in all
+directions. So they fared in this undertaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE SEVEN PIGS OF THE KING OF THE GOLDEN PILLARS.
+
+
+After resting till their wounds were healed, Ur and Urcar asked where
+they should go next.
+
+"We shall go," said Brian, "to Asal, the king of the Golden Pillars, to
+ask him for his seven pigs; for this is the next part of the Ildana's
+eric-fine."
+
+So they set out; and the canoe brought them straightway to the land of
+the Golden Pillars, without delay and without mishap. As they drew nigh
+to the harbour, they saw the shore lined with men all armed. For the
+fame of the deeds of these great champions had begun to be noised
+through many lands; how they had been forced to leave Erin by the hard
+sentence of the Ildana; and how they were seeking and bearing away the
+most precious and gifted jewels of the world to pay the fine. Wherefore
+the king of the Golden Pillars had armed his people, and had sent them
+to guard the harbours.
+
+The king himself came down to the beach to meet them. As soon as they
+had come within speaking distance, he bade them stay their course; and
+then he asked them, in an angry and chiding tone, if they were the three
+champions from Erin, who had overcome and slain so many kings.
+
+Brian answered, "Be not displeased with us, O king for in all this
+matter we are not to blame. The Ildana has demanded a fine which we
+perforce must pay; for we have promised, and the Dedannans are our
+guarantee. If the kings to whom he sent us had given us peaceably the
+precious things we demanded, we would gladly have departed in peace; but
+as they did not, we fought against them, unwillingly indeed and
+overthrew them; for no one has as yet been able to withstand us."
+
+"Tell me now," said the king, "what has brought you to my country?"
+
+"We have come for thy seven pigs," answered Brian; "for they are a part
+of the fine."
+
+"And in what manner do you think ye shall get them?" asked the king.
+
+Brian answered, "Thou hast heard, O king, how the Ildana has brought us
+to these straits, and we must pay him the fine, every jot, or else we
+shall die at the hands of our people. Thou, perchance, wilt have pity on
+our hardships, and give us these pigs in token of kindness and
+friendship, and if so we shall be thankful; but if not, then we will
+fight for them, and either bring them away by force, after slaying thee
+and thy people or fall ourselves in the attempt."
+
+Hearing this, the king and his people went into council; and after
+debating the matter at full length, they thought it best to give the
+pigs peaceably, seeing that no king, however powerful, had as yet been
+able to withstand the sons of Turenn.
+
+The three champions wondered greatly when this was told to them; for in
+no other country had they been able to get any part of the fine without
+battle and hardship, and without leaving much of their blood behind
+them. So they were now very glad; and thanked Asal and his people.
+
+The king then brought them to his palace, and gave them a kind welcome;
+and they were supplied with food and drink to their hearts' desire, and
+slept on soft, downy beds. So they rested after all their weary journeys
+and toils.
+
+When they arose next morning, they were brought to the king's presence,
+and the pigs were given to them; and Brian addressed the king in these
+words--
+
+ The prizes we've brought to this land,
+ We have won them in conflict and blood;
+ But the gift we have sought at thy hand,
+ That gift thou hast freely bestowed.
+
+ The red spear rewarded our deeds,
+ When Pezar the mighty we slew;
+ And the fight for the chariot and steeds,
+ Ah, long shall the Sigarites rue!
+
+ Great Asal! in happier days,
+ When our deeds bring us glory and fame,
+ Green Erin shall echo thy praise,
+ And her poets shall honour thy name!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HOUND-WHELP OF THE KING OF IRODA.
+
+
+"Whither do you go next, ye sons of Turenn?" asked Asal.
+
+"We go," answered Brian, "to Iroda, for Failinis, the king's
+hound-whelp."
+
+"Then grant me this boon," said the king, "namely, that ye let me go
+with you to Iroda. For my daughter is the king's wife; and I will try to
+prevail on him that he give you the hound-whelp freely and without
+battle."
+
+This they agreed to. But the king wished that they should go in his own
+ship; so it was got ready, and they went on board with all their wealth;
+and it is not told how they fared till they reached the borders of
+Iroda. The shores were covered with fierce, armed men, who were there by
+orders of the king to guard the harbour; and these men shouted at the
+crew, warning them to come no farther; for they knew the sons of Turenn,
+and well they knew what they came for.
+
+Asal then requested the three champions to remain where they were for a
+time, while he went on shore to talk with his son-in-law. Accordingly he
+landed, and went to the king, who, after he had welcomed him, asked what
+had brought the sons of Turenn to his country.
+
+"They have come for your hound-whelp," answered Asal.
+
+And the king of Iroda said, "It was an evil counsel you followed, when
+you came with these men to my shores; for to no three champions in the
+world have the gods given such strength or such good luck as that they
+can get my hound-whelp, either by force or by my own free will."
+
+"It will be unwise to refuse them," replied Asal. "They have overpowered
+and slain many great kings; for they have gifted arms that no warrior,
+however powerful, can withstand; and behold, I have come hither to tell
+you what manner of men these are, that you might be advised by me, and
+give them your hound-whelp in peace."
+
+So he pressed him earnestly; but his words were only thrown away on the
+king of Iroda, who spoke scornfully of the sons of Turenn, and refused
+Asal's request with wrathful words.
+
+Asal, much troubled at this, went and told the sons of Turenn how
+matters stood. And they, having without delay put on their battle-dress,
+and taken their arms in their hands, challenged the king of Iroda and
+his people. Then began a very fierce and bloody battle; for though
+nothing could stand before the sons of Turenn, yet the warriors of Iroda
+were many and very brave. So they fought till the two younger brothers
+became separated from Brian, and he was quite surrounded. But as he
+wielded the dreadful spear of Pezar, with its blazing, fiery point, his
+enemies fell back dismayed, and the ranks were broken before him, so
+that those who crossed his path stood in a gap of danger.
+
+At length he espied the king of Iroda, where he fought hedged round by
+spears; and he rushed through the thick of the battle straight towards
+him, striking down spears and swords and men as he went. And now these
+two valiant warriors fought hand to hand a stout and watchful and fierce
+battle--for the others fell back by the king's command; and it was long
+before any advantage was gained on either side. But though to those who
+looked on, Brian seemed the more wrathful of the two, yet he held back
+his hand, so as not to slay his foe; and this it was, indeed, that
+prolonged the combat, for he sought to tire out the king. At length,
+watching his opportunity, Brian closed suddenly, and, seizing the king
+in his strong arms, he lifted him clean off the ground, and bore him to
+where Asal stood. Then, setting him down, he said--
+
+"Behold thy son-in-law; it would have been easier to kill him three
+times over than to bring him to thee once!"
+
+When the people saw their king a prisoner, they ceased fighting; and the
+end of all was that peace was made, and the hound-whelp was given over
+to the sons of Turenn. Then they took their leave, and left the shores
+of Iroda in friendship with the king and with Asal his father-in-law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+RETURN OF THE SONS OF TURENN, WITH PART OF THE ERIC-FINE.
+
+
+Now we shall speak of Luga of the Long Arms. It was revealed to him that
+the sons of Turenn had obtained all those parts of the fine which he
+wanted for the battle of Moytura;[11] but that they had not yet got the
+cooking-spit, or given the three shouts on Midkena's Hill. So he sent
+after them a druidical spell, which, falling on them soon after they had
+left Iroda, caused them to forget the remaining part of the fine, and
+filled them with a longing desire to return to their native home.
+Accordingly they went on board their canoe, bringing with them every
+part of the fine they had gotten already; and the canoe glided swiftly
+over the waves to Erin.
+
+At this time Luga was with the king at a fair-meeting on the plain
+before Tara; and it was made known to him secretly that the sons of
+Turenn had landed at Bruga of the Boyne. He left the assembly anon,
+telling no one; and he went direct to Caher-Crofinn[XLVII.] at Tara,
+and, closing the gates and doors after him, he put on his battle array,
+namely, the smooth Greek armour of Mannanan Mac Lir, and the enchanted
+mantle of the daughter of Flidas.
+
+Soon after, the sons of Turenn were seen approaching; and as they came
+forward, the multitude flocked out to meet them, gazing with wonder at
+the many marvellous things they had brought. When the three champions
+had come to the royal tent, they were joyfully welcomed by the king and
+by the Dedannans in general; and then the king spoke kindly to them, and
+asked if they had brought the eric-fine.
+
+"We have obtained it after much hardship and danger," they replied; "and
+now we wish to know where Luga is, that we may hand it over to him."
+
+The king told them that Luga was at the assembly; but when they sent to
+search for him, he was nowhere to be found.
+
+"I can tell where he is," said Brian. "It has been made known to him
+that we have arrived in Erin, bringing with us gifted arms that none can
+withstand; and he has gone to one of the strongholds of Tara, to avoid
+us, fearing we might use these venomed weapons against himself."
+
+Messengers were then sent to Luga to tell him that the sons of Turenn
+had arrived, and to ask him to come forth to the meeting, that they
+might give him the fine.
+
+But he answered, "I will not come to the meeting yet; but go ye back,
+and tell the sons of Turenn to give the fine to the king for me."
+
+The messengers returned with this answer; and the sons of Turenn gave to
+the king for Luga all the wonderful things they had brought, keeping,
+however their own arms; after which the whole company went into the
+palace.
+
+When Luga was told how matters stood, he came to where the king and all
+the others were; and the king gave him the fine. Then Luga, looking
+narrowly at everything that had been given up to him, said--
+
+"Here, indeed, is an eric enough to pay for any one that ever yet was
+slain, or that shall be slain to the end of time. But yet there is one
+kind of fine that must be paid to the last farthing, namely, an
+eric-fine; for of this it is not lawful to hold back even the smallest
+part. And moreover, O king, thou and the Dedannans whom I see here
+present, are guarantees for the full payment of my eric-fine. Now I see
+here the three apples, and the skin of the pig, and the fiery-headed
+spear, and the chariot and steeds, and the seven pigs, and the
+hound-whelp; but where, ye sons of Turenn, is the cooking-spit of the
+women of Fincara? And I have not heard that ye have given the three
+shouts on Midkena's Hill."
+
+On hearing this, the sons of Turenn fell into a faintness like the
+faintness before death. And when they had recovered they answered not
+one word, but left the assembly and went to their father's house. To him
+and their sister Ethnea they told all that had befallen them; and how
+they should set out on another quest, as they had forgotten part of the
+eric-fine through the spells of Luga.
+
+At this Turenn was overwhelmed with grief; and Ethnea wept in great
+fear and sorrow. And so they passed that night. Next day, they went down
+to the shore, and their father and sister went with them to their ship,
+and bade them farewell.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVII.] Caher-Crofinn, otherwise called Rath-ree, the principal
+fortress at Tara, the remains of which are still to be seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE COOKING-SPIT OF THE WOMEN OF FINCARA.
+
+
+Then they went on board their ship--for they had Mannanan's canoe no
+longer--and they sailed forth on the green billowy sea to search for the
+Island of Fincara. For a whole quarter of a year they wandered hither
+and thither over the wide ocean, landing on many shores and inquiring of
+all they met; yet they were not able to get the least tidings of the
+island.
+
+At last, they came across one very old man, who told them that he had
+heard of the Island of Fincara in the days of his youth; and that it lay
+not on the surface, but down deep in the waters, for it was sunk beneath
+the waves by a spell in times long past.[13]
+
+Then Brian put on his water-dress, with his helmet of transparent
+crystal on his head, and, telling his brothers to await his return, he
+leaped over the side of the ship, and sank at once out of sight. He
+walked about for a fortnight down in the green salt sea, seeking for
+the Island of Fincara; and at last he found it.
+
+There were many houses on the island; but one he saw larger and grander
+than the rest. To this he straightway bent his steps, and found it open.
+On entering, he saw in one large room a great number of beautiful
+ladies, busily employed at all sorts of embroidery and needlework; and
+in their midst was a long, bright cooking-spit lying on a table.
+
+Without speaking a word, he walked straight to the table, and, seizing
+the spit in one hand, he turned round and walked towards the door. The
+women neither spoke nor moved, but each had her eyes fixed on him from
+the moment he entered, admiring his manly form, his beauty, and his
+fearlessness; but when they saw him about to walk off with the spit,
+they all burst out laughing; and one, who seemed chief among them,
+said--
+
+"Thou hast attempted a bold deed, O son of Turenn! Know that there are
+thrice fifty warlike women here, and that the weakest among us would be
+able of herself to prevent thee taking this cooking-spit, even if thy
+two brothers were here to help thee. But thou art a brave and courageous
+champion, else thou wouldst not have attempted, unaided, to take it by
+force, knowing the danger. And for thy boldness and valour, and for the
+comeliness of thy person, we will let thee take this one, for we have
+many others besides."
+
+So Brian, after thanking them, brought away the spit joyfully, and
+sought his ship.
+
+Ur and Urcar waited for Brian in the same spot the whole time, and when
+he came not, they began to fear that he would return no more. With these
+thoughts they were at last about to leave the place, when they saw the
+glitter of his crystal helmet down deep in the water, and immediately
+after he came to the surface with the cooking-spit in his hand. They
+brought him on board, and now all felt very joyful and courageous of
+heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE THREE SHOUTS ON MIDKENA'S HILL.
+
+
+The three brothers next sailed away towards the north of Lochlann, and
+never abated speed till they moored their vessel near the Hill of
+Midkena, which rose smooth and green over the sea-shore. When Midkena
+saw them approaching, he knew them at once, and, coming towards them
+armed for battle, he addressed them aloud--
+
+"You it was that slew Kian, my friend and pupil; and now come forth and
+fight, for you shall not leave these shores till you answer for his
+death."
+
+Brian, in no degree daunted by the fierce look and threatening speech of
+Midkena, sprang ashore, and the two heroes attacked each other with
+great fury. When the three sons of Midkena heard the clash of arms,
+they came forth, and, seeing how matters stood, they rushed down to aid
+their father; but just as they arrived at the shore, Midkena fell dead,
+cloven through helmet and head by the heavy sword of Brian.
+
+And now a fight began, three on each side; and if men were afar off,
+even in the land of Hisberna, in the east of the world, they would
+willingly come the whole way to see this battle, so fierce and haughty
+were the minds of those mighty champions, so skilful and active were
+they in the use of their weapons, so numerous and heavy were their
+blows, and so long did they continue to fight without either party
+giving way. The three sons of Turenn were at last dreadfully
+wounded--wounded almost to death. But neither fear nor weakness did this
+cause them, for their valour and their fury arose all the more for their
+wounds, and with one mighty onset they drove their spears through the
+bodies of their foes; and the sons of Midkena fell before them into the
+long sleep of death.
+
+But now that the fight was ended, and the battle-fury of the victors had
+passed off--now it was that they began to feel the effects of their
+wounds. They threw themselves full length on the blood-stained sward,
+and long they remained without moving or speaking a word, as if they
+were dead; and a heavy curtain of darkness fell over their eyes.
+
+At last Brian, raising his head, spoke to his brothers to know if they
+lived, and when they answered him feebly, he said--
+
+"My dear brothers, let us now arise and give the three shouts on the
+hill while there is time, for I feel the signs of death."
+
+But they were not able to rise.
+
+Then Brian, gathering all his remaining strength, stood up and lifted
+one with each hand, while his own blood flowed plentifully; and then
+they raised three feeble shouts on Midkena's Hill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+RETURN AND DEATH OF THE SONS OF TURENN.
+
+
+Making no further delay, he led them to their ship, and they set sail
+for Erin. While they were yet far off, Brian, gazing over the sea
+towards the west, suddenly cried out--
+
+"Lo, I see Ben Edar[XLVIII.] yonder, rising over the waters; and I see
+also Dun Turenn farther towards the north."
+
+And Ur answered from where he reclined with Urcar on the deck, "If we
+could but get one sight of Ben Edar methinks we should regain our health
+and strength; and as thou lovest us, and as thou lovest thy own renown,
+my brother, come and raise our heads and rest them on thy breast, that
+we may see Erin once more. After that, we shall welcome either life or
+death."
+
+ UR.
+
+ O brother, torch of valour, strong of hand,
+ Come, place our weary heads upon thy breast;
+ And let us look upon our native land,
+ Before we sink to everlasting rest!
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ Belovèd sons of Turenn, woe is me!
+ My wounds are deep, my day of strength is past;
+ Yet not for this I grieve, but that I see
+ Your lives, my noble brothers, ebbing fast!
+
+ UR.
+
+ Would we could give our lives to purchase thine;
+ Ah, gladly would we die to ease thy pain!
+ For art thou not the pride of Turenn's line,
+ The noblest champion of green Erin's plain?
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ That mighty Dannan healer, Dianket;[XLIX.]
+ Or Midac, who excelled his sire in skill;
+ The maiden-leech, Armedda, mightier yet,
+ Who knew the herbs to cure, the herbs to kill:
+
+ Oh, were they here; or had we now at hand
+ Those gifted apples from the distant East;
+ Then might we hope to reach our native land,
+ And live again in joy and peace and rest!
+
+ UR.
+
+ Brother, methinks could we but see once more
+ Ben Edar's slopes, or Bregia's[L.] dewy plain,
+ Tailltenn,[LI.] or Bruga's[LII.] mystic mansion hoar,
+ Our blood would course in health and strength again.
+
+ Or let us once behold our father's home,
+ Or winding Liffey down by Ahaclee,[LIII.]
+ Old Frevan's hill,[LIV.] or Tara's[LV.] regal dome;
+ Then welcome death or life, whiche'er may be!
+
+So Brian raised their heads and rested them on his breast, and they
+gazed on the rocky cliffs and green slopes of Ben Edar while the ship
+wafted slowly towards land.
+
+Soon after this they landed on the north side of Ben Edar, from which
+they made their way slowly to Dun Turenn. And when they had reached the
+green in front of the house, Brian cried out--
+
+"Father, dear father, come forth to thy children!"
+
+Turenn came forth and saw his sons all wounded and pale and feeble.
+
+And Brian said, "Go, beloved father--go quick to Tara, and quickly
+return. Bring this cooking-spit to Luga, and tell him that we have given
+the three shouts on Midkena's Hill. Say that we have now paid the full
+eric-fine, and bring back from him the apples of the Garden of Hisberna,
+to heal our wounds, else we die."
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ Father, our wounds are deadly; nought can save
+ Thy children's lives but Luga's friendly hand:
+ Go, seek him, father--fare thee fast--and crave
+ The healing apples from Hisberna's land!
+
+ TURENN.
+
+ In vain, my sons, ye seek to fly your doom;
+ The stern Ildana's mind too well I know:
+ Alas! far liefer would he see your tomb,
+ Than all the treasures all this world could show!
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ But he is just; and though his sire we slew,
+ Have we not paid full eric for the deed?
+ The great Ildana is our kinsman too,
+ And will relent in this our time of need.
+
+ Then go, my father, thou art swift and strong;
+ Speed like the wind--why linger here to mourn?
+ Go straight to Luga's home, nor tarry long;
+ Or, father, we shall die ere thou return!
+
+Turenn set out and travelled like the wind till he reached Tara, where
+he found Luga.
+
+He gave him the cooking-spit, and said, "Behold, my three sons have now
+paid thee the full eric-fine, for they have given the three shouts on
+Midkena's Hill. But they are wounded even unto death; and now give me,
+I pray thee, the apples from the Garden of Hisberna, to cure them, else
+they die."
+
+But Luga refused, and turned away from Turenn.
+
+Turenn hastened back to his sons with a sorrowful heart, and told them
+that he had failed to get the apples.
+
+Then Brian said, "Take me with thee to Tara. I will see him, and
+perchance he may have pity on us, and give us the apples."
+
+And it was done so. But when Brian begged for the apples, Luga said--
+
+"I will not give them to thee. If thou shouldst offer me the full of the
+whole earth of gold, I would not give them to thee. Thou and thy
+brothers committed a wicked and pitiless deed when you slew my father.
+For that deed you must suffer, and with nothing short of your death
+shall I be content."
+
+ For the blood that you spilled,
+ For the hero you killed--
+ The deed is avenged, and your doom is fulfilled!
+
+Brian turned away and went back to his brothers, and, lying down between
+them, his life departed; and his brothers died at the same moment.
+
+Then their father and their sister stood hand in hand over their bodies,
+lamenting. And Turenn spoke this lay--
+
+ Oh, pulseless is my heart this woful hour,
+ My strength is gone, my joy for ever fled;
+ Three noble champions, Erin's pride and power,
+ My three fair youths, my children, cold and dead!
+
+ Mild Ur, the fair-haired; Urcar, straight and tall;
+ The kings of Banba[LVI.] worthy both to be;
+ And Brian, bravest, noblest, best of all,
+ Who conquered many lands beyond the sea:
+
+ Lo, I am Turenn, your unhappy sire,
+ Mourning with feeble voice above your grave;
+ No life, no wealth, no honours I desire;
+ A place beside my sons is all I crave!
+
+After this Turenn and Ethnea fell on the bodies of the three young
+heroes and died.
+
+And they were all buried in one grave.
+
+
+This is the story of the Fate of the Children of Turenn.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVIII.] Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin. Dun Turenn, the
+fortress of their father Turenn.
+
+[XLIX.] Dianket, the great Dedannan physician. His son Midac and his
+daughter Armedda were still more skilful than their father. (See note 1
+at the end.)
+
+[L.] Bregia, the plain lying between the Liffey and the Boyne.
+
+[LI.] Tailltenn, now Teltown, on the Blackwater, about midway between
+Navan and Kells, in Meath. Here annual meetings were held from the most
+ancient times, on the first of August, and for some days before and
+after, at which games were celebrated, like the Olympic games of Greece.
+
+[LII.] Bruga on the Boyne, where Angus or Mac Indoc, the great Dedannan
+enchanter, had his "mystic mansion hoar." (See note 1 at the end.)
+
+[LIII.] Ahaclee, the old name of Dublin.
+
+[LIV.] Frevan, now the hill of Frewen, rising over Lough Owei, near
+Mullingar, where the ancient Irish kings had one of their palaces.
+
+[LV.] Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the Irish kings.
+
+[LVI.] Banba, one of the ancient names of Ireland.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH,
+
+AND THE
+
+STORY OF LIBAN THE MERMAID.
+
+
+In the days of old a good king ruled over Muman,[LVII.] whose name was
+Marid Mac Carido. He had two sons, Ecca and Rib. Ecca was restless and
+unruly, and in many ways displeased the king; and he told his brother
+Rib that he had made up his mind to leave his home, and win lands for
+himself in some far off part of the country. Rib tried hard to dissuade
+him; but though this delayed his departure for a while, he was none the
+less bent on going.
+
+At last Ecca, being wrought upon by his stepmother Ebliu (from whom
+Slieve Eblinne[LVIII.] was afterwards named), did a grievous wrong to
+his father, and fled from Muman with all his people; and his brother Rib
+and his stepmother Ebliu went with him. Ten hundred men they were in
+all, besides women and children; and they turned their faces towards
+the north.
+
+After they had travelled for some time, their druids[3] told them that
+it was not fated for them to settle in the same place; and accordingly,
+when they had come to the Pass of the two Pillar Stones, they parted.
+
+Rib and his people turned to the west, and they journeyed till they came
+to the plain of Arbthenn. And there the water of a fountain burst forth
+over the land, and drowned them all; and a great lake was formed, which
+to this day is called the Lake of Rib.[LIX.]
+
+Ecca continued his journey northwards; and he and his people fared
+slowly on till they came near to Bruga[LX.] of the Boyne, the palace of
+Mac Indoc, where they were fain to rest. No sooner had they halted, than
+a tall man came forth from the palace, namely, Angus Mac Indoc of the
+Bruga, son of the Dagda, and commanded them to leave the place without
+delay. But they, being spent with the toil of travel, heeded not his
+words, and, pitching their tents, they rested on the plain before the
+palace. Whereupon Angus, being wroth that his commands were unheeded,
+killed all their horses that night.
+
+Next day, he came forth again, and he said to them, "Your horses I slew
+last night; and now, unless ye depart from this place, I will slay your
+people to-night."
+
+And Ecca said to him, "Much evil hast thou done to us already, for thou
+hast killed all our horses. And now we cannot go, even though we desire
+it, for without horses we cannot travel."
+
+Then Angus brought to them a very large horse in full harness, and they
+put all their goods on him. And when they were about to go, he said to
+them--
+
+"Beware that ye keep this great steed walking continually; not even a
+moment's rest shall ye give him, otherwise he will certainly be the
+cause of your death."[14]
+
+After this they set out again, on a Sunday in the mid-month of autumn,
+and travelled on till they reached the Plain of the Grey Copse,[LXI.]
+where they intended to abide. They gathered then round the great steed
+to take their luggage off him, and each was busy seeing after his own
+property, so that they forgot to keep the horse moving. And the moment
+he stood still, a magic well sprang up beneath his feet.[14]
+
+Now Ecca, when he saw the well spring up, was troubled, remembering
+Angus's warning. And he caused a house to be built round it, and near it
+he built his palace, for the better security. And he chose a woman to
+take care of the well, charging her strictly to keep the door locked,
+except when the people of the palace came for water.
+
+After that the King of Ulad,[LXII.] that is to say, Muridach, the son
+of Fiaca Findamnas (who was grandson of Conal Carna of the Red
+Branch[15]) came against Ecca to drive him forth from Ulad. But Ecca
+made a stout fight, so that he won the lordship of half of Ulad from
+Muridach. And after that his people settled down on the Plain of the
+Grey Copse.
+
+Now Ecca had two daughters, Ariu and Liban, of whom Ariu was the wife of
+Curnan the Simpleton. And Curnan went about among the people,
+foretelling that a lake would flow over them from the well, and urging
+them earnestly to make ready their boats.
+
+ Come forth, come forth, ye valiant men; build boats, and build ye fast!
+ I see the water surging out, a torrent deep and vast;
+ I see our chief and all his host o'erwhelmed beneath the wave;
+ And Ariu, too, my best beloved, alas! I cannot save.
+ But Liban east and west shall swim
+ Long ages on the ocean's rim,
+ By mystic shores and islets dim,
+ And down in the deep sea cave!
+
+And he ceased not to warn all he met, repeating this verse continually;
+but the people gave no heed to the words of the Simpleton.
+
+Now the woman who had charge of the well, on a certain occasion forgot
+to close the door, so that the spell was free to work evil. And
+immediately the water burst forth over the plain, and formed a great
+lake, namely the Lake of the Copse. And Ecca and all his family and all
+his folk were drowned, save only his daughter Liban, and Conang, and
+Curnan the Simpleton. And they buried Ariu, and raised a mound over her,
+which is called from her Carn-Arenn.
+
+Of Conang nothing more is told. But as to Curnan, he died of grief after
+his wife Ariu; and he was buried in a mound, which is called Carn-Curnan
+to this day in memory of him.
+
+And thus the great Lake of the Copse was formed, which is now called
+Lough Necca,[LXIII.] in memory of Ecca, the son of Marid. And it was the
+overflow of this lake which, more than all other causes, scattered the
+Ultonians over Erin.
+
+Now as to Liban. She also was swept away like the others; but she was
+not drowned. She lived for a whole year with her lap-dog, in her chamber
+beneath the lake, and God protected her from the water. At the end of
+the year she was weary; and when she saw the speckled salmon swimming
+and playing all round her, she prayed and said--
+
+"O my Lord, I wish I were a salmon, that I might swim with the others
+through the clear green sea!"
+
+And at the words she took the shape of a salmon, except her face and
+breast, which did not change. And her lap-dog was changed to an otter,
+and attended her afterwards whithersoever she went, as long as she lived
+in the sea.
+
+And so she remained swimming about from sea to sea for three hundred
+years; that is to say, from the time of Ecca, the son of Marid, to the
+time of Comgall of Bangor.[16]
+
+Now on one occasion, Comgall sent Beoc, the son of Indli, from Bangor
+to Rome, to talk with Gregory[LXIV.] concerning some matters of order
+and rule. And when Beoc's curragh[17] was sailing over the sea, he and
+his crew heard sweet singing in the waters beneath them, as it were the
+chanting of angels.
+
+And Beoc, having listened for a while, looked down into the water, and
+asked what the chant was for, and who it was that sang.
+
+And Liban answered, "I am Liban, the daughter of Ecca, son of Marid; and
+it is I who sang the chant thou hast heard."
+
+"Why art thou here?" asked Beoc.
+
+And she replied, "Lo, I have lived for three hundred years beneath the
+sea; and I have come hither to fix a day and a place of meeting with
+thee. I shall now go westward; and I beseech thee, for the sake of the
+holy men of Dalaradia,[LXV.] to come to Inver Ollarba[LXVI.] to meet me,
+on this same day at the end of a year. Say also to Comgall and to the
+other holy men of Bangor, all that I say to thee. Come with thy boats
+and thy fishing-nets, and thou shalt take me from the waters in which I
+have lived."
+
+"I shall not grant thee the boon thou askest," said Beoc, "unless thou
+give me a reward."
+
+"What reward dost thou seek?" asked Liban.
+
+"That thou be buried in one grave with me in my own monastery,"
+answered Beoc.
+
+"That shall be granted to thee," said Liban.
+
+Beoc then went on his way to Rome. And when he had returned, he related
+to Comgall and to the other saints of the monastery at Bangor, the story
+of the mermaid. And now the end of the year was nigh.
+
+Then they made ready their nets, and on the day appointed they went in
+their boats to Inver Ollarba, a goodly company of the saints of Erin.
+And Liban was caught in the net of Fergus of Miluc:[LXVII.] and her head
+and shoulders were those of a maiden, but she had the body of a fish.
+
+Now the boat in which she was brought to land was kept half full of sea
+water, in which she remained swimming about. And many came to see her;
+and all were filled with wonder when they saw her strange shape and
+heard her story.
+
+Among the rest came the chief of the tribe of Hua-Conang, wearing a
+purple cloak; and she kept gazing at him earnestly. The young chief,
+seeing this, said to her--
+
+"Dost thou wish to have this cloak? If so, I will give it to thee
+willingly."
+
+But she answered, "Not so: I desire not thy cloak. But it brings to my
+mind my father Ecca; for on the day he was drowned, he wore a cloak of
+purple like thine. But may good luck be on thee for thy gentleness, and
+on him who shall come after thee in thy place; and in every assembly
+where thy successor sits, may he be known to all without inquiry."
+
+After that there came up a large-bodied, dark-visaged, fierce hero, and
+killed her lap-dog. Whereupon she was grieved; and she told him that the
+heroism of himself and his tribe should be stained by the baseness of
+their minds, and that they should not be able to defend themselves
+against injuries till they should do penance, by fasting, for her sake.
+
+Then the warrior repented what he had done, and humbled himself before
+her.
+
+And now there arose a contention about her, as to whom she should
+belong. Comgall said she was his, forasmuch as she was caught in his
+territory. But Fergus urged that she belonged to him by right, as it was
+in his net she was taken. And Beoc said he had the best right of all to
+her, on account of the promise she had made to him.
+
+And as no one could settle the dispute, these three saints fasted and
+prayed that God would give a judgment between them, to show who should
+own Liban.
+
+And an angel said to one of the company, "Two wild oxen will come hither
+to-morrow from Carn-Arenn, that is to say, from the grave-mound of
+Liban's sister, Ariu. Yoke a chariot to them, and place the mermaid in
+it; and into whatsoever territory they shall bring her, she shall remain
+with the owner thereof."
+
+The oxen came on the morrow, as the angel had foretold. And when they
+were yoked, and when Liban was placed in the chariot, they brought her
+straightway to Beoc's church, namely to Tec-Da-Beoc.
+
+Then the saints gave her a choice--either to die immediately after
+baptism, and go to heaven; or to live on earth as long as she had lived
+in the sea, and then to go to heaven after these long ages. And the
+choice she took was to die immediately. Whereupon Comgall baptised her;
+and he gave her the name of Murgen, that is, "Sea-born," or Murgelt,
+that is "Mermaid."
+
+And she is counted among the holy virgins, and held in honour and
+reverence, as God ordained for her in heaven; and wonders and miracles
+are performed through her means at Tec-Da-Beoc.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LVII.] Muman, _i.e._ Munster.
+
+[LVIII.] Slieve Eblinne, now Slieve Eelim or Slieve Phelim, in
+Tipperary, sometimes called the Twelve Hills of Evlinn. "Eblinne" is the
+genitive of "Ebliu."
+
+[LIX.] Now Lough Ree, on the Shannon.
+
+[LX.] See note, page 62; see also note 1 at the end of the book.
+
+[LXI.] The Plain of the Grey Copse, according to the legend, was the
+name of the plain now covered by Lough Neagh.
+
+[LXII.] Ulad, _i.e._ Ulster.
+
+[LXIII.] Lough Necca, now Lough Neagh.
+
+[LXIV.] Gregory, _i.e._ Pope Gregory.
+
+[LXV.] Dalaradia, the old name of a territory which included the
+southern half of the county Antrim and a part of Down.
+
+[LXVI.] Inver Ollarba, _i.e._ the _inver_, or mouth of the river
+Ollarba, which was the ancient name of the Larne Water, in Antrim.
+
+[LXVII.] Miluc, or Meelick, the name of an ancient ecclesiastical
+establishment in the county Antrim. See "Ecclesiastical Antiquities of
+Down, Connor, and Dromore" (page 3), by the Rev. William Reeves, M.B.,
+M.R.I.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR, AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.
+
+
+Connla of the Golden Hair was the son of Conn the Hundred-fighter.[18]
+One day as he stood with his father on the royal Hill of Usna,[LXVIII.]
+he saw a lady a little way off, very beautiful, and dressed in strange
+attire. She approached the spot where he stood; and when she was near,
+he spoke to her, and asked who she was, and from what place she had
+come.
+
+The lady replied, "I have come from the Land of the Living[19]--a land
+where there is neither death nor old age, nor any breach of law. The
+inhabitants of earth call us Aes-shee,[19] for we have our dwellings
+within large, pleasant, green hills. We pass our time very pleasantly in
+feasting and harmless amusements, never growing old; and we have no
+quarrels or contentions."
+
+The king and his company marvelled very much; for though they heard this
+conversation, no one saw the lady except Connla alone.
+
+"Who is this thou art talking to, my son?" said the king.
+
+And anon she answered for the youth, "Connla is speaking with a lovely,
+noble-born young lady, who will never die, and who will never grow old.
+I love Connla of the Golden Hair, and I have come to bring him with me
+to Moy-mell,[19] the plain of never-ending pleasure. On the day that he
+comes with me he shall be made king; and he shall reign for ever in
+Fairyland, without weeping and without sorrow. Come with me, O gentle
+Connla of the ruddy cheek, the fair, freckled neck, and the golden hair!
+Come with me, beloved Connla, and thou shalt retain the comeliness and
+dignity of thy form, free from the wrinkles of old age, till the awful
+day of judgment!"
+
+ Thy flowing golden hair, thy comely face,
+ Thy tall majestic form of peerless grace,
+ That show thee sprung from Conn's exalted race.
+
+King Conn the Hundred-fighter, being much troubled, called then on his
+druid,[3] Coran, to put forth his power against the witchery of the
+banshee[19]--
+
+"O Coran of the mystic arts and of the mighty incantations, here is a
+contest such as I have never been engaged in since I was made king at
+Tara--a contest with an invisible lady, who is beguiling my son to
+Fairyland by her baleful charms. Her cunning is beyond my skill, and I
+am not able to withstand her power; and if thou, Coran, help not, my son
+will be taken away from me by the wiles and witchery of a woman from the
+fairy hills."
+
+Coran, the druid, then came forward, and began to chant against the
+voice of the lady. And his power was greater than hers for that time, so
+that she was forced to retire.
+
+As she was going away she threw an apple to Connla, who straightway lost
+sight of her; and the king and his people no longer heard her voice.
+
+The king and the prince returned with their company to the palace; and
+Connla remained for a whole month without tasting food or drink, except
+the apple. And though he ate of it each day, it was never lessened, but
+was as whole and perfect in the end as at the beginning. Moreover, when
+they offered him aught else to eat or drink, he refused it; for while he
+had his apple he did not deem any other food worthy to be tasted. And he
+began to be very moody and sorrowful, thinking of the lovely fairy
+maiden.
+
+At the end of the month, as Connla stood by his father's side among the
+nobles, on the Plain of Arcomin, he saw the same lady approaching him
+from the west. And when she had come near, she addressed him in this
+manner--
+
+"A glorious seat, indeed, has Connla among wretched, short-lived
+mortals, awaiting the dreadful stroke of death! But now, the
+ever-youthful people of Moy-mell, who never feel old age, and who fear
+not death, seeing thee day by day among thy friends, in the assemblies
+of thy Fatherland, love thee with a strange love; and they will make
+thee king over them if thou wilt come with me."
+
+When the king heard the words of the lady, he commanded his people to
+call the druid again to him, saying--
+
+"Bring my druid, Coran, to me; for I see that the fairy lady has this
+day regained the power of her voice."
+
+At this the lady said, "Valiant Conn, fighter of a hundred, the faith of
+the druids has come to little honour among the upright, mighty,
+numberless people of this land. When the righteous law shall be
+restored, it will seal up the lips of the false, black demon; and his
+druids shall no longer have power to work their guileful spells."
+
+Now the king observed, and marvelled greatly, that whenever the lady was
+present, his son never spoke one word to any one, nay, even though they
+addressed him many times. And when the lady had ceased to speak, the
+king said--
+
+"Connla, my son, has thy mind been moved by the words of the lady?"
+
+Connla spoke then, and replied, "Father, I am very unhappy; for though I
+love my people beyond all, yet I am filled with sadness on account of
+this lady!"
+
+When Connla had said this, the maiden again addressed him, and chanted
+these words in a very sweet voice--
+
+
+THE CHANT OF THE FAIRY MAIDEN TO CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR.
+
+ I.
+
+ A land of youth, a land of rest,
+ A land from sorrow free;
+ It lies far off in the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea.
+ A swift canoe of crystal bright,
+ That never met mortal view--
+ We shall reach the land ere fall of night,
+ In that strong and swift canoe:
+ We shall reach the strand
+ Of that sunny land,
+ From druids and demons free;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ II.
+
+ A pleasant land of winding vales, bright streams, and verdurous plains,
+ Where summer all the live-long year, in changeless splendour reigns;
+ A peaceful land of calm delight, of everlasting bloom;
+ Old age and death we never know, no sickness, care, or gloom;
+ The land of youth,
+ Of love and truth,
+ From pain and sorrow free;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ III.
+
+ There are strange delights for mortal men in that island of the west;
+ The sun comes down each evening in its lovely vales to rest;
+ And though far and dim
+ On the ocean's rim
+ It seems to mortal view,
+ We shall reach its halls
+ Ere the evening falls,
+ In my strong and swift canoe;
+ And ever more
+ That verdant shore
+ Our happy home shall be;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ IV.
+
+ It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair,
+ It will guard thee from the druids, from the demons of the air;
+ My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that western shore,
+ Where thou and I in joy and love shall live for evermore:
+ From the druid's incantation,
+ From his black and deadly snare,
+ From the withering imprecation
+ Of the demon of the air,
+ It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair:
+ My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that silver strand
+ Where thou shalt reign in endless joy, the king of the Fairy-land!
+ [LXIX.]
+
+When the maiden had ended her chant, Connla suddenly walked away from
+his father's side, and sprang into the curragh, the gleaming,
+straight-gliding, strong, crystal canoe. The king and his people saw
+them afar off and dimly, moving away over the bright sea towards the
+sunset. They gazed sadly after them, till they lost sight of the canoe
+over the utmost verge; and no one can tell whither they went, for Connla
+was never again seen in his native land.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXVIII.] Hill of Usna. (See note, page 37.)
+
+[LXIX.] This is an expansion, rather than a translation, of the
+original, which is very short, and in some places very obscure.
+
+
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+AN ACCOUNT OF THE ADVENTURES OF MAILDUN AND HIS CREW, AND OF THE
+WONDERFUL THINGS THEY SAW DURING THEIR VOYAGE OF THREE YEARS AND SEVEN
+MONTHS, IN THEIR CURRAGH,[17] ON THE WESTERN SEA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+MAILDUN'S CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH. HE BEGINS HIS VOYAGE IN QUEST OF THE
+PLUNDERERS WHO SLEW HIS FATHER.
+
+
+There was once an illustrious man of the tribe of Owenaght[LXX.] of
+Ninus, Allil Ocar Aga by name, a goodly hero, and lord of his own tribe
+and territory. One time, when he was in his house unguarded, a fleet of
+plunderers landed on the coast, and spoiled his territory. The chief
+fled for refuge to the church of Dooclone; but the spoilers followed him
+thither, slew him, and burned the church over his head.
+
+Not long after Allil's death, a son was born to him. The child's mother
+gave him the name of Maildun; and, wishing to conceal his birth, she
+brought him to the queen of that country, who was her dear friend. The
+queen took him to her, and gave out that he was her own child, and he
+was brought up with the king's sons, slept in the same cradle with them,
+and was fed from the same breast and from the same cup. He was a very
+lovely child; and the people who saw him thought it doubtful if there
+was any other child living at the time equally beautiful.
+
+As he grew up to be a young man, the noble qualities of his mind
+gradually unfolded themselves. He was high-spirited and generous, and he
+loved all sorts of manly exercises. In ball-playing, in running and
+leaping, in throwing the stone, in chess-playing, in rowing, and in
+horse-racing, he surpassed all the youths that came to the king's
+palace, and won the palm in every contest.
+
+One day, when the young men were at their games, a certain youth among
+them grew envious of Maildun; and he said, in an angry and haughty tone
+of voice--
+
+"It is a cause of much shame to us that we have to yield in every game,
+whether of skill or of strength, whether on land or on water, to an
+obscure youth, of whom no one can tell who is his father or his mother,
+or what race or tribe he belongs to."
+
+On hearing this, Maildun ceased at once from play; for until that moment
+he believed that he was the son of the king of the Owenaght, and of the
+queen who had nursed him. And going anon to the queen, he told her what
+had happened; and he said to her--
+
+"If I am not thy son, I will neither eat nor drink till thou tell me who
+my father and mother are."
+
+She tried to soothe him, and said, "Why do you worry yourself searching
+after this matter? Give no heed to the words of this envious youth. Am I
+not a mother to you? And in all this country, is there any mother who
+loves her son better than I love you?"
+
+He answered, "All this is quite true; yet I pray thee let me know who my
+parents are."
+
+The queen then, seeing that he would not be put off, brought him to his
+mother, and put him into her hands. And when he had spoken with her, he
+asked her to tell him who his father was.
+
+"You are bent on a foolish quest, my child," she said; "for even if you
+knew all about your father, the knowledge would bring neither advantage
+nor happiness to you; for he died before you were born."
+
+"Even so," he replied, "I wish to know who he was."
+
+So his mother told him the truth, saying, "Your father was Allil Ocar
+Aga, of the tribe of Owenaght of Ninus."
+
+Maildun then set out for his father's territory; and his three foster
+brothers, namely, the king's three sons, who were noble and handsome
+youths like himself, went with him. When the people of his tribe found
+out that the strange youth was the son of their chief, whom the
+plunderers had slain years before, and when they were told that the
+three others were the king's sons, they gave them all a joyful welcome,
+feasting them, and showing them much honour; so that Maildun was made
+quite happy, and soon forgot all the abasement and trouble he had
+undergone.
+
+Some time after this, it happened that a number of young people were in
+the churchyard of Dooclone--the same church in which Maildun's father
+had been slain--exercising themselves in casting a hand-stone. The game
+was to throw the stone clear over the charred roof of the church that
+had been burned; and Maildun was there contending among the others. A
+foul-tongued fellow named Brickna, a servant of the people who owned the
+church, was standing by; and he said to Maildun--
+
+"It would better become you to avenge the man who was burned to death
+here, than to be amusing yourself casting a stone over his bare, burnt
+bones."
+
+"Who was he?" inquired Maildun.
+
+"Allil Ocar Aga, your father," replied the other.
+
+"Who slew him?" asked Maildun.
+
+"Plunderers from a fleet slew him and burned him in this church,"
+replied Brickna; "and the same plunderers are still sailing in the same
+fleet."
+
+Maildun was disturbed and sad after hearing this. He dropped the stone
+that he held in his hand, folded his cloak round him, and buckled on his
+shield. And he left the company, and began to inquire of all he met, the
+road to the plunderers' ships. For a long time he could get no tidings
+of them; but at last some persons, who knew where the fleet lay, told
+him that it was a long way off, and that there was no reaching it except
+by sea.
+
+Now Maildun was resolved to find out these plunderers, and to avenge on
+them the death of his father. So he went without delay into
+Corcomroe,[LXXI.] to the druid[3] Nuca, to seek his advice about
+building a curragh, and to ask also for a charm to protect him, both
+while building it, and while sailing on the sea afterwards.
+
+The druid gave him full instructions. He told him the day he should
+begin to build his curragh, and the exact day on which he was to set out
+on his voyage; and he was very particular about the number of the crew,
+which, he said, was to be sixty chosen men, neither more nor less.
+
+So Maildun built a large triple-hide curragh,[17] following the druid's
+directions in every particular, chose his crew of sixty, among whom were
+his two friends, Germane and Diuran Lekerd; and on the day appointed put
+out to sea.
+
+When he had got only a very little way from the land, he saw his three
+foster brothers running down to the shore, signalling and calling out to
+him to return and take them on board; for they said they wished to go
+with him.
+
+"We shall not turn back," said Maildun; "and you cannot come with us;
+for we have already got our exact number."
+
+"We will swim after you in the sea till we are drowned, if you do not
+return for us," replied they; and so saying, the three plunged in and
+swam after the curragh.
+
+When Maildun saw this, he turned his vessel towards them, and took them
+on board rather than let them be drowned.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXX.] There were several tribes named Owenaght in the south of Ireland.
+This particular tribe were called, as in the text, the Owenaght of
+Ninus, and also, according to an interlined gloss in the "Book of the
+Dun Cow," the Owenaght of the Aras, _i.e._ of the Aran Islands. Their
+territory was situated in the north-west of the county Clare, opposite
+the Islands of Aran.
+
+[LXXI.] Corcomroe, an ancient territory, now a barony in the north-west
+of the county Clare. (For the meaning and history of this name, see the
+author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places," Series I. Part
+i. Chapter ii.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FIRST ISLAND. TIDINGS OF THE PLUNDERERS.
+
+
+They sailed that day and night, as well as the whole of next day, till
+darkness came on again; and at midnight they saw two small bare islands,
+with two great houses on them near the shore. When they drew near, they
+heard the sounds of merriment and laughter, and the shouts of revellers
+intermingled with the loud voices of warriors boasting of their deeds.
+And listening to catch the conversation, they heard one warrior say to
+another--
+
+"Stand off from me, for I am a better warrior than thou; it was I who
+slew Allil Ocar Aga, and burned Dooclone over his head; and no one has
+ever dared to avenge it on me. Thou hast never done a great deed like
+that!"
+
+"Now surely," said Germane and Diuran to Maildun, "Heaven has guided our
+ship to this place! Here is an easy victory. Let us now sack this house,
+since God has revealed our enemies to us, and delivered them into our
+hands!"
+
+While they were yet speaking, the wind arose, and a great tempest
+suddenly broke on them. And they were driven violently before the storm,
+all that night and a part of next day, into the great and boundless
+ocean; so that they saw neither the islands they had left nor any other
+land; and they knew not whither they were going.
+
+Then Maildun said, "Take down your sail and put by your oars, and let
+the curragh drift before the wind in whatsoever direction it pleases God
+to lead us;" which was done.
+
+He then turned to his foster brothers, and said to them, "This evil has
+befallen us because we took you into the curragh, thereby violating the
+druid's directions; for he forbade me to go to sea with more than sixty
+men for my crew, and we had that number before you joined us. Of a
+surety more evil will come of it."
+
+His foster brothers answered nothing to this, but remained silent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE MONSTROUS ANTS.
+
+
+For three days and three nights they saw no land. On the morning of the
+fourth day, while it was yet dark, they heard a sound to the north-east;
+and Germane said--
+
+"This is the voice of the waves breaking on the shore."
+
+As soon as it was light they saw land and made towards it. While they
+were casting lots to know who should go and explore the country, they
+saw great flocks of ants coming down to the beach, each of them as large
+as a foal. The people judged by their numbers, and by their eager and
+hungry look, that they were bent on eating both ship and crew; so they
+turned their vessel round and sailed quickly away.
+
+ Their multitudes countless, prodigious their size;
+ Were never such ants seen or heard of before.
+ They struggled and tumbled and plunged for the prize,
+ And fiercely the famine-fire blazed from their eyes,
+ As they ground with their teeth the red sand of the shore!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TERRACED ISLE OF BIRDS.
+
+
+Again for three days and three nights they saw no land. But on the
+morning of the fourth day they heard the murmur of the waves on the
+beach; and as the day dawned, they saw a large high island, with
+terraces all round it, rising one behind another. On the terraces grew
+rows of tall trees, on which were perched great numbers of large,
+bright-coloured birds.
+
+When the crew were about to hold council as to who should visit the
+island and see whether the birds were tame, Maildun himself offered to
+go. So he went with a few companions; and they viewed the island warily,
+but found nothing to hurt or alarm them; after which they caught great
+numbers of the birds and brought them to their ship.
+
+ A shield-shaped island, with terraces crowned,
+ And great trees circling round and round:
+ From the summit down to the wave-washed rocks,
+ There are bright-coloured birds in myriad flocks--
+ Their plumes are radiant; but hunger is keen;
+ So the birds are killed,
+ Till the curragh is filled,
+ And the sailors embark on the ocean green!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+A MONSTER.
+
+
+They sailed from this, and on the fourth day discovered a large, sandy
+island, on which, when they came near, they saw a huge, fearful animal
+standing on the beach, and looking at them very attentively. He was
+somewhat like a horse in shape; but his legs were like the legs of a
+dog; and he had great, sharp claws of a blue colour.
+
+Maildun, having viewed this monster for some time, liked not his look;
+and, telling his companions to watch him closely, for that he seemed
+bent on mischief, he bade the oarsmen row very slowly towards land.
+
+The monster seemed much delighted when the ship drew nigh the shore, and
+gambolled and pranced about with joy on the beach, before the eyes of
+the voyagers; for he intended to eat the whole of them the moment they
+landed.
+
+"He seems not at all sorry to see us coming," said Maildun; "but we must
+avoid him and put back from the shore."
+
+This was done. And when the animal observed them drawing off, he ran
+down in a great rage to the very water's edge, and digging up large,
+round pebbles with his sharp claws, he began to fling them at the
+vessel; but the crew soon got beyond his reach, and sailed into the open
+sea.
+
+ A horrible monster, with blazing eyes,
+ In shape like a horse and tremendous in size,
+ Awaiting the curragh, they saw;
+ With big bony jaws
+ And murderous claws,
+ That filled them with terror and awe:
+ How gleeful he dances,
+ And bellows and prances,
+ As near to the island they draw;
+ Expecting a feast--
+ The bloodthirsty beast--
+ With his teeth like edge of a saw:
+ Then he ran to the shore,
+ With a deafening roar,
+ Intending to swallow them raw:
+ But the crew, with a shout,
+ Put their vessel about,
+ And escaped from his ravenous maw![LXXII.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE DEMON HORSE-RACE.
+
+
+After sailing a long distance, they came in view of a broad, flat
+island. It fell to the lot of Germane to go and examine it, and he did
+not think the task a pleasant one. Then his friend Diuran said to him--
+
+"I will go with you this time; and when next it falls to my lot to visit
+an island, you shall come with me." So both went together.
+
+They found the island very large; and some distance from the shore they
+came to a broad green race-course, in which they saw immense
+hoof-marks, the size of a ship's sail, or of a large dining-table. They
+found nut-shells, as large as helmets, scattered about; and although
+they could see no one, they observed all the marks and tokens that
+people of huge size were lately employed there at sundry kinds of work.
+
+Seeing these strange signs, they became alarmed, and went and called
+their companions from the boat to view them. But the others, when they
+had seen them, were also struck with fear, and all quickly retired from
+the place and went on board their curragh.
+
+When they had got a little way from the land, they saw dimly, as it were
+through a mist, a vast multitude of people on the sea, of gigantic size
+and demoniac look, rushing along the crests of the waves with great
+outcry. As soon as this shadowy host had landed, they went to the green,
+where they arranged a horse-race.
+
+The horses were swifter than the wind; and as they pressed forward in
+the race, the multitudes raised a mighty shout like thunder, which
+reached the crew as if it were beside them. Maildun and his men, as they
+sat in their curragh, heard the strokes of the whips and the cries of
+the riders; and though the race was far off, they could distinguish the
+eager words of the spectators:--"Observe the grey horse!" "See that
+chestnut horse!" "Watch the horse with the white spots!" "My horse leaps
+better than yours!"
+
+After seeing and hearing these things, the crew sailed away from the
+island as quickly as they were able, into the open ocean, for they felt
+quite sure that the multitude they saw was a gathering of demons.
+
+ A spacious isle of meadowy plains, with a broad and sandy shore:
+ Two bold and trusty spies are sent, its wonders to explore.
+ Mysterious signs, strange, awful sights, now meet the wanderers'
+ eyes:
+ Vast hoof-marks, and the traces dire of men of monstrous size:
+ And lo! on the sea, in countless hosts, their shadowy forms expand;
+ They pass the affrighted sailors by, and like demons they rush to
+ land;
+ They mount their steeds, and the race is run, in the midst of
+ hell's uproar:
+ Then the wanderers quickly raise their sails, and leave the
+ accursèd shore.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXII.] See note, page 128.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE PALACE OF SOLITUDE.
+
+
+They suffered much from hunger and thirst this time, for they sailed a
+whole week without making land; but at the end of that time they came in
+sight of a high island, with a large and very splendid house on the
+beach near the water's edge. There were two doors--one turned inland,
+and the other facing the sea; and the door that looked towards the sea
+was closed with a great flat stone. In this stone was an opening,
+through which the waves, as they beat against the door every day, threw
+numbers of salmon into the house.
+
+The voyagers landed, and went through the whole house without meeting
+any one. But they saw in one large room an ornamented couch, intended
+for the head of the house, and in each of the other rooms was a larger
+one for three members of the family: and there was a cup of crystal on a
+little table before each couch. They found abundance of food and ale,
+and they ate and drank till they were satisfied, thanking God for having
+relieved them from hunger and thirst.
+
+ Aloft, high towering o'er the ocean's foam,
+ The spacious mansion rears its glittering dome.
+ Each day the billows, through the marble door,
+ Shoot living salmon floundering on the floor.
+ Couches that lure the sailors to recline,
+ Abundant food, brown ale, and sparkling wine;
+ Tables and chairs in order duly placed,
+ With crystal cups and golden goblets graced.
+ But not a living soul the wanderers found;
+ 'Twas silence all and solitude profound.
+ They eat and drink, give thanks, then hoist their sail,
+ And skim the deep once more, obedient to the gale.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE WONDERFUL APPLE TREE.
+
+
+After leaving this, they suffered again from hunger, till they came to
+an island with a high hill round it on every side. A single apple tree
+grew in the middle, very tall and slender, and all its branches were in
+like manner exceedingly slender, and of wonderful length, so that they
+grew over the hill and down to the sea.
+
+When the ship came near the island, Maildun caught one of the branches
+in his hand. For three days and three nights the ship coasted the
+island, and during all this time he held the branch, letting it slide
+through his hand, till on the third day he found a cluster of seven
+apples on the very end. Each of these apples supplied the travellers
+with food and drink for forty days and forty nights.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE ISLAND OF BLOODTHIRSTY QUADRUPEDS.
+
+
+A beautiful island next came in view, in which they saw, at a distance,
+multitudes of large animals shaped like horses. The voyagers, as they
+drew near, viewed them attentively, and soon observed that one of them
+opened his mouth and bit a great piece out of the side of the animal
+that stood next him, bringing away skin and flesh. Immediately after,
+another did the same to the nearest of his fellows. And, in short, the
+voyagers saw that all the animals in the island kept worrying and
+tearing each other from time to time in this manner; so that the ground
+was covered far and wide with the blood that streamed from their sides.
+
+ In needless strife they oft contend,
+ A cruel, mutual-mangling brood;
+ Their flesh with gory tusks they rend,
+ And crimson all the isle with blood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+AN EXTRAORDINARY MONSTER.
+
+
+The next island had a wall all round it. When they came near the shore,
+an animal of vast size, with a thick, rough skin, started up inside the
+wall, and ran round the island with the swiftness of the wind. When he
+had ended his race, he went to a high point, and standing on a large,
+flat stone, began to exercise himself according to his daily custom, in
+the following manner. He kept turning himself completely round and round
+in his skin, the bones and flesh moving, while the skin remained at
+rest.
+
+When he was tired of this exercise, he rested a little; and he then
+began turning his skin continually round his body, down at one side and
+up at the other like a mill-wheel; but the bones and flesh did not move.
+
+After spending some time at this sort of work, he started and ran round
+the island as at first, as if to refresh himself. He then went back to
+the same spot, and this time, while the skin that covered the lower part
+of his body remained without motion, he whirled the skin of the upper
+part round and round like the movement of a flat-lying millstone. And it
+was in this manner that he spent most of his time on the island.
+
+Maildun and his people, after they had seen these strange doings,
+thought it better not to venture nearer. So they put out to sea in great
+haste. The monster, observing them about to fly, ran down to the beach
+to seize the ship; but finding that they had got out of his reach, he
+began to fling round stones at them with great force and an excellent
+aim. One of them struck Maildun's shield and went quite through it,
+lodging in the keel of the curragh; after which the voyagers got beyond
+his range and sailed away.
+
+ In a wall-circled isle a big monster they found,
+ With a hide like an elephant, leathery and bare;
+ He threw up his heels with a wonderful bound,
+ And ran round the isle with the speed of a hare.
+
+ But a feat more astounding has yet to be told:
+ He turned round and round in his leathery skin;
+ His bones and his flesh and his sinews he rolled--
+ He was resting outside while he twisted within!
+
+ Then, changing his practice with marvellous skill,
+ His carcase stood rigid and round went his hide;
+ It whirled round his bones like the wheel of a mill--
+ He was resting within while he twisted outside!
+
+ Next, standing quite near on a green little hill,
+ After galloping round in the very same track,
+ While the skin of his belly stood perfectly still,
+ Like a millstone he twisted the skin of his back!
+
+ But Maildun and his men put to sea in their boat,
+ For they saw his two eyes looking over the wall;
+ And they knew by the way that he opened his throat,
+ He intended to swallow them, curragh and all![LXXIII.]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXIII.] The verse in the original is quite serious; but I could not
+resist the temptation to give it a humorous turn. The same observation
+applies to the verse at page 122.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE ISLE OF RED-HOT ANIMALS.
+
+
+Not daring to land on this island, they turned away hurriedly, much
+disheartened, not knowing whither to turn or where to find a
+resting-place. They sailed for a long time, suffering much from hunger
+and thirst, and praying fervently to be relieved from their distress. At
+last, when they were beginning to sink into a state of despondency,
+being quite worn out with toil and hardship of every kind, they sighted
+land.
+
+It was a large and beautiful island, with innumerable fruit trees
+scattered over its surface, bearing abundance of gold-coloured apples.
+Under the trees they saw herds of short, stout animals, of a bright red
+colour, shaped somewhat like pigs; but coming nearer, and looking more
+closely, they perceived with astonishment that the animals were all
+fiery, and that their bright colour was caused by the red flames which
+penetrated and lighted up their bodies.
+
+The voyagers now observed several of them approach one of the trees in a
+body, and striking the trunk all together with their hind legs, they
+shook down some of the apples and ate them. In this manner the animals
+employed themselves every day, from early morning till the setting of
+the sun when they retired into deep caves, and were seen no more till
+next morning.
+
+Numerous flocks of birds were swimming on the sea, all round the island.
+From morning till noon, they continued to swim away from the land,
+farther and farther out to sea; but at noon they turned round, and from
+that to sunset they swam back towards the shore. A little after sunset,
+when the animals had retired to their caves, the birds flocked in on the
+island, and spread themselves over it, plucking the apples from the
+trees and eating them.
+
+Maildun proposed that they should land on the island, and gather some of
+the fruit, saying that it was not harder or more dangerous for them than
+for the birds; so two of the men were sent beforehand to examine the
+place. They found the ground hot under their feet, for the fiery
+animals, as they lay at rest, heated the earth all around and above
+their caves; but the two scouts persevered notwithstanding, and brought
+away some of the apples.
+
+When morning dawned, the birds left the island and swam out to sea; and
+the fiery animals, coming forth from their caves, went among the trees
+as usual, and ate the apples till evening. The crew remained in their
+curragh all day; and as soon as the animals had gone into their caves
+for the night, and the birds had taken their place, Maildun landed with
+all his men. And they plucked the apples till morning, and brought them
+on board, till they had gathered as much as they could stow into their
+vessel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE PALACE OF THE LITTLE CAT.
+
+
+After rowing for a long time, their store of apples failed them, and
+they had nothing to eat or drink; so that they suffered sorely under a
+hot sun, and their mouths and nostrils were filled with the briny smell
+of the sea. At last they came in sight of land--a little island with a
+large palace on it. Around the palace was a wall, white all over,
+without stain or flaw, as if it had been built of burnt lime, or carved
+out of one unbroken rock of chalk; and where it looked towards the sea
+it was so lofty that it seemed almost to reach the clouds.
+
+The gate of this outer wall was open, and a number of fine houses, all
+snowy white, were ranged round on the inside, enclosing a level court in
+the middle, on which all the houses opened. Maildun and his people
+entered the largest of them, and walked through several rooms without
+meeting with any one. But on reaching the principal apartment, they saw
+in it a small cat, playing among a number of low, square, marble
+pillars, which stood ranged in a row; and his play was, leaping
+continually from the top of one pillar to the top of another. When the
+men entered the room, the cat looked at them for a moment, but returned
+to his play anon, and took no further notice of them.
+
+Looking now to the room itself, they saw three rows of precious jewels
+ranged round the wall from one door-jamb to the other. The first was a
+row of brooches of gold and silver, with their pins fixed in the wall,
+and their heads outwards; the second, a row of torques of gold and
+silver; and the third, a row of great swords, with hilts of gold and
+silver.
+
+Round the room were arranged a number of couches, all pure white and
+richly ornamented. Abundant food of various kinds was spread on tables,
+among which they observed a boiled ox and a roast hog; and there were
+many large drinking-horns, full of good, intoxicating ale.
+
+"Is it for us that this food has been prepared?" said Maildun to the
+cat.
+
+The cat, on hearing the question, ceased from playing, and looked at
+him; but he recommenced his play immediately. Whereupon Maildun told his
+people that the dinner was meant for them; and they all sat down, and
+ate and drank till they were satisfied, after which they rested and
+slept on the couches.
+
+When they awoke, they poured what was left of the ale into one vessel;
+and they gathered the remnants of the food to bring them away. As they
+were about to go, Maildun's eldest foster brother asked him--
+
+"Shall I bring one of those large torques away with me?"
+
+"By no means," said Maildun; "it is well that we have got food and
+rest. Bring nothing away, for it is certain that this house is not left
+without some one to guard it."
+
+The young man, however, disregarding Maildun's advice, took down one of
+the torques and brought it away. But the cat followed him, and overtook
+him in the middle of the court, and, springing on him like a blazing,
+fiery arrow, he went through his body, and reduced it in a moment to a
+heap of ashes. He then returned to the room, and, leaping up on one of
+the pillars, sat upon it.
+
+Maildun turned back, bringing the torque with him, and, approaching the
+cat, spoke some soothing words; after which he put the torque back to
+the place from which it had been taken. Having done this, he collected
+the ashes of his foster brother, and, bringing them to the shore, cast
+them into the sea. They all then went on board the curragh, and
+continued their voyage, grieving for their lost companion, but thanking
+God for His many mercies to them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+AN ISLAND THAT DYED BLACK AND WHITE.
+
+
+On the morning of the third day, they came to another island, which was
+divided into two parts by a wall of brass running across the middle.
+They saw two great flocks of sheep, one on each side of the wall; and
+all those at one side were black, while those at the other side were
+white.
+
+A very large man was employed in dividing and arranging the sheep; and
+he often took up a sheep and threw it with much ease over the wall from
+one side to the other. When he threw over a white sheep among the black
+ones, it became black immediately; and in like manner, when he threw a
+black sheep over, it was instantly changed to white.
+
+The travellers were very much alarmed on witnessing these doings and
+Maildun said--
+
+"It is very well that we know so far. Let us now throw something on
+shore, to see whether it also will change colour; if it does, we shall
+avoid the island."
+
+So they took a branch with black-coloured bark and threw it towards the
+white sheep, and no sooner did it touch the ground than it became white.
+They then threw a white-coloured branch on the side of the black sheep,
+and in a moment it turned black.
+
+"It is very lucky for us," said Maildun, "that we did not land on the
+island, for doubtless our colour would have changed like the colour of
+the branches."
+
+So they put about with much fear, and sailed away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE BURNING RIVER.
+
+
+On the third day, they came in view of a large, broad island, on which
+they saw a herd of gracefully shaped swine; and they killed one small
+porkling for food. Towards the centre rose a high mountain, which they
+resolved to ascend, in order to view the island; and Germane and Diuran
+Lekerd were chosen for this task.
+
+When they had advanced some distance towards the mountain, they came to
+a broad, shallow river; and sitting down on the bank to rest, Germane
+dipped the point of his lance into the water, which instantly burned off
+the top, as if the lance had been thrust into a furnace. So they went no
+farther.
+
+On the opposite side of the river, they saw a herd of animals like great
+hornless oxen, all lying down; and a man of gigantic size near them: and
+Germane began to strike his spear against his shield, in order to rouse
+the cattle.
+
+"Why are you frightening the poor young calves in that manner?" demanded
+the big shepherd, in a tremendous voice.
+
+Germane, astonished to find that such large animals were nothing more
+than calves, instead of answering the question, asked the big man where
+the mothers of those calves were.
+
+"They are on the side of yonder mountain," he replied.
+
+Germane and Diuran waited to hear no more; but, returning to their
+companions, told them all they had seen and heard; after which the crew
+embarked and left the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE MILLER OF HELL.
+
+
+The next island they came to, which was not far off from the last, had a
+large mill on it; and near the door stood the miller, a huge-bodied,
+strong, burly man. They saw numberless crowds of men and horses laden
+with corn, coming towards the mill; and when their corn was ground they
+went away towards the west. Great herds of all kinds of cattle covered
+the plain as far as the eye could reach, and among them many wagons
+laden with every kind of wealth that is produced on the ridge of the
+world. All these the miller put into the mouth of his mill to be ground;
+and all, as they came forth, went westwards.
+
+Maildun and his people now spoke to the miller, and asked him the name
+of the mill, and the meaning of all they had seen on the island. And he,
+turning quickly towards them, replied in few words--
+
+"This mill is called the Mill of Inver-tre-Kenand, and I am the miller
+of hell. All the corn and all the riches of the world that men are
+dissatisfied with, or which they complain of in any way, are sent here
+to be ground; and also every precious article, and every kind of wealth,
+which men try to conceal from God. All these I grind in the Mill of
+Inver-tre-Kenand, and send them afterwards away to the west."
+
+He spoke no more, but turned round and busied himself again with his
+mill. And the voyagers, with much wonder and awe in their hearts, went
+to their curragh and sailed away.[LXXIV.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE ISLE OF WEEPING.
+
+
+After leaving this, they had not been long sailing when they discovered
+another large island, with a great multitude of people on it. They were
+all black, both skin and clothes, with black head-dresses also; and they
+kept walking about, sighing and weeping and wringing their hands,
+without the least pause or rest.
+
+It fell to the lot of Maildun's second foster brother to go and examine
+the island. And when he went among the people, he also grew sorrowful,
+and fell to weeping and wringing his hands, with the others. Two of the
+crew were sent to bring him back; but they were unable to find him among
+the mourners; and, what was worse, in a little time they joined the
+crowd, and began to weep and lament like all the rest.
+
+Maildun then chose four men to go and bring back the others by force,
+and he put arms in their hands, and gave them these directions--
+
+"When you land on the island, fold your mantles round your faces, so as
+to cover your mouths and noses, that you may not breathe the air of the
+country; and look neither to the right nor to the left, neither at the
+earth nor at the sky, but fix your eyes on your own men till you have
+laid hands on them."
+
+They did exactly as they were told, and having come up with their two
+companions, namely, those who had been sent after Maildun's foster
+brother, they seized them and brought them back by force. But the other
+they could not find. When these two were asked what they had seen on the
+island, and why they began to weep, their only reply was--
+
+"We cannot tell; we only know that we did what we saw the others doing."
+
+And after this the voyagers sailed away from the island, leaving
+Maildun's second foster brother behind.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXIV.] The incident of the big miller occurs in the Voyage of the Sons
+of O'Corra, as well as in the Voyage of Maildun. The two accounts are
+somewhat different; and I have combined both here.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE FOUR PRECIOUS WALLS.
+
+
+The next was a high island, divided into four parts by four walls
+meeting in the centre. The first was a wall of gold; the second, a wall
+of silver; the third, a wall of copper; and the fourth, a wall of
+crystal. In the first of the four divisions were kings; in the second,
+queens; in the third, youths; and in the fourth, young maidens.
+
+When the voyagers landed, one of the maidens came to meet them, and
+leading them forward to a house, gave them food. This food, which she
+dealt out to them from a small vessel, looked like cheese, and whatever
+taste pleased each person best, that was the taste he found on it. And
+after they had eaten till they were satisfied, they slept in a sweet
+sleep, as if gently intoxicated, for three days and three nights. When
+they awoke on the third day, they found themselves in their curragh on
+the open sea; and there was no appearance in any direction either of the
+maiden or of the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE PALACE OF THE CRYSTAL BRIDGE.
+
+
+They came now to a small island, with a palace on it, having a copper
+chain in front, hung all over with a number of little silver bells.
+Straight before the door there was a fountain, spanned by a bridge of
+crystal, which led to the palace. They walked towards the bridge,
+meaning to cross it, but every time they stepped on it they fell
+backwards flat on the ground.
+
+After some time, they saw a very beautiful young woman coming out of the
+palace, with a pail in her hand; and she lifted a crystal slab from the
+bridge, and, having filled her vessel from the fountain, she went back
+into the palace.
+
+"This woman has been sent to keep house for Maildun," said Germane.
+
+"Maildun indeed!" said she, as she shut the door after her.
+
+After this they began to shake the copper chain, and the tinkling of the
+silver bells was so soft and melodious that the voyagers gradually fell
+into a gentle, tranquil sleep, and slept so till next morning. When they
+awoke, they saw the same young woman coming forth from the palace, with
+the pail in her hand; and she lifted the crystal slab as before, filled
+her vessel, and returned into the palace.
+
+"This woman has certainly been sent to keep house for Maildun," said
+Germane.
+
+"Wonderful are the powers of Maildun!" said she, as she shut the door of
+the court behind her.
+
+They stayed in this place for three days and three nights, and each
+morning the maiden came forth in the same manner, and filled her pail.
+On the fourth day, she came towards them, splendidly and beautifully
+dressed, with her bright yellow hair bound by a circlet of gold, and
+wearing silver-work shoes on her small, white feet. She had a white
+mantle over her shoulders, which was fastened in front by a silver
+brooch studded with gold; and under all, next her soft, snow-white skin,
+was a garment of fine white silk.
+
+"My love to you, Maildun, and to your companions," she said; and she
+mentioned them all, one after another, calling each by his own proper
+name. "My love to you," said she. "We knew well that you were coming to
+our island, for your arrival has long been foretold to us."
+
+Then she led them to a large house standing by the sea, and she caused
+the curragh to be drawn high up on the beach. They found in the house a
+number of couches, one of which was intended for Maildun alone, and each
+of the others for three of his people. The woman then gave them, from
+one vessel, food which was like cheese; first of all ministering to
+Maildun, and then giving a triple share to every three of his
+companions; and whatever taste each man wished for, that was the taste
+he found on it. She then lifted the crystal slab at the bridge, filled
+her pail, and dealt out drink to them; and she knew exactly how much to
+give, both of food and of drink, so that each had enough and no more.
+
+"This woman would make a fit wife for Maildun," said his people. But
+while they spoke, she went from them with her pail in her hand.
+
+When she was gone, Maildun's companions said to him, "Shall we ask this
+maiden to become thy wife?"
+
+He answered, "What advantage will it be to you to ask her?"
+
+She came next morning, and they said to her, "Why dost thou not stay
+here with us? Wilt thou make friendship with Maildun; and wilt thou take
+him for thy husband?"
+
+She replied that she and all those that lived on the island were
+forbidden to marry with the sons of men; and she told them that she
+could not disobey, as she knew not what sin or transgression was.
+
+She then went from them to her house; and on the next morning, when she
+returned, and after she had ministered to them as usual, till they were
+satisfied with food and drink, and were become cheerful, they spoke the
+same words to her.
+
+"To-morrow," she replied, "you will get an answer to your question;" and
+so saying, she walked towards her house, and they went to sleep on their
+couches.
+
+When they awoke next morning, they found themselves lying in their
+curragh on the sea, beside a great high rock; and when they looked
+about, they saw neither the woman, nor the palace of the crystal bridge,
+nor any trace of the island where they had been sojourning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE ISLE OF SPEAKING BIRDS.
+
+
+One night, soon after leaving this, they heard in the distance, towards
+the north-east, a confused murmur of voices, as if from a great number
+of persons singing psalms. They followed the direction of the sound, in
+order to learn from what it proceeded; and at noon the next day, they
+came in view of an island, very hilly and lofty. It was full of birds,
+some black, some brown, and some speckled, who were all shouting and
+speaking with human voices; and it was from them that the great clamour
+came.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE AGED HERMIT, AND THE HUMAN SOULS.
+
+
+At a little distance from this they found another small island, with
+many trees on it, some standing singly, and some in clusters, on which
+were perched great numbers of birds. They also saw an aged man on the
+island, who was covered thickly all over with long, white hair, and wore
+no other dress. And when they landed, they spoke to him, and asked him
+who he was and what race he belonged to.
+
+"I am one of the men of Erin," he replied. "On a certain day, a long,
+long time ago, I embarked in a small curragh, and put out to sea on a
+pilgrimage; but I had got only a little way from shore, when my curragh
+became very unsteady, as if it were about to overturn. So I returned to
+land, and, in order to steady my boat, I placed under my feet at the
+bottom, a number of green surface sods, cut from one of the grassy
+fields of my own country, and began my voyage anew. Under the guidance
+of God, I arrived at this spot; and He fixed the sods in the sea for me,
+so that they formed a little island. At first I had barely room to
+stand; but every year, from that time to the present, the Lord has added
+one foot to the length and breadth of my island, till in the long lapse
+of ages it has grown to its present size. And on one day in each year,
+He has caused a single tree to spring up, till the island has become
+covered with trees. Moreover, I am so old that my body, as you see, has
+become covered with long, white hair, so that I need no other dress.
+
+"And the birds that ye see on the trees," he continued, "these are the
+souls of my children, and of all my descendants, both men and women, who
+are sent to this little island to abide with me according as they die in
+Erin. God has caused a well of ale to spring up for us on the island:
+and every morning the angels bring me half a cake, a slice of fish, and
+a cup of ale from the well; and in the evening the same allowance of
+food and ale is dealt out to each man and woman of my people. And it is
+in this manner that we live, and shall continue to live till the end of
+the world; for we are all awaiting here the day of judgment."
+
+Maildun and his companions were treated hospitably on the island by the
+old pilgrim for three days and three nights; and when they were taking
+leave of him, he told them that they should all reach their own country
+except one man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE BIG BLACKSMITHS.
+
+
+When they had been for a long time tossed about on the waters, they saw
+land in the distance. On approaching the shore, they heard the roaring
+of a great bellows, and the thundering sound of smiths' hammers striking
+a large glowing mass of iron on an anvil; and every blow seemed to
+Maildun as loud as if a dozen men had brought down their sledges all
+together.
+
+When they had come a little nearer, they heard the big voices of the
+smiths in eager talk.
+
+"Are they near?" asked one.
+
+"Hush! silence!" says another.
+
+"Who are they that you say are coming?" inquired a third.
+
+"Little fellows, that are rowing towards our shore in a pigmy boat,"
+says the first.
+
+When Maildun heard this, he hastily addressed the crew--
+
+"Put back at once, but do not turn the curragh: reverse the sweep of
+your oars, and let her move stern forward, so that those giants may not
+perceive that we are flying!"
+
+The crew at once obey, and the boat begins to move away from the shore,
+stern forward, as he had commanded.
+
+The first smith again spoke. "Are they near enough to the shore?" said
+he to the man who was watching.
+
+"They seem to be at rest," answered the other; "for I cannot perceive
+that they are coming closer, and they have not turned their little boat
+to go back."
+
+In a short time the first smith asks again, "What are they doing now?"
+
+"I think," said the watcher, "they are flying; for it seems to me that
+they are now farther off than they were a while ago."
+
+At this the first smith rushed out of the forge--a huge, burly
+giant--holding, in the tongs which he grasped in his right hand, a vast
+mass of iron sparkling and glowing from the furnace; and, running down
+to the shore with long, heavy strides, he flung the red-hot mass with
+all his might after the curragh. It fell a little short, and plunged
+down just near the prow, causing the whole sea to hiss and boil and
+heave up around the boat. But they plied their oars, so that they
+quickly got beyond his reach, and sailed out into the open ocean.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE CRYSTAL SEA.
+
+
+After a time, they came to a sea like green crystal. It was so calm and
+transparent that they could see the sand at the bottom quite clearly,
+sparkling in the sunlight. And in this sea they saw neither monsters,
+nor ugly animals, nor rough rocks; nothing but the clear water and the
+sunshine and the bright sand. For a whole day they sailed over it,
+admiring its splendour and beauty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+A LOVELY COUNTRY BENEATH THE WAVES.
+
+
+After leaving this they entered on another sea, which seemed like a
+clear, thin cloud; and it was so transparent, and appeared so light,
+that they thought at first it would not bear up the weight of the
+curragh.
+
+Looking down, they could see, beneath the clear water, a beautiful
+country, with many mansions surrounded by groves and woods. In one place
+was a single tree; and, standing on its branches, they saw an animal
+fierce and terrible to look upon.
+
+Round about the tree was a great herd of oxen grazing, and a man stood
+near to guard them, armed with shield and spear and sword; but when he
+looked up and saw the animal on the tree, he turned anon and fled with
+the utmost speed. Then the monster stretched forth his neck, and,
+darting his head downward, plunged his fangs into the back of the
+largest ox of the whole herd, lifted him off the ground into the tree,
+and swallowed him down in the twinkling of an eye; whereupon the whole
+herd took to flight.
+
+When Maildun and his people saw this, they were seized with great
+terror; for they feared they should not be able to cross the sea over
+the monster, on account of the extreme mist-like thinness of the water;
+but after much difficulty and danger they got across it safely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+AN ISLAND GUARDED BY A WALL OF WATER.
+
+
+When they came to the next island, they observed with astonishment that
+the sea rose up over it on every side, steep and high, standing, as it
+were, like a wall all round it. When the people of the island saw the
+voyagers, they rushed hither and thither, shouting, "There they are,
+surely! There they come again for another spoil!"
+
+Then Maildun's people saw great numbers of men and women, all shouting
+and driving vast herds of horses, cows, and sheep. A woman began to pelt
+the crew from below with large nuts; she flung them so that they
+alighted on the waves round the boat, where they remained floating; and
+the crew gathered great quantities of them and kept them for eating.
+
+When they turned to go away, the shouting ceased: and they heard one man
+calling aloud, "Where are they now?" and another answering him, "They
+are gone away!"
+
+From what Maildun saw and heard at this island, it is likely that it had
+been foretold to the people that their country should some day be
+spoiled by certain marauders; and that they thought Maildun and his men
+were the enemies they expected.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+A WATER-ARCH IN THE AIR.
+
+
+On the next island they saw a very wonderful thing, namely, a great
+stream of water which, gushing up out of the strand, rose into the air
+in the form of a rainbow, till it crossed the whole island and came down
+on the strand at the other side. They walked under it without getting
+wet; and they hooked down from it many large salmon. Great quantities of
+salmon of a very great size fell also out of the water over their heads
+down on the ground; so that the whole island smelled of fish, and it
+became troublesome to gather them on account of their abundance.
+
+From the evening of Sunday till the evening of Monday, the stream never
+ceased to flow, and never changed its place, but remained spanning the
+island like a solid arch of water. Then the voyagers gathered the
+largest of the salmon, till they had as much as the curragh would hold;
+after which they sailed out into the great sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE SILVER PILLAR OF THE SEA.
+
+
+The next thing they found after this was an immense silver pillar
+standing in the sea. It had eight sides, each of which was the width of
+an oar-stroke of the curragh, so that its whole circumference was eight
+oar-strokes. It rose out of the sea without any land or earth about it,
+nothing but the boundless ocean; and they could not see its base deep
+down in the water, neither were they able to see the top on account of
+its vast height.
+
+A silver net hung from the top down to the very water, extending far out
+at one side of the pillar; and the meshes were so large that the curragh
+in full sail went through one of them. When they were passing through
+it, Diuran struck the mesh with the edge of his spear, and with the blow
+cut a large piece off it.
+
+"Do not destroy the net," said Maildun; "for what we see is the work of
+great men."
+
+"What I have done," answered Diuran, "is for the honour of my God, and
+in order that the story of our adventures may be more readily believed;
+and I shall lay this silver as an offering on the altar of Armagh, if I
+ever reach Erin."
+
+That piece of silver weighed two ounces and a half, as it was reckoned
+afterwards by the people of the church of Armagh.
+
+After this they heard some one speaking on the top of the pillar, in a
+loud, clear, glad voice; but they knew neither what he said, nor in what
+language he spoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+AN ISLAND STANDING ON ONE PILLAR.
+
+
+The island they saw after this was named Encos;[LXXV.] and it was so
+called because it was supported by a single pillar in the middle. They
+rowed all round it, seeking how they might get into it; but could find
+no landing-place. At the foot of the pillar, however, down deep in the
+water, they saw a door securely closed and locked, and they judged that
+this was the way into the island. They called aloud, to find out if any
+persons were living there; but they got no reply. So they left it, and
+put out to sea once more.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXV.] Encos means "one foot."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+THE ISLAND QUEEN DETAINS THEM WITH HER MAGIC THREAD-CLEW.
+
+The next island they reached was very large. On one side rose a lofty,
+smooth, heath-clad mountain, and all the rest of the island was a grassy
+plain. Near the sea-shore stood a great high palace, adorned with
+carvings and precious stones, and strongly fortified with a high rampart
+all round. After landing, they went towards the palace, and sat to rest
+on the bench before the gateway leading through the outer rampart; and,
+looking in through the open door, they saw a number of beautiful young
+maidens in the court.
+
+After they had sat for some time, a rider appeared at a distance, coming
+swiftly towards the palace; and on a near approach, the travellers
+perceived that it was a lady, young and beautiful and richly dressed.
+She wore a blue, rustling silk head-dress; a silver-fringed purple cloak
+hung from her shoulders; her gloves were embroidered with gold thread;
+and her feet were laced becomingly in close-fitting scarlet sandals. One
+of the maidens came out and held her horse, while she dismounted and
+entered the palace; and soon after she had gone in, another of the
+maidens came towards Maildun and his companions and said--
+
+"You are welcome to this island. Come into the palace; the queen has
+sent me to invite you, and is waiting to receive you."
+
+They followed the maiden into the palace; and the queen bade them
+welcome, and received them kindly. Then, leading them into a large hall
+in which a plentiful dinner was laid out, she bade them sit down and
+eat. A dish of choice food and a crystal goblet of wine were placed
+before Maildun; while a single dish and a single drinking-bowl, with a
+triple quantity of meat and drink, were laid before each three of his
+companions. And having eaten and drunk till they were satisfied, they
+went to sleep on soft couches till morning.
+
+Next day, the queen addressed Maildun and his companions--
+
+"Stay now in this country, and do not go a-wandering any longer over the
+wide ocean from island to island. Old age or sickness shall never come
+upon you; but you shall be always as young as you are at present, and
+you shall live for ever a life of ease and pleasure."
+
+"Tell us," said Maildun, "how you pass your life here."
+
+"That is no hard matter," answered the queen. "The good king who
+formerly ruled over this island was my husband, and these fair young
+maidens that you see are our children. He died after a long reign, and
+as he left no son, I now reign, the sole ruler of the island. And every
+day I go to the Great Plain, to administer justice and to decide causes
+among my people."
+
+"Wilt thou go from us to-day?" asked Maildun.
+
+"I must needs go even now," she replied, "to give judgments among the
+people; but as to you, you will all stay in this house till I return in
+the evening, and you need not trouble yourselves with any labour or
+care."
+
+They remained in that island during the three months of winter. And
+these three months appeared to Maildun's companions as long as three
+years, for they began to have an earnest desire to return to their
+native land. At the end of that time, one of them said to Maildun--
+
+"We have been a long time here; why do we not return to our own
+country?"
+
+"What you say is neither good nor sensible," answered Maildun, "for we
+shall not find in our own country anything better than we have here."
+
+But this did not satisfy his companions, and they began to murmur
+loudly. "It is quite clear," said they, "that Maildun loves the queen of
+this island; and as this is so, let him stay here; but as for us, we
+will return to our own country."
+
+Maildun, however, would not consent to remain after them, and he told
+them that he would go away with them.
+
+Now, on a certain day, not long after this conversation, as soon as the
+queen had gone to the Great Plain to administer justice, according to
+her daily custom, they got their curragh ready and put out to sea. They
+had not gone very far from land when the queen came riding towards the
+shore; and, seeing how matters stood, she went into the palace and soon
+returned with a ball of thread in her hand.
+
+Walking down to the water's edge, she flung the ball after the curragh,
+but held the end of the thread in her hand. Maildun caught the ball as
+it was passing, and it clung to his hand; and the queen, gently pulling
+the thread towards her, drew back the curragh to the very spot from
+which they had started in the little harbour. And when they had landed,
+she made them promise that if ever this happened again, some one should
+always stand up in the boat and catch the ball.
+
+The voyagers abode on the island, much against their will, for nine
+months longer. For every time they attempted to escape, the queen
+brought them back by means of the clew, as she had done at first,
+Maildun always catching the ball.
+
+At the end of the nine months, the men held council, and this is what
+they said--
+
+"We know now that Maildun does not wish to leave the island; for he
+loves this queen very much, and he catches the ball whenever we try to
+escape, in order that we may be brought back to the palace."
+
+Maildun replied, "Let some one else attend to the ball next time, and
+let us try whether it will cling to his hand."
+
+They agreed to this, and, watching their opportunity, they again put off
+towards the open sea. The queen arrived, as usual, before they had gone
+very far and flung the ball after them as before. Another man of the
+crew caught it, and it clung as firmly to his hand as to Maildun's; and
+the queen began to draw the curragh towards the shore. But Diuran,
+drawing his sword, cut off the man's hand, which fell with the ball into
+the sea; and the men gladly plying their oars, the curragh resumed her
+outward voyage.
+
+When the queen saw this, she began to weep and lament, wringing her
+hands and tearing her hair with grief; and her maidens also began to
+weep and cry aloud and clap their hands, so that the whole palace was
+full of grief and lamentation. But none the less did the men bend to
+their oars, and the curragh sailed away; and it was in this manner that
+the voyagers made their escape from the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+THE ISLE OF INTOXICATING WINE-FRUITS.
+
+
+They were now a long time tossed about on the great billows, when at
+length they came in view of an island with many trees on it. These trees
+were somewhat like hazels, and they were laden with a kind of fruit
+which the voyagers had not seen before, extremely large, and not very
+different in appearance from apples, except that they had a rough,
+berry-like rind.
+
+After the crew had plucked all the fruit off one small tree, they cast
+lots who should try them, and the lot fell on Maildun. So he took some
+of them, and, squeezing the juice into a vessel, drank it. It threw him
+into a sleep of intoxication so deep that he seemed to be in a trance
+rather than in a natural slumber, without breath or motion, and with the
+red foam on his lips. And from that hour till the same hour next day, no
+one could tell whether he was living or dead.
+
+When he awoke next day, he bade his people to gather as much of the
+fruit as they could bring away with them; for the world, as he told
+them, never produced anything of such surpassing goodness. They pressed
+out the juice of the fruit till they had filled all their vessels; and
+so powerful was it to produce intoxication and sleep, that, before
+drinking it, they had to mix a large quantity of water with it to
+moderate its strength.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE MYSTIC LAKE.
+
+
+The island they came to next was larger than most of those they had
+seen. On one side grew a wood of yew trees and great oaks; and on the
+other side was a grassy plain, with one small lake in the midst. A
+noble-looking house stood on the near part of the plain, with a small
+church not far off; and numerous flocks of sheep browsed over the whole
+island.
+
+The travellers went to the church, and found in it a hermit, with
+snow-white beard and hair, and all the other marks of great old age.
+Maildun asked who he was, and whence he had come.
+
+He replied, "I am one of the fifteen people, who, following the example
+of our master, Brendan of Birra,[20] sailed on a pilgrimage out into the
+great ocean. After many wanderings, we settled on this island, where we
+lived for a long time; but my companions died one after another, and of
+all who came hither, I alone am left."
+
+The old pilgrim then showed them Brendan's satchel,[21] which he and his
+companions had brought with them on their pilgrimage; and Maildun kissed
+it, and all bowed down in veneration before it. And he told them that as
+long as they remained there, they might eat of the sheep and of the
+other food of the island; but to waste nothing.
+
+One day, as they were seated on a hill, gazing out over the sea, they
+saw what they took to be a black cloud coming towards them from the
+south-west. They continued to view it very closely as it came nearer and
+nearer; and at last they perceived with amazement that it was an immense
+bird, for they saw quite plainly the slow, heavy flapping of his wings.
+When he reached the island, he alighted on a little hillock over the
+lake; and they felt no small alarm, for they thought, on account of his
+vast size, that if he saw them, he might seize them in his talons, and
+carry them off over the sea. So they hid themselves under trees and in
+the crannies of rocks; but they never lost sight of the bird, for they
+were bent on watching his movements.
+
+He appeared very old, and he held in one claw a branch of a tree, which
+he had brought with him over the sea, larger and heavier than the
+largest full-grown oak. It was covered with fresh, green leaves, and was
+heavily laden with clusters of fruit, red and rich-looking like grapes,
+but much larger.
+
+He remained resting for a time on the hill, being much wearied after his
+flight, and at last he began to eat the fruit off the branch. After
+watching him for some time longer, Maildun ventured warily towards the
+hillock, to see whether he was inclined to mischief; but the bird showed
+no disposition to harm him. This emboldened the others, and they all
+followed their chief.
+
+The whole crew now marched in a body round the bird, headed by Maildun,
+with their shields raised; and as he still made no stir, one of the men,
+by Maildun's directions, went straight in front of him, and brought away
+some of the fruit from the branch which he still held in his talons. But
+the bird went on plucking and eating his fruit, and never took the least
+notice.
+
+On the evening of that same day, as the men sat looking over the sea to
+the south-west, where the great bird first appeared to them, they saw
+in the distance two others, quite as large, coming slowly towards them
+from the very same point. On they came, flying at a vast height, nearer
+and nearer, till at last they swooped down and alighted on the hillock
+in front of the first bird, one on each side.
+
+Although they were plainly much younger than the other, they seemed very
+tired, and took a long rest. Then, shaking their wings, they began
+picking the old bird all over, body, wings, and head, plucking out the
+old feathers and the decayed quill points, and smoothing down his
+plumage with their great beaks. After this had gone on for some time,
+the three began plucking the fruit off the branch, and they ate till
+they were satisfied.
+
+Next morning, the two birds began at the very same work, picking and
+arranging the feathers of the old bird as before; and at midday they
+ceased, and began again to eat the fruit, throwing the stones and what
+they did not eat of the pulp, into the lake, till the water became red
+like wine. After this the old bird plunged into the lake and remained in
+it, washing himself, till evening, when he again flew up on the hillock,
+but perched on a different part of it, to avoid touching and defiling
+himself with the old feathers and the other traces of age and decay,
+which the younger birds had removed from him.
+
+On the morning of the third day, the two younger birds set about
+arranging his feathers for the third time; and on this occasion they
+applied themselves to their task in a manner much more careful and
+particular than before, smoothing the plumes with the nicest touches,
+and arranging them in beautiful lines and glossy tufts and ridges. And
+so they continued without the least pause till midday, when they ceased.
+Then, after resting for a little while, they opened their great wings,
+rose into the air, and flew away swiftly towards the south-west, till
+the men lost sight of them in the distance.
+
+Meantime the old bird, after the others had left, continued to smooth
+and plume his feathers till evening; then, shaking his wings, he rose
+up, and flew three times round the island, as if to try his strength.
+And now the men observed that he had lost all the appearances of old
+age: his feathers were thick and glossy, his head was erect and his eye
+bright, and he flew with quite as much power and swiftness as the
+others. Alighting for the last time on the hillock, after resting a
+little, he rose again, and turning his flight after the other two, to
+the point from which he had come, he was soon lost to view, and the
+voyagers saw no more of him.
+
+It now appeared very clear to Maildun and his companions that this bird
+had undergone a renewal of youth from old age, according to the word of
+the prophet, which says, "Thy youth shall be renewed as the eagle."
+Diuran, seeing this great wonder, said to his companions--
+
+"Let us also bathe in the lake, and we shall obtain a renewal of youth
+like the bird."
+
+But they said, "Not so, for the bird has left the poison of his old age
+and decay in the water."
+
+Diuran, however, would have his own way; and he told them he was
+resolved to try the virtue of the water, and that they might follow his
+example or not, whichever they pleased. So he plunged in and swam about
+for some time, after which he took a little of the water and mixed it in
+his mouth; and in the end he swallowed a small quantity. He then came
+out perfectly sound and whole; and he remained so ever after, for as
+long as he lived he never lost a tooth or had a grey hair, and he
+suffered not from disease or bodily weakness of any kind. But none of
+the others ventured in.
+
+The voyagers, having remained long enough on this island, stored in
+their curragh a large quantity of the flesh of the sheep; and after
+bidding farewell to the ancient cleric, they sought the ocean once more.
+
+ Now once again, when winds and tide combine,
+ The flying curragh cleaves the crested brine.
+ Far to the west an island rose to view,
+ With verdant plains, clear streams, and mountains blue.
+ An aged hermit, bred in Erin's land,
+ Welcomed and blessed the chieftain and his band;
+ Brought food and drink, and bade them rest awhile,
+ And view the wonders of that lovely isle.
+ Lo, from the sea, three birds of monstrous size,
+ With vast wings slowly moving, cleave the skies;
+ And as they nearer drew, the sailors saw
+ One held a fruit branch firmly in his claw.
+ Down by the dear, mysterious lake they light,
+ Eat from the branch, and rest them from their flight.
+
+ The aged bird, with plumes decayed and thin,
+ Paused on the brink awhile, then, plunging in,
+ He bath'd and smooth'd his feathers o'er and o'er,
+ Shook his great wings and rested on the shore.
+ Now while the other two his plumes arrange,
+ Through all his frame appears a wondrous change:
+ His eyes grow bright, his head erect and bold,
+ His glossy plumage shines like burnished gold;
+ Free from old age, his glorious form expands;
+ In radiant youth and beauty proud he stands!
+ Such was the gift that lake of wonder gave;
+ Such was the virtue of its mystic wave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+THE ISLE OF LAUGHING.
+
+
+They next came to an island with a great plain extending over its whole
+surface. They saw a vast multitude of people on it, engaged in sundry
+youthful games, and all continually laughing. The voyagers cast lots who
+should go to examine the island; and the lot fell upon Maildun's third
+foster brother.
+
+The moment he landed he went among the others and joined in their
+pastimes and in their laughter, as if he had been among them all his
+life. His companions waited for him a very long time, but were afraid to
+venture to land after him; and at last, as there seemed no chance of his
+returning, they left him and sailed away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE BLEST.
+
+
+They came now to a small island with a high rampart of fire all round
+it; and that rampart revolved continually round the island. There was
+one large open door in the rampart; and whenever the door, in its
+involution, came in front of them, they could see almost the whole
+island through it, and all that was therein.
+
+And this is what they saw: A great number of people, beautiful and
+glorious-looking, wearing rich garments adorned and radiant all over,
+feasting joyously, and drinking from embossed vessels of red gold which
+they held in their hands. The voyagers heard also their cheerful,
+festive songs; and they marvelled greatly, and their hearts were full of
+gladness at all the happiness they saw and heard. But they did not
+venture to land.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+THE HERMIT OF THE SEA-ROCK.
+
+
+A little time after leaving this, they saw something a long way off
+towards the south, which at first they took to be a large white bird
+floating on the sea, and rising and falling with the waves; but on
+turning their curragh towards it for a nearer view, they found that it
+was a man. He was very old, so old that he was covered all over with
+long, white hair, which grew from his body; and he was standing on a
+broad, bare rock, and kept continually throwing himself on his knees,
+and never ceased praying.
+
+When they saw that he was a holy man, they asked and received his
+blessing; after which they began to converse with him; and they inquired
+who he was, and how he had come to that rock. Then the old man gave them
+the following account:--
+
+"I was born and bred in the island of Tory.[LXXVI.] When I grew up to be
+a man, I was cook to the brotherhood of the monastery; and a wicked cook
+I was; for every day I sold part of the food intrusted to me, and
+secretly bought many choice and rare things with the money. Worse even
+than this I did; I made secret passages underground into the church and
+into the houses belonging to it, and I stole from time to time great
+quantities of golden vestments, book-covers adorned with brass and gold,
+and other holy and precious things.
+
+"I soon became very rich, and had my rooms filled with costly couches,
+with clothes of every colour, both linen and woollen, with brazen
+pitchers and caldrons, and with brooches and armlets of gold. Nothing
+was wanting in my house, of furniture and ornament, that a person in a
+high rank of life might be expected to have; and I became very proud and
+overbearing.
+
+"One day, I was sent to dig a grave for the body of a rustic that had
+been brought from the mainland to be buried on the island. I went and
+fixed on a spot in the little graveyard; but as soon as I had set to
+work, I heard a voice speaking down deep in the earth beneath my feet--
+
+"'Do not dig this grave!'
+
+"I paused for a moment, startled; but, recovering myself, I gave no
+further heed to the mysterious words, and again I began to dig. The
+moment I did so, I heard the same voice, even more plainly than before--
+
+"'Do not dig this grave! I am a devout and holy person, and my body is
+lean and light; do not put the heavy, pampered body of that sinner down
+upon me!'
+
+"But I answered, in the excess of my pride and obstinacy, 'I will
+certainly dig this grave; and I will bury this body down on you!'
+
+"'If you put that body down on me, the flesh will fall off your bones,
+and you will die, and be sent to the infernal pit at the end of three
+days; and, moreover, the body will not remain where you put it.'
+
+"'What will you give me,' I asked, 'if I do not bury the corpse on you?'
+
+"'Everlasting life in heaven,' replied the voice.
+
+"'How do you know this; and how am I to be sure of it?' I inquired.
+
+"And the voice answered me, 'The grave you are digging is clay. Observe
+now whether it will remain so, and then you will know the truth of what
+I tell you. And you will see that what I say will come to pass, and that
+you cannot bury that man on me, even if you should try to do so.'
+
+"These words were scarce ended, when the grave was turned into a mass of
+white sand before my face. And when I saw this, I brought the body away,
+and buried it elsewhere.
+
+"It happened, some time after, that I got a new curragh made, with the
+hides painted red all over; and I went to sea in it. As I sailed by the
+shores and islands, I was so pleased with the view of the land and sea
+from my curragh that I resolved to live altogether in it for some time;
+and I brought on board all my treasures--silver cups, gold bracelets,
+and ornamented drinking-horns, and everything else, from the largest to
+the smallest article.
+
+"I enjoyed myself for a time, while the air was clear and the sea calm
+and smooth. But one day, the winds suddenly arose and a storm burst upon
+me, which carried me out to sea, so that I quite lost sight of land, and
+I knew not in what direction the curragh was drifting. After a time, the
+wind abated to a gentle gale, the sea became smooth, and the curragh
+sailed on as before, with a quiet, pleasant movement.
+
+"But suddenly, though the breeze continued to blow, I thought I could
+perceive that the curragh ceased moving, and, standing up to find out
+the cause, I saw with great surprise an old man not far off, sitting on
+the crest of a wave.
+
+"He spoke to me; and, as soon as I heard his voice, I knew it at once,
+but I could not at the moment call to mind where I had heard it before.
+And I became greatly troubled, and began to tremble, I knew not why.
+
+"'Whither art thou going?' he asked.
+
+"'I know not,' I replied; 'but this I know, I am pleased with the
+smooth, gentle motion of my curragh over the waves.'
+
+"'You would not be pleased,' replied the old man, 'if you could see the
+troops that are at this moment around you.'
+
+"'What troops do you speak of?' I asked. And he answered--
+
+"'All the space round about you, as far as your view reaches over the
+sea, and upwards to the clouds, is one great towering mass of demons, on
+account of your avarice, your thefts, your pride, and your other crimes
+and vices.'
+
+"He then asked, 'Do you know why your curragh has stopped?'
+
+"I answered, 'No;' and he said, 'It has been stopped by me; and it will
+never move from that spot till you promise me to do what I shall ask of
+you.'
+
+"I replied that perhaps it was not in my power to grant his demand.
+
+"'It is in your power,' he answered; 'and if you refuse me, the torments
+of hell shall be your doom.'
+
+"He then came close to the curragh, and, laying his hands on me, he
+made me swear to do what he demanded.
+
+"'What I ask is this,' said he; 'that you throw into the sea this moment
+all the ill-gotten treasures you have in the curragh.'
+
+"This grieved me very much, and I replied, 'It is a pity that all these
+costly things should be lost.'
+
+"To which he answered, 'They will not go to loss; a person will be sent
+to take charge of them. Now do as I say.'
+
+"So, greatly against my wishes, I threw all the beautiful precious
+articles overboard, keeping only a small wooden cup to drink from.
+
+"'You will now continue your voyage,' he said; 'and the first solid
+ground your curragh reaches, there you are to stay.'
+
+"He then gave me seven cakes and a cup of watery whey as food for my
+voyage; after which the curragh moved on, and I soon lost sight of him.
+And now I all at once recollected that the old man's voice was the same
+as the voice that I had heard come from the ground, when I was about to
+dig the grave for the body of the rustic. I was so astonished and
+troubled at this discovery, and so disturbed at the loss of all my
+wealth, that I threw aside my oars, and gave myself up altogether to the
+winds and currents, not caring whither I went; and for a long time I was
+tossed about on the waves, I knew not in what direction.
+
+"At last it seemed to me that my curragh ceased to move; but I was not
+sure about it, for I could see no sign of land. Mindful, however, of
+what the old man had told me, that I was to stay wherever my curragh
+stopped, I looked round more carefully; and at last I saw, very near me,
+a small rock level with the surface, over which the waves were gently
+laughing and tumbling. I stepped on to the rock; and the moment I did
+so, the waves seemed to spring back, and the rock rose high over the
+level of the water; while the curragh drifted by and quickly
+disappeared, so that I never saw it after. This rock has been my abode
+from that time to the present day.
+
+"For the first seven years, I lived on the seven cakes and the cup of
+whey given me by the man who had sent me to the rock. At the end of that
+time the cakes were all gone; and for three days I fasted, with nothing
+but the whey to wet my mouth. Late in the evening of the third day, an
+otter brought me a salmon out of the sea; but though I suffered much
+from hunger, I could not bring myself to eat the fish raw, and it was
+washed back again into the waves.
+
+"I remained without food for three days longer; and in the afternoon of
+the third day, the otter returned with the salmon. And I saw another
+otter bring firewood; and when he had piled it up on the rock, he blew
+it with his breath till it took fire and lighted up. And then I broiled
+the salmon and ate till I had satisfied my hunger.
+
+"The otter continued to bring me a salmon every day, and in this manner
+I lived for seven years longer. The rock also grew larger and larger
+daily, till it became the size you now see it. At the end of seven
+years, the otter ceased to bring me my salmon, and I fasted for three
+days. But at the end of the third day, I was sent half a cake of fine
+wheaten flour and a slice of fish; and on the same day my cup of watery
+whey fell into the sea, and a cup of the same size, filled with good
+ale, was placed on the rock for me.
+
+"And so I have lived, praying and doing penance for my sins to this
+hour. Each day my drinking-vessel is filled with ale, and I am sent half
+a wheat-flour cake and a slice of fish; and neither rain nor wind, nor
+heat, nor cold, is allowed to molest me on this rock."
+
+This was the end of the old man's history. In the evening of that day,
+each man of the crew received the same quantity of food that was sent to
+the old hermit himself, namely, half a cake and a slice of fish; and
+they found in the vessel as much good ale as served them all.
+
+The next morning he said to them, "You shall all reach your own country
+in safety. And you, Maildun, you shall find in an island on your way,
+the very man that slew your father; but you are neither to kill him nor
+take revenge on him in any way. As God has delivered you from the many
+dangers you have passed through, though you were very guilty, and well
+deserved death at His hands; so you forgive your enemy the crime he
+committed against you."
+
+After this they took leave of the old man and sailed away.
+
+
+THE OLD HERMIT'S STORY.
+
+ The storms may roar and the seas may rage,
+ But here, on this bare, brown rock,
+ I pray and repent and I tell my beads,
+ Secure from the hurricane's shock.
+
+ For the good, kind God, in pity to me,
+ Holds out His protecting hand;
+ And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,
+ Can molest me where I stand.
+
+ I robbed the churches and wronged the poor,
+ And grew richer day by day;
+ But now on this bare, brown ocean rock,
+ A heavy penance I pay.
+
+ A bloated sinner died unshrived,
+ And they brought his corse to me--
+ "Go, dig the grave and bury the dead,
+ And pray for the soul set free."
+
+ I dug the grave, but my hands were stayed
+ By a solemn and fearful sound,
+ For the feeble tones of a dead man's voice
+ Came up from the hollow ground!
+
+_The dead monk speaks up from the grave_--
+
+ Place not that pampered corse on mine,
+ For my bones are weak and thin;
+ I cannot bear the heavy weight
+ Of a body defiled by sin.
+
+ I was a meek and holy man;
+ I fasted and watched and prayed;
+ A sinner's corse would defile the clay
+ Where my wasted body is laid.
+
+_The old hermit continues his story_--
+
+ The voice then ceased, and I heard no more
+ Its hollow, beseeching tone;
+ Then I closed the grave, and left the old monk
+ To rest in his coffin alone.
+
+ My curragh sailed on the western main,
+ And I saw, as I viewed the sea,
+ A withered old man upon a wave;
+ And he fixed his eyes on me.
+
+ He spoke, and his voice my heart's blood froze,
+ And I shook with horror and fear:
+ 'Twas the very voice of the dead old monk
+ That sounded in mine ear!
+
+_The dead monk speaks again_--
+
+ Far from my grave the sinner's corse
+ In unhallowed clay lies deep;
+ And now in my coffin, undefiled,
+ For ever in peace I sleep.
+
+ Go, live and pray on the bare, brown rock,
+ Far out in the stormy sea;
+ A heavy penance for heavy crimes,
+ And heaven at last for thee!
+
+_The old hermit ends his story_--
+
+ And here I live from age to age;
+ I pray and repent and fast;
+ An otter brings me food each day,
+ And I hope for heaven at last.
+
+ The tempests roar and the billows rage,
+ But God holds forth His hand,
+ And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,
+ Can harm me where I stand.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXVI.] Tory Island, off the coast of Donegal, where there was a
+monastery dedicated to St. Columkille.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+SIGNS OF HOME.
+
+
+Soon after they saw a beautiful verdant island, with herds of oxen,
+cows, and sheep browsing all over its hills and valleys; but no houses
+nor inhabitants were to be seen. And they rested for some time on this
+island, and ate the flesh of the cows and sheep.
+
+One day, while they were standing on a hill, a large falcon flew by; and
+two of the crew, who happened to look closely at him, cried out, in the
+hearing of Maildun--
+
+"See that falcon! he is surely like the falcons of Erin!"
+
+"Watch him closely," cried Maildun; "and observe exactly in what
+direction he is flying!"
+
+And they saw that he flew to the south-east, without turning or
+wavering.
+
+They went on board at once; and, having unmoored, they sailed to the
+south-east after the falcon. After rowing the whole day, they sighted
+land in the dusk of the evening, which seemed to them like the land of
+Erin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+MAILDUN MEETS HIS ENEMY, AND ARRIVES HOME.
+
+
+On a near approach, they found it was a small island; and now they
+recognised it as the very same island they had seen in the beginning of
+their voyage, in which they had heard the man in the great house boast
+that he had slain Maildun's father, and from which the storm had driven
+them out into the great ocean.
+
+They turned the prow of their vessel to the shore, landed, and went
+towards the house. It happened that at this very time the people of the
+house were seated at their evening meal; and Maildun and his companions,
+as they stood outside, heard a part of their conversation.
+
+Said one to another, "It would not be well for us if we were now to see
+Maildun."
+
+"As to Maildun," answered another, "it is very well known that he was
+drowned long ago in the great ocean."
+
+"Do not be sure," observed a third; "perchance he is the very man that
+may waken you up some morning from your sleep."
+
+"Supposing he came now," asks another, "what should we do?"
+
+The head of the house now spoke in reply to the last question; and
+Maildun at once knew his voice--
+
+"I can easily answer that," said he. "Maildun has been for a long time
+suffering great afflictions and hardships; and if he were to come now,
+though we were enemies once, I should certainly give him a welcome and a
+kind reception."
+
+When Maildun heard this he knocked at the door, and the door-keeper
+asked who was there; to which Maildun made answer--
+
+"It is I, Maildun, returned safely from all my wanderings."
+
+The chief of the house then ordered the door to be opened; and he went
+to meet Maildun, and brought himself and his companions into the house.
+They were joyfully welcomed by the whole household; new garments were
+given to them; and they feasted and rested, till they forgot their
+weariness and their hardships.
+
+They related all the wonders God had revealed to them in the course of
+their voyage, according to the word of the sage who says, "It will be a
+source of pleasure to remember these things at a future time."
+
+After they had remained here for some days, Maildun returned to his own
+country. And Diuran Lekerd took the five half-ounces of silver he had
+cut down from the great net at the Silver Pillar, and laid it, according
+to his promise, on the high altar of Armagh.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.[LXXVII.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+COLGA, KING OF LOCHLANN, INVADES ERIN, AND IS SLAIN.
+
+
+Once upon a time, a noble, warlike king ruled over Lochlann,[6] whose
+name was Colga of the Hard Weapons. On a certain occasion, this king
+held a meeting of his chief people, on the broad, green plain before his
+palace of Berva.[6] And when they were all gathered together, he spoke
+to them in a loud, clear voice, from where he sat high on his throne;
+and he asked them whether they found any fault with the manner in which
+he ruled them, and whether they knew of anything deserving of blame in
+him as their sovereign lord and king. They replied, as if with the voice
+of one man, that they found no fault of any kind.
+
+Then the king spoke again and said, "You see not as I see. Do you not
+know that I am called King of the Four Tribes of Lochlann, and of the
+Islands of the Sea? And yet there is one island which acknowledges not
+my rule."
+
+And when they had asked which of the islands he meant, he said--
+
+"That island is Erin of the green hills. My forefathers, indeed, held
+sway over it, and many of our brave warriors died there in fight. There
+fell the great king, Balor of the Mighty Blows;[9] his son Bres[9] also;
+and his queen, Kethlenda of the Crooked Teeth;[9] there, too, fell Irann
+and Slana, sisters of the king; and many others that I do not name. But
+though our hosts at last subdued the land and laid it under tribute, yet
+they held it not long; for the men of Erin arose and expelled our army,
+regaining their ancient freedom.
+
+"And now it is my desire that we once more sail to Erin with a fleet and
+an army, to bring it under my power, and take, either by consent or by
+force, the tributes that are due to me by right. And we shall thereafter
+hold the island in subjection till the end of the world."
+
+The chiefs approved the counsel of the king, and the meeting broke up.
+
+Then the king made proclamation, and sent his swift scouts and couriers
+all over the land, to muster his fighting men, till he had assembled a
+mighty army in one place.
+
+And when they had made ready their curve-sided, white-sailed ships, and
+their strong, swift-gliding boats, the army embarked. And they raised
+their sails and plied their oars; and they cleft the billowy, briny sea;
+and the clear, cold winds whistled through their sails; and they made
+neither stop nor stay, till they landed on the shore of the province of
+Ulad.[LXXVIII.]
+
+The King of Ireland at that time was Cormac Mac Art,[22] the grandson of
+Conn the Hundred-fighter.[18] And when Cormac heard that a great fleet
+had come to Erin, and landed an army of foreigners, he straightway sent
+tidings of the invasion to Allen[LXXIX.] of the green hill-slopes, where
+lived Finn,[23] and the noble Fena[23] of the Gaels.
+
+When the king's messengers had told their tale, Finn despatched his
+trusty, swift-footed couriers to every part of Erin where he knew the
+Fena dwelt; and he bade them to say that all should meet him at a
+certain place, near that part of the coast where the Lochlann army lay
+encamped. And he himself led the Fena of Leinster northwards to join the
+muster.
+
+They attacked the foreigners, and the foreigners were not slow to meet
+their onset; and the Fena were sore pressed in that battle, so that at
+one time the Lochlanns were like to prevail.
+
+Oscar, the son of Oisin,[23] when he saw his friends falling all round
+him, was grieved to the heart; and he rested for a space to gather his
+wrath and his strength. Then, renewing the fight, he rushed with fury
+towards the standard of Colga, the Lochlann king, dealing havoc and
+slaughter among those foreigners that stood in his track. The king saw
+Oscar approach, and met him; and they fought a deadly battle
+hand-to-hand. Soon their shields were rent, their hard helmets were
+dinted with sword-blows, their armour was pierced in many places, and
+their flesh was torn with deep wounds. And the end of the fight was,
+that the king of the foreigners was slain by Oscar, the son of Oisin.
+
+When the Lochlanns saw their king fall, they lost heart, and the battle
+went against them. But they fought on nevertheless, till evening, when
+their army entirely gave way, and fled from the field. And of all the
+nobles and princes and mighty chiefs who sailed to Erin on that
+expedition, not one was left alive, except the youngest son of the king,
+whose name was Midac. Him Finn spared on account of his youth; with
+intent to bring him up in his own household.
+
+After the Fena had rested for a time, and buried their dead, they turned
+their faces southward, and marched slowly towards Allen, bringing their
+sick and wounded companions. And Finn placed Midac among the household
+of Allen, treating him honourably, and giving him servants and tutors.
+Moreover, he enlisted him in the Fena, and gave him a high post as
+befitted a prince.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXVII.] The quicken tree, or quickbeam, or mountain ash, or roan-tree;
+Gaelic, _caerthainn_. Many mystic virtues were anciently attributed to
+this tree.
+
+[LXXVIII.] Ulad, _i.e._ Ulster.
+
+[LXXIX.] The Hill of Allen, in the county Kildare, where Finn had his
+palace. (See note 23 at the end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+MIDAC, THE SON OF COLGA, MEDITATES REVENGE.
+
+
+After this things went on as before, while Midac grew up towards
+manhood, and hunted and feasted with the Fena, and fought with them when
+they fought. But he never lost an opportunity of making himself
+acquainted with all their haunts and hunting-grounds, their palaces and
+fortresses, and in particular with their manner of carrying on war.
+
+It happened one day that Finn and some of his leading chiefs were in
+council, considering sundry matters, especially the state and condition
+of the Fena; and each chief was commanded by Finn to speak, and give his
+opinion or advice on anything that he deemed weighty enough to be
+debated by the meeting.
+
+And after many had spoken, Conan Mail, the son of Morna, stood up and
+said--
+
+"It seems to me, O king, that you and I and the Fena in general are now
+in great danger. For you have in your house, and mixing with your
+people, a young man who has good cause of enmity towards you; that is to
+say, Midac, the son of the king of Lochlann. For was it not by you that
+his father and brothers and many of his friends were slain? Now I notice
+that this young prince is silent and distant, and talks little to those
+around him. Moreover, I see that day after day he takes much pains to
+know all matters relating to the Fena; and as he has friends in
+Lochlann, mighty men with armies and ships, I fear me the day may come
+when this prince will use his knowledge to our destruction."
+
+The king said that all this was quite true, and he asked Conan to give
+his opinion as to what should be done.
+
+"What I advise in the matter is this," said Conan, "that Midac be not
+allowed to abide any longer in the palace of Allen. But as it is meet
+that he should be treated in a manner becoming a prince, let him be
+given a tract of land for himself in some other part of Erin, with a
+home and a household of his own. Then shall we be freed from his
+presence, and he can no longer listen to our counsels, and learn all our
+secrets and all our plans."
+
+This speech seemed to Finn and the other chiefs reasonable and prudent,
+and they agreed to follow the advice of Conan Mail.
+
+Accordingly Finn sent for the prince, and said to him--
+
+"Thou knowest, Midac, that thou hast been brought up from boyhood in my
+household, and that thou hast been dealt with in every way as becomes a
+prince. Now thou art a man, and standest in no further need of
+instruction, for thou hast learned everything needful for a prince and
+for a champion of the Fena; and it is not meet that thou shouldst abide
+longer in the house of another. Choose, therefore, the two cantreds
+that please thee best in all Erin, and they shall be given to thee and
+to thy descendants for ever as a patrimony. There thou shalt build
+houses and a homestead for thyself, and I will help thee with men and
+with cattle and with all things else necessary."
+
+Midac listened in silence; and when the king had done speaking, he
+replied in a cold and distant manner and in few words, that the proposal
+was reasonable and proper, and pleased him well. And thereupon he chose
+the rich cantred of Kenri on the Shannon, and the cantred of the Islands
+lying next to it on the north, at the other side of the river.[LXXX.]
+
+Now Midac had good reasons for choosing these two territories beyond all
+others in Erin. For the river opens out between them like a great sea,
+in which are many islands and sheltered harbours, where ships might
+anchor in safety; and he hoped to bring a fleet and an army into Erin
+some day, to avenge on Finn and the Fena the defeats they had inflicted
+on his countrymen, and above all, the death of his father and brothers.
+And being bent on treachery, he could not have chosen in all Erin a
+territory better suited for carrying out his secret designs.
+
+So these two cantreds were bestowed on Midac. Finn gave him also much
+cattle and wealth of all kinds; so that when his houses were built, and
+when he was settled in his new territory, with his servants and his
+cattle and his wealth all round him, there was no brugaid[LXXXI.] in
+Erin richer or more prosperous than he.
+
+For fourteen years Midac lived in his new home, growing richer every
+year. But the Fena knew nothing of his way of life, for he kept himself
+apart, and none of his old acquaintances visited him. And though he was
+enrolled in the ranks of the Fena, he never, during all that time,
+invited one of them to his house, or offered them food or drink or
+entertainment of any kind.
+
+One day, Finn and the Fena went to hunt in the district of Fermorc,[C]
+and over the plains of Hy Conall Gavra.[LXXXII.] And when all was
+arranged and the chase about to begin, Finn himself, and a few of his
+companions, went to the top of the hill of Knockfierna[LXXXIII.] to see
+the sport; while the main body of the Fena scattered themselves over the
+plain with their dogs and attendants, to start the deer and the wild
+boars and all the other game of the forest.
+
+Then Finn's people pitched their tents, and made soft couches of rushes
+and heather, and dug cooking-places[24]; for they intended the hill to
+be the resting-place of all who chose to rest, till the chase was
+ended.
+
+After Finn and his companions had sat for some time on the hill, they
+saw a tall warrior coming towards them, armed in full battle array. He
+wore a splendid coat of mail of Lochlann workmanship, and over it a
+mantle of fine satin dyed in divers colours. A broad shield hung on his
+left shoulder, and his helmet glittered in the morning sun like polished
+silver. At his left side hung a long sword, with golden hilt and
+enamelled sheath; and he held in his right hand his two long, polished,
+death-dealing spears. His figure and gait were wonderfully majestic, and
+as he came near, he saluted the king in stately and courteous words.
+
+Finn returned the salutation, and spoke with him for a while; and at
+length he asked him whence he had come, and if he had brought any
+tidings.
+
+"As to the place I came from," he answered, "that need not be spoken of;
+and for news, I have nothing to tell except that I am a
+ferdana,[LXXXIV.] and that I have come to thee, O king of the Fena, with
+a poem."
+
+"Methinks, indeed," replied Finn, "that conflict and battle are the
+poetry you profess; for never have I seen a hero more noble in mien and
+feature."
+
+"I am a ferdana nevertheless," answered the stranger; "and if thou dost
+not forbid me, I will prove it by reciting a poem I have brought for
+thee."
+
+"A mountain-top is not the place for poetry," said Finn; "and moreover,
+there is now no opportunity either for reciting or listening. For I and
+these few companions of mine have come to sit here that we may view the
+chase, and listen to the eager shouts of the men, and the sweet cry of
+the hounds.
+
+"But if you are, as you say," continued Finn, "a ferdana, remain here
+with us till the chase is ended; and then you shall come with me to one
+of our palaces, where I shall listen to your poem, and bestow on you
+such gifts as are meet for a poet of your rank."
+
+But the strange champion answered, "It is not my wish to go to your
+palace; and I now put you under gesa,[12] which true heroes do not
+suffer, that you listen to my poem, and that you find out and explain
+its meaning."
+
+"Well then," said Finn, "let there be no further delay; repeat your
+poem."
+
+So the hero recited the following verse:--
+
+ I saw a house by a river's shore,
+ Famed through Erin in days of yore,
+ Radiant with sparkling gems all o'er,
+ Its lord deep skilled in magical lore;
+ No conqueror ever defiled its floor;
+ No spoiler can rive its golden store;
+ Fire cannot burn its battlements hoar;
+ Safe it stands when the torrents pour;
+ Feasting and joy for evermore,
+ To all who enter its open door!
+ Now if thou hast learned a champion's lore,
+ Tell me the name of that mansion hoar,
+ With roof of crystal and marble floor--
+ The mansion I saw by the river's shore.
+
+"I can explain that poem," said Finn. "The mansion you saw is Bruga of
+the Boyne,[LXXXV.] the fairy palace of Angus, the Dedannan prince, son
+of the Dagda, which is open to all who wish to partake of its feasts and
+its enjoyments. It cannot be burned by fire, or drowned by water, or
+spoiled by robbers, on account of the great power of its lord and
+master; for there is not now, and there never was, and there never shall
+be, in Erin, a man more skilled in magic arts than Angus of the Bruga."
+
+"That is the sense of my poem," said the stranger; "and now listen to
+this other, and explain it to me if thou canst"--
+
+ I saw to the south a bright-faced queen,
+ With couch of crystal and robe of green;
+ A numerous offspring, sprightly and small,
+ Plain through her skin you can see them all;
+ Slowly she moves, and yet her speed
+ Exceeds the pace of the swiftest steed!
+ Now tell me the name of that wondrous queen,
+ With her couch of crystal and robe of green.[LXXXVI.]
+
+"I understand the sense of that poem also," said Finn. "The queen you
+saw is the river Boyne, which flows by the south side of the palace of
+Bruga. Her couch of crystal is the sandy bed of the river; and her robe
+of green the grassy plain of Bregia,[LXXXVII.] through which it flows.
+Her children, which you can see through her skin, are the speckled
+salmon, the lively, pretty trout, and all the other fish that swim in
+the clear water of the river. The river flows slowly indeed; but its
+waters traverse the whole world in seven years, which is more than the
+swiftest steed can do."
+
+"These are my poems," said the champion; "and thou hast truly explained
+their meaning."
+
+"And now," said Finn, "as I have listened to thy poetry and explained
+it, tell us, I pray thee, who thou art and whence thou hast come; for I
+marvel much that so noble a champion should live in any of the five
+provinces of Erin without being known to me and my companions."
+
+Then Conan Mail spoke. "Thou art, O king, the wisest and most far-seeing
+of the Fena, and thou hast unravelled and explained the hard poetical
+puzzles of this champion. Yet, on the present occasion, thou knowest not
+a friend from a foe; for this man is Midac, whom thou didst bring up
+with much honour in thine own house, and afterwards made rich, but who
+is now thy bitter enemy, and the enemy of all the Fena. Here he has
+lived for fourteen years, without fellowship or communication with his
+former companions. And though he is enrolled in the order of the Fena,
+he has never, during all that time, invited thee to a banquet, or come
+to see any of his old friends, or given food or entertainment to any of
+the Fena, either master or man."
+
+Midac answered, "If Finn and the Fena have not feasted with me, that is
+none of my fault; for my house has never been without a banquet fit for
+either king or chief; but you never came to partake of it. I did not,
+indeed, send you an invitation; but that you should not have waited for,
+seeing that I was one of the Fena, and that I was brought up in your own
+household. Howbeit, let that pass. I have now a feast ready, in all
+respects worthy of a king; and I put you under gesa that you and the
+chiefs that are here with you, come this night to partake of it. I have
+two palaces, and in each there is a banquet. One is the Palace of the
+Island, which stands on the sea; and the other is the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, which is a little way off from this hill; and it is to
+this that I wish you to come."
+
+Finn consented; and Midac, after he had pointed out the way to the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees, left them, saying he would go before, that
+he might have things in readiness when they should arrive.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXX.] The cantreds of Kenri and Islands are now two baronies: the
+former the barony of Kenry, in Limerick, a little below the city; the
+latter the barony of Islands, in Clare, on the opposite side of the
+Shannon, including the mouth of the river Fergus, with its numerous
+_islands_, from which the barony has its name.
+
+[LXXXI.] Brugaid, a sort of local officer, who was allowed a tract of
+land free, on condition that he maintained a large establishment as a
+house of public hospitality. Many of the brugaids were very rich.
+
+[LXXXII.] Fermorc and Hy Conall Gavra are now the baronies of Upper and
+Lower Connello, in the county Limerick.
+
+[LXXXIII.] Knockfierna, a conspicuous hill, celebrated for its fairy
+lore, near Croom, in the county Limerick; very near Kenri, Midac's
+territory.
+
+[LXXXIV.] Ferdana, a poet.
+
+[LXXXV.] Bruga of the Boyne. (See note, page 62.)
+
+[LXXXVI.] The poets were much given to proposing poetical puzzles of
+this kind; and it was considered a mark of superior education, and of
+great acuteness in a champion to be able to explain them. (For another
+example, see the enigmatical verse about the skin of the pig, in the
+story of "The Children of Turenn," page 69.)
+
+[LXXXVII.] Bregia or Magh Breagh, the ancient name of the plain
+extending from the Liffey northwards to the borders of the county Louth.
+(For this name, see the author's "Irish Names of Places," Series II.
+Part IV. chap. II.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FINN IS ENTRAPPED BY MIDAC, AND HELD BY ENCHANTMENT IN THE PALACE OF THE
+QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+Finn now held council with his companions, and they agreed that the
+king's son, Oisin, and five other chiefs, with their followers, should
+tarry on the hill till the hunting party returned, while Finn went to
+the palace with the rest.
+
+And it was arranged that Finn should send back word immediately to the
+party on the hill, how he fared; and that Oisin and the others were to
+follow him to the palace when the hunting party had returned.
+
+Those that remained with Oisin were Dermat O'Dyna; Fatha Conan, the son
+of the son of Conn; Kylta Mac Ronan; Ficna, the son of Finn; and Innsa,
+the son of Swena Selga.
+
+And of those who went with Finn to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, the
+chief were Gaul Mac Morna; Dathkeen the Strong-limbed; Mac Luga of the
+Red Hand; Glas Mac Encarda from Beara; the two sons of Aed the Lesser,
+son of Finn; Racad and Dalgus, the two kings of Leinster; Angus Mac
+Bresal Bola; and the two leaders of the Connaught Fena, namely,
+Mac-na-Corra and Corr the Swift-footed.
+
+As Finn and his party came nigh to the palace, they were amazed at its
+size and splendour; and they wondered greatly that they had never seen
+it before. It stood on a level green, which was surrounded by a light
+plantation of quicken trees, all covered with clusters of scarlet
+berries. At one side of the little plain, very near the palace, was a
+broad river, with a rocky bank at the near side, and a steep pathway
+leading down to a ford.
+
+But what surprised them most was that all was lonely and silent--not a
+living soul could they see in any direction; and Finn, fearing some
+foul play, would have turned back, only that he bethought him of his
+gesa and his promise. The great door was wide open, and Conan went in
+before the others; and after viewing the banqueting hall, he came out
+quite enraptured with what he had seen. He praised the beauty and
+perfect arrangement of everything, and told his companions that no other
+king or chief in all Erin had a banqueting hall to match the hall of
+Midac, the son of Colga. They all now entered, but they found no
+one--neither host nor guests nor attendants.
+
+As they gazed around, they thought they had never seen a banquet hall so
+splendid. A great fire burned brightly in the middle, without any smoke,
+and sent forth a sweet perfume, which filled the whole room with
+fragrance, and cheered and delighted the heroes. Couches were placed all
+round, with rich coverlets and rugs, and soft, glossy furs. The curved
+walls were of wood,[LXXXVIII.] close-jointed and polished like ivory;
+and each board was painted differently from those above and below; so
+that the sides of the room, from floor to roof, were all radiant with a
+wonderful variety of colours.
+
+Still seeing no one, they seated themselves on the couches and rugs.
+Presently a door opened, and Midac walked into the room. He stood for a
+few moments before the heroes, and looked at them one after another,
+but never spoke one word; then, turning round, he went out and shut the
+great door behind him.
+
+Finn and his friends were much surprised at this; however, they said
+nothing, but remained resting as they were for some time, expecting
+Midac's return. Still no one came, and at length Finn spoke--
+
+"We have been invited here, my friends, to a banquet; and it seems to me
+very strange that we should be left so long without attendance, and
+without either food or drink. Perhaps, indeed, Midac's attendants have
+made some mistake, and that the feast intended for this palace has been
+prepared in the Palace of the Island. But I wonder greatly that such a
+thing should have happened."
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Gaul Mac Morna; "for
+lo, the fire, which was clear and smokeless when we first saw it, and
+which smelled more sweetly than the flowers of the plain, now fills the
+hall with a foul stench, and sends up a great cloud of black, sooty
+smoke!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Glas Mac Encarda; "for
+the boards in the walls of this banquet hall, which were smooth and
+close-jointed and glorious all over with bright colours when we came,
+are now nothing but rough planks, clumsily fastened together with tough
+quicken tree withes, and as rude and unshapen as if they had been hacked
+and hewed with a blunt axe!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Foilan, the son of Aed
+the Lesser; "for this palace, which had seven great doors when we came
+in, all wide open, and looking pleasantly towards the sunshine, has now
+only one small, narrow door, close fastened, and facing straight to the
+north!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Conan Mail; "for the
+rich rugs and furs and the soft couches, which were under us when we sat
+here first, are all gone, not as much as a fragment or a thread
+remaining; and we are now sitting on the bare, damp earth, which feels
+as cold as the snow of one night!"[LXXXIX.]
+
+Then Finn again spoke. "You know, my friends, that I never tarry in a
+house having only one door. Let one of you then, arise, and break open
+that narrow door, so that we may go forth from this foul, smoky den!"
+
+"That shall be done," cried Conan; and, so saying, he seized his long
+spear, and, planting it on the floor, point downwards, he attempted to
+spring to his feet. But he found that he was not able to move, and
+turning to his companions, he cried out with a groan of anguish--
+
+"Alas, my friends! I see now something more wonderful than all; for I am
+firmly fixed by some druidical spell to the cold clay floor of the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees!"
+
+And immediately all the others found themselves, in like manner, fixed
+where they sat. And they were silent for a time, being quite confounded
+and overwhelmed with fear and anguish.
+
+At length Gaul spoke, and said, "It seems clear, O king, that Midac has
+planned this treachery, and that danger lies before us. I wish, then,
+that you would place your thumb under your tooth of knowledge,[25] and
+let us know the truth; so that we may at once consider as to the best
+means of escaping from this strait."
+
+Whereupon Finn placed his thumb under his tooth of knowledge, and mused
+for a little while. Then suddenly withdrawing his thumb, he sank back in
+his seat and groaned aloud.
+
+"May it be the will of the gods," said Gaul, "that it is the pain of thy
+thumb that has caused thee to utter that groan!"
+
+"Alas! not so," replied Finn. "I grieve that my death is near, and the
+death of these dear companions! For fourteen years has Midac, the son of
+the king of Lochlann, been plotting against us; and now at last he has
+caught us in this treacherous snare, from which I can see no escape.
+
+"For in the Palace of the Island there is, at this moment, an army of
+foreigners, whom Midac has brought hither for our destruction. Chief
+over all is Sinsar of the Battles, from Greece, the Monarch of the
+World, who has under his command sixteen warlike princes, with many
+others of lesser note. Next to Sinsar is his son, Borba the Haughty,
+who commands also a number of fierce and hardy knights.
+
+"There are, besides, the three kings of the Island of the Torrent,
+large-bodied and bloodthirsty, like three furious dragons, who have
+never yet yielded to an enemy on the field of battle. It is these who,
+by their sorcery, have fixed us here; for this cold clay that we sit on
+is part of the soil of the enchanted Island of the Torrent, which they
+brought hither, and placed here with foul spells. Moreover, the
+enchantment that binds us to this floor can never be broken unless the
+blood of these kings be sprinkled on the clay. And very soon some of
+Sinsar's warriors will come over from the Palace of the Island, to slay
+us all, while we are fixed here helpless, and unable to raise a hand in
+our own defence."
+
+Full of alarm and anguish were the heroes when they heard these tidings.
+And some began to shed bitter tears in silence, and some lamented aloud.
+But Finn again spoke and said--
+
+"It becomes us not, my friends, being heroes, to weep and wail like
+women, even though we are in danger of death; for tears and lamentations
+will avail us nothing. Let us rather sound the Dord-Fian,[XC.] sweetly
+and plaintively, according to our wont, that it may be a comfort to us
+before we die."
+
+So they ceased weeping, and, joining all together, they sounded the
+Dord-Fian in a slow, sad strain.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXXVIII.] The houses of the ancient Irish were circular, and generally
+made of wood.
+
+[LXXXIX.] "As cold as the snow of one night;" "As white as the snow of
+one night," are usual comparisons in Gaelic. The first night's snow
+seems particularly cold and white when you see it in the morning on
+account of the contrast with the green fields of the day before.
+
+[XC.] Dord-Fian, or Dord-Fiansa, a sort of musical war-cry, usually
+performed by several persons in chorus.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+INNSA, FINN'S FOSTER SON, DEFENDS THE FORD LEADING TO THE PALACE OF THE
+QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+Now let us speak of Oisin, and the party who tarried with him on the
+hill of Knockfierna. When he found that his father Finn had not sent
+back a messenger as he had promised, though the night was now drawing
+nigh, he began to fear that something was wrong; and he said to his
+companions--
+
+"I marvel much that we have got no news from the king, how he and his
+companions have fared in the Palace of the Quicken Trees. It is clear to
+me that he would have fulfilled his promise to send us word, if he had
+not been hindered by some unforeseen difficulty. Now, therefore, I wish
+to know who will go to the palace and bring me back tidings."
+
+Ficna, the son of Finn, stood forth and offered to go; and Finn's foster
+son, Innsa, the son of Swena Selga, said he would go with him.
+
+They both set out at once, and as they travelled with speed, they soon
+reached the plain on which stood the Palace of the Quicken Trees; and
+now the night was darkening around them. As they came near to the
+palace, they marvelled to hear the loud, slow strains of the Dord-Fian;
+and Innsa exclaimed joyfully--
+
+"Things go well with our friends, seeing that they are amusing
+themselves with the Dord-Fian!"
+
+But Ficna, who guessed more truly how things really stood, replied--
+
+"It is my opinion, friend, that matters are not so pleasant with them as
+you think; for it is only in time of trouble or danger that Finn is wont
+to have the Dord-Fian sounded in a manner so slow and sad."
+
+While they talked in this wise, it chanced that the Dord-Fian ceased for
+a little space; and Finn hearing the low hum of conversation outside,
+asked was that the voice of Ficna. And when Ficna answered, "Yes," Finn
+said to him--
+
+"Come not nearer, my son; for this place teems with dangerous spells. We
+have been decoyed hither by Midac, and we are all held here by the foul
+sorcery of the three kings of the Island of the Torrent."
+
+And thereupon Finn told him the whole story of the treachery that had
+been wrought on them, from beginning to end; and he told him also that
+nothing could free them but the blood of those three kings sprinkled on
+the clay.
+
+Then he asked who the second man was whom he had heard conversing with
+Ficna; and when he was told that it was Innsa, the son of Swena Selga,
+he addressed Ficna earnestly--
+
+"Fly, my son, from this fatal place! Fly, and save my foster child from
+the treacherous swords of the foreigners; for they are already on their
+way hither!"
+
+But Innsa quickly answered, "That I will never do. It would, indeed, be
+an ungrateful return to a kind foster father, to leave thee now in
+deadly strait, and seek my own safety."
+
+And Ficna spoke in a like strain.
+
+Then Finn said, "Be it so, my sons; but a sore trial awaits you. Those
+who come hither from the Palace of the Island must needs pass the ford
+under the shadow of these walls. Now this ford is rugged and hard to be
+crossed; and one good man, standing in the steep, narrow entrance at the
+hither side, might dispute the passage for a time against many. Go now,
+and defend this ford; and haply some help may come in time."
+
+So both went to the ford. And when they had viewed it carefully, Ficna,
+seeing that one man might defend it for a short time almost as well as
+two, said to Innsa--
+
+"Stay thou here to guard the ford for a little time, while I go to the
+Palace of the Island to see how the foreigners might be attacked. Haply,
+too, I may meet with the party coming hither, and decoy them on some
+other track."
+
+And Innsa consented; and Ficna set out straightway for the Palace of the
+Island.
+
+
+Now as to the Palace of the Island. When Midac returned in the morning,
+and told how Finn and his people were held safe in the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, the foreigners were in great joy. And they feasted and
+drank and were merry till evening; when an Irla[XCI.] of the King of the
+World spoke in secret to his brother, and said--
+
+"I will go now to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, and I will bring
+hither the head of Finn the son of Cumal; and I shall gain thereby much
+renown, and shall be honoured by the King of the World."
+
+So he went, bringing with him a goodly number of his own knights; and
+nothing is told of what befell them till they arrived at the brink of
+the ford under the Palace of the Quicken Trees. Looking across through
+the darkness, the Irla thought he saw a warrior standing at the other
+brink; and he called aloud to ask who was there, and whether he belonged
+to the noble or the ignoble races of the world.
+
+And when Innsa answered that he belonged to the household of Finn, the
+son of Cumal, the Irla said--
+
+"Lo, we are going to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, to bring Finn's
+head to the King of the World; and thou shalt come with us and lead us
+to the door."
+
+"That, indeed," replied Innsa, "would be a strange way for a champion to
+act who has been sent hither by Finn to guard this ford. I will not
+allow any foe to pass--of that be sure; and I warn you that you come not
+to my side of the ford!"
+
+At this the Irla said to his knights, "Force the ford: then shall we see
+if yonder hero can fight as well as he threatens."
+
+And at the word, they rushed through the water, as many as could find
+room. But only one or two at a time could attack; and the young champion
+struck them down right and left as fast as they came up, till the ford
+became encumbered with their bodies.
+
+And when the conflict had lasted for a long time, and when they found
+that they could not dislodge him, the few that remained retired across
+the ford; and Innsa was fain to rest after his long combat.
+
+But the Irla, seeing so many of his knights slain, was mad with wrath;
+and, snatching up his sword and shield, he attacked Innsa; and they
+fought a long and bloody fight.
+
+Now the Irla was fresh and strong, while Innsa was weary and sore
+wounded; and at length the young hero fell in the ford, and the Irla
+beheaded him, and, exulting in his victory, brought the head away.
+
+Finn and his companions, as they sat in miserable plight in the Palace
+of the Quicken Trees, heard the clash of arms at the ford, and the
+shouts and groans of warriors; and after a time all was still again; and
+they knew not how the fight had ended.
+
+And now the Irla, thinking over the matter, deemed it unsafe to go to
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees without a larger body of knights; so he
+returned towards the Palace of the Island, intending to bring Innsa's
+head to the King of the World. When he had come within a little distance
+of the palace, he met Ficna, who was then on his way back to the ford;
+and seeing that he was coming from the Palace of the Island, he deemed
+that he was one of the knights of the King of the World.
+
+Ficna spoke to him, and asked whither he had come.
+
+"I come," replied the Irla, "from the ford of the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees. There, indeed, on our way to the palace, to slay Finn the son of
+Cumal, we were met by a young champion, who defended the ford and slew
+my knights. But he fell at length beneath my sword; and, lo, I have
+brought his head for a triumph to the King of the World!"
+
+Ficna took the head tenderly, and kissed the cheek thrice, and said,
+sorrowing--
+
+"Alas, dear youth! only this morning I saw the light of valour in those
+dim eyes, and the bloom of youth on that faded cheek!"
+
+Then turning wrathfully to the Irla, he asked--
+
+"Knowest thou to whom thou hast given the young warrior's head?"
+
+And the Irla replied, "Hast thou not come from the Palace of the Island,
+and dost thou not belong to the host of the King of the World?"
+
+"I am not one of his knights," answered Ficna; "and neither shalt thou
+be, after this hour!"
+
+Whereupon they drew their swords, and fought where they stood; and the
+foreign Irla fell by the avenging sword of Ficna, the son of Finn. Ficna
+beheaded him and returned to the ford, bringing the head, and also the
+head of Innsa. And when he had come to the ford, he made a grave of
+green sods on the bank, in which he laid the body and the head of
+Innsa, sometimes grieving for the youth, and sometimes rejoicing that
+his death had been avenged.
+
+Then he went on to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, bringing the Irla's
+head; and when he had come nigh the door, he called aloud to Finn, who,
+impatient and full of anxious thoughts, asked--
+
+"Tell us, Ficna, who fought the battle at the ford, and how it has
+ended."
+
+"Thine own foster son, Innsa, defended the ford against many foes, whose
+bodies now encumber the stream."
+
+"And how is it now with my foster son?" asked Finn.
+
+"He died where he fought," replied Ficna; "for at the end, when he was
+weary and sore wounded, the foreign Irla attacked him, and slew him."
+
+"And thou, my son, didst thou stand by and see my nursling slain?"
+
+"Truly I did not," answered Ficna. "Would that I had been there, and I
+would have defended and saved him! And even now he is well avenged; for
+I met the Irla soon after, and lo, I have brought thee his head.
+Moreover, I buried thy nursling tenderly in a grave of green sods by the
+ford."
+
+And Finn wept and said, "Victory and blessings be with thee, my son!
+Never were children better than mine. Before I saw them, few were my
+possessions and small my consideration in Erin; but since they have
+grown up around me, I have been great and prosperous, till I fell by
+treachery into this evil plight. And now, Ficna, return and guard the
+ford, and peradventure our friends may send help in time."
+
+So Ficna went and sat on the brink of the ford.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCI.] Irla, _i.e._ an earl, a chief.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FICNA, THE SON OF FINN, DEFENDS THE FORD.
+
+
+Now at the Palace of the Island, another Irla, whose name was Kironn,
+brother to him who had been slain by Ficna, spoke to some of his own
+followers--
+
+"It is long since my brother left for the Palace of the Quicken Trees; I
+fear me that he and his people have fared ill in their quest. And now I
+will go to seek for them."
+
+And he went, bringing a company of knights well armed; and when they had
+come to the ford, they saw Ficna at the far side. Kironn called out and
+asked who he was, and asked also who had made such a slaughter in the
+ford.
+
+Ficna answered, "I am one of the household champions of Finn the son of
+Cumal, and he has sent me here to guard this ford. As to the slaughter
+of yonder knights, your question stirs my mind to wrath, and I warn you,
+if you come to this side of the ford, you will get a reply, not in
+words, but in deeds."
+
+Then Kironn and his men rushed through the water, blind with rage, and
+struck wildly at Ficna. But the young hero watchfully parried their
+strokes and thrusts; and one after another they fell beneath his blows,
+till only a single man was left, who ran back with all speed to the
+Palace of the Island to tell the tale. And Ficna sat down on the brink,
+covered all over with wounds, and weary from the toil of battle.
+
+When these tidings were brought to the palace, Midac was very wroth, and
+he said, "These men should not have gone to force the ford without my
+knowledge; for they were far too few in number, and neither were they
+bold and hardy enough to meet Finn's valiant champions. I know these
+Fena well, and it is not to me a matter of surprise that the Irla and
+his people fell by them.
+
+"But I will now go with a choice party of my own brave men; and I will
+cross the ford despite their guards, and slay Finn and all his
+companions in the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+
+"Moreover, there is one man among them, namely, Conan Mail,[23] who of
+all the men of Erin has the largest appetite, and is fondest of choice
+eating and drinking. To him will I bring savoury food and delicious
+drink, not, indeed, to delight him with eating and drinking, but that I
+may torment him with the sight and smell of what he cannot taste."
+
+So, having got the food, he set out with a chosen band; and when he had
+arrived at the ford, he saw a warrior at the far side. He asked who he
+was, and finding that it was Ficna, he spoke guilefully to him.
+
+"Dear art thou to me, Ficna, dearer even than all the rest of Finn's
+household; for during the time I lived among the Fena, you never used me
+ill, or lifted a hand to either man or dog belonging to me."
+
+But Ficna spurned his smooth words, and replied, "While you lived among
+the Fena, there was not a man among them that had less to do with you
+than I. But this I know, that you were treated kindly by all, especially
+by my father Finn, and you have repaid him by ingratitude and
+treachery."
+
+When Midac heard this speech he was filled with wrath, and no longer
+hiding his evil mind, he ordered Ficna with threats to leave the ford.
+But Ficna laughed with scorn, and replied--
+
+"The task is easy, friend Midac, to dislodge a single champion; and
+surely it is a small matter to you whether I stand in this narrow pass
+or abandon my post. Come forward, then, you and your knights; but here I
+will remain to receive you. I only regret you did not come sooner, while
+my blood was hot, and before my wounds grew stiff, when you would have
+got a better welcome!"
+
+Then Midac ordered forward his knights, and they ran eagerly across the
+ford. But Ficna overthrew them with a mighty onset, like a hawk among a
+flight of small birds, or like a wolf among a flock of sheep. When Midac
+saw this, he buckled on his shield and took his sword. Then, treading
+warily over the rough rocks, and over the dead bodies of his knights,
+he confronted Ficna, and they attacked each other with deadly hate and
+fury.
+
+
+We shall now speak of those who remained on Knockfierna. When Oisin
+found that the two heroes did not return as soon as he expected, he thus
+addressed his companions--
+
+"It seems to me a long time, my friends, since Ficna and Innsa went to
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees; methinks if they have sped successfully
+they should have long since come back with tidings of Finn and the
+others."
+
+And one of his companions answered, "It is plain that they have gone to
+partake of the feast, and it fares so well with them that they are in no
+haste to leave the palace."
+
+But Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face spoke and said, "It may be as you
+say, friend, but I should like to know the truth of the matter. And now
+I will go and find out why they tarry, for my mind misgives me that some
+evil thing has happened."
+
+And Fatha Conan said he would go with him.
+
+So the two heroes set out for the Palace of the Quicken Trees; and when
+they were yet a good way off from the ford they heard the clash of arms.
+They paused for a moment, breathless, to listen, and then Dermat
+exclaimed--
+
+"It is the sound of single combat, the combat of mighty heroes; it is
+Ficna fighting with the foreigners, for I know his war-shout. I hear
+the clash of swords and the groans of warriors; I hear the shrieks of
+the ravens over the fairy-mansions, and the howls of the wild men of the
+glens! Hasten, Fatha, hasten, for Ficna is in sore strait, and his shout
+is a shout for help!"
+
+And so they ran like the wind till they reached the hill-brow over the
+river; and, looking across in the dim moonlight, they saw the whole ford
+heaped with the bodies of the slain, and the two heroes fighting to the
+death at the far side. And at the first glance they observed that Ficna,
+being sore wounded, was yielding and sheltering behind his shield, and
+scarce able to ward off the blows of Midac.
+
+Then Fatha cried out, "Fly, Dermat, fly! Save our dear companion! Save
+the king's son from death."
+
+And Dermat, pausing for a moment, said, as if communing with himself--
+
+"This is surely an evil plight: for if I run to the other side, the
+foreigner, being the more enraged for seeing me, will strike with
+greater fury, and I may not overtake the prince alive; and if I cast my
+spear, I may strike the wrong man!"
+
+But Fatha, overhearing him, said, "Fear not, Dermat, for you never yet
+threw an erring cast of a spear!"
+
+Then Dermat, putting his finger in the silken loop of his spear, threw a
+deadly cast with unerring aim, and struck Midac, so that the iron
+spear-head went right through his body, and the length of a warrior's
+hand beyond.
+
+"Woe to the man," exclaimed Midac--"woe to him whom that spear reaches:
+for it is the spear of Dermat O'Dyna!"
+
+And now his wrath increased, and he struck at Ficna more fiercely than
+before.
+
+Dermat shouted to him to hold his hand and not slay the king's son; and
+as he spoke he rushed down the slope and across the ford, to save the
+young hero. But Midac, still pressing on with unabated strength and
+fury, replied--
+
+"Had you wished to save the prince's life, you should have spared mine:
+now that I have been wounded to death by your spear, Finn shall never
+see his son alive!"
+
+Even as he spoke, he raised his sword for a mighty blow; and just as
+Dermat, shouting earnestly, was closing on them, he struck the prince
+lifeless to the earth, but fell down himself immediately after.
+
+Dermat came up on the instant, and looked sadly at his friend lying
+dead. Then, addressing Midac, he said--
+
+"If I had found thee dead, I would have passed thee untouched; but now
+that I have overtaken thee alive, I must needs behead thee, for thy head
+will be to Finn a worthy eric[10] for his son."
+
+And so saying, he struck off Midac's head with one sweep of his heavy
+sword.
+
+Dermat now repaired to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, leaving Fatha to
+watch the ford till his return. And when he had come near, he called
+aloud and struck the door with his heavy spear, for his wrath had not
+yet left him; but the door yielded not.
+
+Finn knew the voice, and called out impatiently, "Do not try to enter
+here, Dermat, for this place is full of foul spells. But tell us first,
+I pray thee, who fought that long and bitter fight; for we heard the
+clash of arms and the shouts of warriors, but we know nothing more."
+
+"Thy noble son, Ficna," returned Dermat, "fought single-handed against
+the foreigners."
+
+"And how fares it with my son after that battle?"
+
+"He is dead," answered Dermat; "first sore wounded by many foes whom he
+slaughtered, and afterwards slain by Midac, the son of Colga. But thy
+son is avenged; for though I came to the ford indeed too late to save
+him, I have slain Midac, and here I have brought thee his head as an
+eric."
+
+And for a long time Dermat heard no more.
+
+At last Finn spoke again and said--
+
+"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat, for often before did you
+relieve the Fena from sore straits. But never have we been in such
+plight as this. For here we sit spell-bound, and only one thing can
+release us, the blood of the three fierce kings of the Island of the
+Torrent sprinkled on this clay. Meantime, unless the ford be well
+defended, the foreigners will come and slay us. In you, Dermat, we
+trust, and unless you aid us well and faithfully now, we shall of a
+certainty perish. Guard the ford till the rising of the sun, for then I
+know the Fena will come to aid you."
+
+"I and Fatha will of a certainty keep the enemy at bay," replied Dermat;
+and he bade them farewell for a time, and was about to return to the
+ford: but Conan Mail, with a groan, said--
+
+"Miserable was the hour when I came to this palace, and cold and
+comfortless is the clay on which I sit--the clay of the Island of the
+Torrent. But worst of all to be without food and drink so long. And
+while I sit here, tormented with hunger and thirst, there is great
+plenty of ale and wine and of rich, savoury food yonder in the Palace of
+the Island. I am not able to bear this any longer; and now, Dermat, I
+beseech you to bring me from the palace as much food as I can eat and a
+drinking-horn of wine."
+
+"Cursed be the tongue that spoke these selfish words!" said Dermat. "A
+host of foreigners are now seeking to compass your death, with only
+Fatha and myself to defend you. Surely this is work enough for two good
+men! And now it seems I must abandon my post, and undertake a task of
+much danger, to get food for the gluttonous Conan Mail!"
+
+"Alas, Dermat-na-man!"[23] replied Conan, "if it were a lovely maiden,
+with bright eyes and golden hair, who made this little request, quickly
+and eagerly you would fly to please her, little recking of danger or
+trouble. But now you refuse me, and the reason is not hard to see. For
+you formerly crossed me four times in my courtships; and now it likes
+you well to see me die of hunger in this dungeon!"
+
+"Well, then," said Dermat, "cease your upbraiding, and I will try to
+bring you food; for it is better to face danger than to suffer the
+revilings of your foul tongue."
+
+So saying, he went back to the ford to Fatha, where he stood watching;
+and after he had told him how matters stood, he said to him--
+
+"I must needs go to the Palace of the Island, to get food for Conan
+Mail; and you shall guard the ford till I return."
+
+But Fatha told him that there was food and drink enough at the other
+side of the ford, which Midac had brought from the palace, and urged him
+to bring a good meal of this to Conan.
+
+"Not so," said Dermat. "He would taunt me with bringing him food taken
+from the hands of dead men; and though one may recover from his blow, it
+is not so easy to recover from the venom of his tongue."[XCII.]
+
+So he left Fatha at the ford, and repaired to the Palace of the Island.
+
+As he drew nigh, he heard the noise of feasting and revelry, and the
+loud talk and laughter of men deep in drink. Walking tiptoe, he peered
+warily through the open door, and saw the chiefs and the knights sitting
+at the tables; with Sinsar of the Battles and his son Borba high seated
+over all. He saw also many attendants serving them with food and drink,
+each holding in his hand a large ornamented drinking-horn, filled with
+wine.
+
+Dermat entered the outer door softly, and stood in a dark part of the
+passage near the door, silent and stern, with sword drawn, watching his
+opportunity. And after a time one of the attendants, unsuspecting,
+passed close to him; when Dermat, with a swift, sure blow, struck off
+his head. And he snatched the drinking-horn from the man's hand before
+he fell, so that not a drop of the wine was spilled.
+
+Then, laying the drinking-horn aside for a moment, he walked straight
+into the hall, and taking up one of the dishes near where the king sat,
+he went out through the open door, bringing with him both dish and
+drinking-horn. And amidst the great crowd, and the drinking, and the
+noise, no one took the least notice of him, so that he got off without
+hindrance or harm of any kind.
+
+When he reached the ford, he found Fatha lying fast asleep on the bank.
+He wondered very much that he could sleep in the midst of such a
+slaughter; but knowing that the young warrior was worn out with watching
+and toil, he left him lying asleep, and went to the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees with the food for Conan.
+
+When he had come to the door, he called aloud to Conan and said--
+
+"I have here a goodly meal of choice food: how am I to give it to thee?"
+
+Conan said, "Throw it towards me through yonder little opening."
+
+Dermat did so; and as fast as he threw the food, Conan caught it in his
+large hands, and ate it up ravenously. And when it was all gone, Dermat
+said--
+
+"I have here a large drinking-horn of good wine: how am I to give it to
+thee?"
+
+Conan answered, "There is a place behind the palace where, from a rock,
+you may reach the lower parapet with a light, airy bound. Come from that
+straight over me, and break a hole in the roof with your spear, through
+which you can pour the wine down to me."
+
+Dermat did so; and as he poured down the wine, Conan, with upturned
+face, opened his great mouth and caught it, and swallowed it every drop.
+
+After this Dermat came down and returned to the ford, where he found
+Fatha still asleep; and he sat beside him, but did not awaken him.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCII.] A satirical allusion to Conan's well-known cowardice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA SLAYS THE THREE KINGS OF THE ISLAND OF THE TORRENT, BREAKS
+THE SPELL WITH THEIR BLOOD, AND FREES FINN.
+
+
+Tidings were brought to the Palace of the Island that Midac and all whom
+he led were slain at the ford; and the three kings of the Island of the
+Torrent said--
+
+"The young king of Lochlann did wrong to make this attempt without
+asking our counsel; and had we known of the thing we would have hindered
+him. For to us belongs the right to behead Finn and his companions,
+since it is the spell-venom of the clay which we brought from the Island
+of the Torrent that holds them bound in the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+And now, indeed, we will go and slay them all."
+
+So they set out with a strong party, and soon reached the ford. Looking
+across in the dim light, they saw Dermat, and called aloud to ask who he
+was.
+
+"I am Dermat O'Dyna," he replied, "one of Finn's champions. He has sent
+me to guard this ford, and whoever you are, I warn you not to cross!"
+
+Then they sought to beguile Dermat, and to win him over by smooth words;
+and they replied--
+
+"It is a pleasure to us to meet you, Dermat; for we are old friends of
+yours. We are the three kings of the Island of the Torrent, your
+fellow-pupils in valour and all heroic feats. For you and we lived with
+the same tutors from the beginning; and you never learned a feat of arms
+that we did not learn in like manner. Leave the ford, then, that we may
+pass on to the Palace of the Quicken Trees."
+
+But Dermat answered in few words, "Finn and his companions are under my
+protection till morning; and I will defend the ford as long as I am
+alive!"
+
+And he stood up straight and tall like a pillar, and scowled across the
+ford.
+
+A number of the foreigners now rushed towards Dermat, and raging in a
+confused crowd, assailed him. But the strong hero met them as a rock
+meets the waves, and slew them with ease as they came within the range
+of his sword. Yet still they pressed on, others succeeding those that
+fell; and in the midst of the rage of battle, Fatha started up from his
+sleep, awakened by the crashing of weapons and the riving of shields.
+
+He gazed for a moment, bewildered, at the combatants, and, seeing how
+matters stood, he was wroth with Dermat for not awakening him; so that
+he ran at him fiercely with drawn sword. But Dermat stepped aside, and,
+being angry, thus addressed him--
+
+"Slake thy vengeance on our foes for the present: for me, the swords of
+the foreigners are enough, methinks, without thine to aid them!"
+
+Then Fatha turned and attacked the foe, and his onset was even more
+deadly than that of Dermat; so that they fell before him to the right
+and left on the ford.
+
+And now at last the three kings, seeing so many of their men falling,
+advanced slowly towards Dermat; and Dermat, unterrified, stood in his
+place to meet them. And their weapons clashed and tore through their
+shields, and the fight was long and furious; till at last the
+champion-pride and the battle-fury of Dermat arose, so that the three
+dragon-like kings fell slain one by one before him, on that ford of red
+slaughter.
+
+And now, though smarting with wounds, and breathless, and weary, Dermat
+and Fatha remembered Finn and the Fena; and Dermat called to mind what
+Finn had told him as to how the spell was to be broken. So he struck off
+the heads of the three kings, and, followed by Fatha, he ran with them,
+all gory as they were, to the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+
+As they drew nigh to the door, Finn, knowing their voices and their
+footsteps, called aloud anxiously to ask how it fared with the
+combatants at the ford; "For," said he, "the crashing and the din of
+that battle exceeded all we have yet heard, and we know not how it has
+ended."
+
+Dermat answered, "King of the Fena, Fatha and I have slain the three
+kings of the Island of the Torrent; and lo, here we have their heads all
+bloody; but how am I to bring them to thee?"
+
+"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat; you and Fatha have fought a
+valiant fight, worthy of the Fena of Erin! Now sprinkle the door with
+the blood."
+
+Dermat did so, and in a moment the door flew wide open with a crash. And
+inside they saw the heroes in sore plight, all pale and faint, seated on
+the cold clay round the wall. Dermat and Fatha, holding the gory heads
+by the hair, sprinkled the earth under each with the blood, beginning
+with Finn, and freed them one by one; and the heroes, as they found the
+spell broken, sprang to their feet with exulting cries. And they thanked
+the gods for having relieved them from that perilous strait, and they
+and the two heroes joyfully embraced each other.
+
+But danger still threatened, and they now took counsel what they should
+do; and Finn, addressing Dermat and Fatha, said--
+
+"The venom of these foul spells has withered our strength, so that we
+are not able to fight; but at sunrise they will lose their power, and we
+shall be strong again. It is necessary, therefore, that you still guard
+the ford, and at the rising of the sun we shall relieve you."
+
+So the two heroes went to the ford, and Fatha returned with food and
+drink for Finn and the others.
+
+
+After the last battle at the ford, a few who had escaped brought back
+tidings to the King of the World and his people, that the three kings of
+the Island of the Torrent had fallen by the hands of Dermat and Fatha.
+But they knew not that Finn and the others had been released.
+
+Then arose the king's son, Borba the Haughty, who, next to the king
+himself, was mightiest in battle of all the foreign host. And he said--
+
+"Feeble warriors were they who tried to cross this ford. I will go now
+and avenge the death of our people on these Fena, and I will bring
+hither the head of Finn the son of Cumal, and place it at my father's
+feet."
+
+So he marched forth without delay, with a large body of chosen warriors,
+till he reached the edge of the ford. And although Dermat and Fatha
+never trembled before a foe, yet when they saw the dark mass drawing
+nigh, and heard the heavy tread and clank of arms, they dreaded that
+they might be dislodged and overpowered by repeated attacks, leaving
+Finn and the rest helpless and unprotected. And each in his heart longed
+for the dawn of morning.
+
+No parley was held this time, but the foreigners came straight across
+the ford--as many abreast as could find footing. And as they drew near,
+Dermat spoke to Fatha--
+
+"Fight warily, my friend: ward the blows of the foremost, and be not too
+eager to slay, but rather look to thy own safety. It behoves us to nurse
+our strength and prolong the fight, for the day is dawning, and sunrise
+is not far off!"
+
+The foreigners came on, many abreast; but their numbers availed them
+naught, for the pass was narrow; and the two heroes, one taking the
+advancing party to the right, and the other to the left, sometimes
+parried and sometimes slew, but never yielded an inch from where they
+stood.
+
+And now at last the sun rose up over the broad plain of Kenri; and
+suddenly the withering spell went forth from the bones and sinews of the
+heroes who sat at the Palace of the Quicken Trees, listening with
+anxious hearts to the clash of battle at the ford. Joyfully they started
+to their feet, and, snatching up their arms, hastened down to the ford
+with Finn at their head; but one they sent, the swiftest among them, to
+Knockfierna, to take the news to Oisin.
+
+Dermat and Fatha, fighting eagerly, heeded not that the sun had risen,
+though it was now indeed glittering before their eyes on the helmets and
+arms of their foes. But as they fought, there rose a great shout behind
+them; and Finn and Gaul and the rest ran down the slope to attack the
+foreigners.
+
+The foreigners, not in the least dismayed, answered the attack; and the
+fight went on, till Gaul Mac Morna and Borba the Haughty met face to
+face in the middle of the ford, and they fought a hard and deadly
+combat. The battle-fury of Gaul at length arose, so that nothing could
+stand before him, and, with one mighty blow, he cleft the head from the
+body of Borba.
+
+And now the foreigners began to yield: but they still continued to
+fight, till a swift messenger sped to the Palace of the Island, and told
+the great king, Sinsar of the Battles, that his son was dead, slain by
+Gaul; and that his army was sore pressed by the Fena, with Finn at their
+head.
+
+When the people heard these tidings, they raised a long and sorrowful
+cry of lamentation for the king's son; but the king himself, though
+sorrow filled his heart, showed it not. And he arose and summoned his
+whole host; and, having arranged them in their battalions and in their
+companies under their princes and chiefs, he marched towards the
+battle-field, desiring vengeance on the Fena more than the glory of
+victory.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE FIGHT AT THE FORD, WITH THE FOREIGN ARMY.
+
+
+All the Fena who had gone to the chase from Knockfierna had returned,
+and were now with Oisin, the son of Finn. And the messenger came slowly
+up the hill-side, and told them, though with much difficulty, for he
+was weary and breathless, the whole story from beginning to end, of
+Finn's enchantment, and of the battles at the ford, and how their
+companions at that moment stood much in need of aid against the
+foreigners.
+
+Instantly the whole body marched straight towards the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, and arrived on the hill-brow over the ford, just as the
+King of the World and his army were approaching from the opposite
+direction.
+
+And now the fight at the ford ceased for a time, while the two armies
+were put in battle array; and on neither side was there any cowardice or
+any desire to avoid the combat.
+
+The Fena were divided into four battalions. The active, bright-eyed
+Clann Baskin marched in front of the first battalion; the fierce,
+champion-like Clann Morna led the second; the strong, sanguinary
+Mic-an-Smoil brought up the third; and the fourth was led forward by the
+fearless, venomous Clann O'Navnan.
+
+And they marched forward, with their silken banners, each banner-staff
+in the hand of a tall, trusty hero; their helmets glittering with
+precious gems; their broad, beautiful shields on their left shoulders;
+with their long, straight, deadly lances in their hands; and their
+heavy, keen-edged swords hanging at the left side of each. Onward they
+marched; and woe to those who crossed the path of that host of active,
+high-minded champions, who never turned their backs on an enemy in
+battle!
+
+And now at last the fight began with showers of light, venomous
+missiles; and many a hero fell even before the combatants met face to
+face. Then they drew their long, broad-bladed swords, and the ranks
+closed and mingled in deadly strife. It would be vain to attempt a
+description of that battle, for it was hard to distinguish friend from
+foe. Many a high-souled hero fell wounded and helpless, and neither sigh
+nor groan of pain escaped them; but they died, encouraging their friends
+to vengeance with voice and gesture. And the first thought of each
+champion was to take the life of his foe rather than to save his own.
+
+The great king Finn himself moved tall and stately from battalion to
+battalion, now fighting in the foremost ranks, and now encouraging his
+friends and companions, his mighty voice rising clear over the clash of
+arms and the shouts of the combatants. And wherever he moved, there the
+courage of the Fena rose high, and their valour and their daring
+increased, so that the ranks of their foes fell back thinned and
+scattered before them.
+
+Oscar, resting for a moment from the toil of battle, looked round, and
+espied the standard of the King of the World, where he stood guarded by
+his best warriors, to protect him from the danger of being surrounded
+and outnumbered by his foes; and the young hero's wrath was kindled when
+he observed that the Fena were falling back dismayed wherever that
+standard was borne.
+
+Rushing through the opposing ranks like a lion maddened by dogs, he
+approached the king; and the king laughed a grim laugh of joy when he
+saw him, and ordered his guards back; for he was glad in his heart,
+expecting to revenge his son's death by slaying with his own hand Finn's
+grandson, who was most loved of all the youthful champions of the Fena.
+Then these two great heroes fought a deadly battle; and many a warrior
+stayed his hand to witness this combat. It seemed as if both should
+fall; for each inflicted on the other many wounds. The king's rage knew
+no bounds at being so long withstood, for at first sight he despised
+Oscar for his youth and beauty; and he made an onset that caused Oscar's
+friends, as they looked on, to tremble; for during this attack the young
+hero defended himself, and no more. But now, having yielded for a time,
+he called to mind the actions and the fame of his forefathers, and
+attacked the king in turn, and, with a blow that no shield or buckler
+could withstand, he swept the head from the king's body.
+
+Then a great shout went up from the Fena, and the foreigners instantly
+gave way; and they were pursued and slaughtered on every side. A few
+threw away their arms and escaped to the shore, where, hastily unmooring
+their ships, they sailed swiftly away to their own country, with tidings
+of the death of their king and the slaughter of their army.
+
+
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARRIVAL OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+One day in the beginning of summer, Finn, the son of Cumal, the son of
+Trenmore O'Baskin,[23] feasted the chief people of Erin at Allen[23] of
+the broad hill-slopes. And when the feast was over, the Fena reminded
+him that it was time to begin the chase through the plains and the glens
+and the wildernesses of Erin.
+
+For this was the manner in which the Fena were wont to spend their time.
+They divided the year into two parts. During the first half, namely,
+from Beltane to Samin,[XCIII.] they hunted each day with their dogs; and
+during the second half, namely, from Samin to Beltane, they lived in the
+mansions and the betas[XCIV.] of Erin; so that there was not a chief or
+a great lord or a keeper of a house of hospitality in the whole country
+that had not nine of the Fena quartered on him during the winter half of
+the year.
+
+Finn and his chiefs now held council as to which of the provinces of
+Erin they should begin with; and they chose Munster for the first chase.
+
+Next day they set out, both dogs and men; and they travelled through
+Offaly,[XCV.] and by one side of Fera-call, and to Brosna of Slieve
+Bloma, and by the Twelve Mountains of Evlinn, till they came to
+Collkilla, which is now called Knockainy.
+
+The chase was then set in order, and they scattered themselves over the
+broad plains of Munster. They began at Ardpatrick,[XCVI.] and they
+hunted over Kenn-Avrat of Slieve-Keen, and over Coill-na-drua, which is
+now called the district of Fermoy; over the fruitful lands of Lehan, and
+over the confines of Fermorc, which is now called Hy Conall Gavra. Then
+south to the patrimony of Curoi Mac Dara, and by the shores of Loch
+Lein; afterwards along the blue-streamy Suir, by Caher-Dun-Isca, over
+the great plain of Femin, and across the speckled summit of
+Slieve-na-man-finn; all over East Munster and West Munster, as far as
+Balla-Gavran on the one side, and on the other across the Shannon to
+Cratloe, near Limerick of the blue waters.
+
+In short, there was not a plain or a valley, a wood or a brake, a
+mountain or a wilderness, in the two provinces of Munster, that they did
+not hunt over on that occasion.
+
+Now it chanced at one time during the chase, while they were hunting
+over the plain of Cliach,[XCVII.] that Finn went to rest on the hill of
+Collkilla, which is now called Knockainy; and he had his hunting-tents
+pitched on a level spot near the summit. Some of his chief heroes
+tarried with him; namely, his son Oisin; the valiant Oscar, the son of
+Oisin; Gaul Mac Morna of the Mighty Deeds; Finn's shield-bearer,
+Skeabrac; Kylta Mac Ronan; Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face; Ligan
+Lumina the Swift-footed; Conan Mail of the Foul Tongue; and Finn Ban Mac
+Bresal.
+
+When the king and his companions had taken their places on the hill, the
+Fena unleashed their gracefully shaped, sweet-voiced hounds through the
+woods and sloping glens. And it was sweet music to Finn's ear, the cry
+of the long-snouted dogs, as they routed the deer from their covers, and
+the badgers from their dens; the pleasant, emulating shouts of the
+youths; the whistling and signalling of the huntsmen; and the
+encouraging cheers of the mighty heroes, as they spread themselves
+through the glens and woods, and over the broad, green plain of Cliach.
+
+Then did Finn ask who of all his companions would go to the highest
+point of the hill directly over them, to keep watch and ward, and to
+report how the chase went on. For, he said, the Dedannans[1] were ever
+on the watch to work the Fena mischief by their druidical spells, and
+more so during the chase than at other times.
+
+Finn Ban Mac Bresal stood forward and offered to go: and, grasping his
+broad spears, he went to the top, and sat viewing the plain to the four
+points of the sky. And the king and his companions brought forth the
+chess-board and chess-men,[26] and sat them down to a game.
+
+Finn Ban Mac Bresal had been watching only a little time, when he saw on
+the plain to the east, a Fomor[XCVIII.] of vast size coming towards the
+hill, leading a horse. As he came nearer, Finn Ban observed that he was
+the ugliest-looking giant his eyes ever lighted on. He had a large,
+thick body, bloated and swollen out to a great size; clumsy, crooked
+legs; and broad, flat feet, turned inwards. His hands and arms and
+shoulders were bony and thick and very strong-looking; his neck was long
+and thin; and while his head was poked forward, his face was turned up,
+as he stared straight at Finn Mac Bresal. He had thick lips, and long,
+crooked teeth; and his face was covered all over with bushy hair.
+
+He was fully armed; but all his weapons were rusty and soiled and
+slovenly looking. A broad shield of a dirty, sooty colour, rough and
+battered, hung over his back; he had a long, heavy, straight sword at
+his left hip; and he held in his left hand two thick-handled,
+broad-headed spears, old and rusty, and seeming as if they had not been
+handled for years. In his right hand he held an iron club, which he
+dragged after him, with its end on the ground; and, as it trailed along,
+it tore up a track as deep as the furrow a farmer ploughs with a team of
+oxen.
+
+The horse he led was even larger in proportion than the giant himself,
+and quite as ugly. His great carcase was covered all over with tangled,
+scraggy hair, of a sooty black; you could count his ribs, and all the
+points of his big bones through his hide; his legs were crooked and
+knotty; his neck was twisted; and as for his jaws, they were so long and
+heavy that they made his head look twice too large for his body.
+
+The giant held him by a thick halter, and seemed to be dragging him
+forward by main force, the animal was so lazy and so hard to move. Every
+now and then, when the beast tried to stand still, the giant would give
+him a blow on the ribs with his big iron club, which sounded as loud as
+the thundering of a great billow against the rough-headed rocks of the
+coast. When he gave him a pull forward by the halter, the wonder was
+that he did not drag the animal's head away from his body; and, on the
+other hand, the horse often gave the halter such a tremendous tug
+backwards that it was equally wonderful how the arm of the giant was not
+torn away from his shoulder.
+
+Now it was not an easy matter to frighten Finn Ban Mac Bresal; but when
+he saw the giant and his horse coming straight towards him in that wise,
+he was seized with such fear and horror that he sprang from his seat,
+and, snatching up his arms, he ran down the hill-slope with his utmost
+speed towards the king and his companions, whom he found sitting round
+the chess-board, deep in their game.
+
+They started up when they saw Finn Ban looking so scared; and, turning
+their eyes towards where he pointed, they saw the big man and his horse
+coming up the hill. They stood gazing at him in silent wonder, waiting
+till he should arrive; but although he was no great way off when they
+first caught sight of him, it was a long time before he reached the spot
+where they stood, so slow was the movement of himself and his horse.
+
+When at last he had come up, he bowed his head, and bended his knee, and
+saluted the king with great respect.
+
+Finn addressed him; and after having given him leave to speak, he asked
+him who he was, and what was his name; from which of the three chief
+divisions of the world he had come, and whether he belonged to one of
+the noble or ignoble races; also what was his profession or craft, and
+why he had no servant to attend to his horse--if, indeed, such an ugly
+old spectre of an animal could be called a horse at all.
+
+The big man made answer and said, "King of the Fena, I will answer
+everything you ask me, as far as lies in my power. Whether I come of a
+noble or of an ignoble race, that, indeed, I cannot tell, for I know not
+who my father and mother were. As to where I came from, I am a Fomor of
+Lochlann[6] in the north; but I have no particular dwelling-place, for
+I am continually travelling about from one country to another, serving
+the great lords and nobles of the world, and receiving wages for my
+service.
+
+"In the course of my wanderings I have often heard of you, O king, and
+of your greatness and splendour and royal bounty; and I have come now to
+visit you, and to ask you to take me into your service for one year; and
+at the end of that time I shall fix my own wages, according to my
+custom.
+
+"You ask me also why I have no servant for this great horse of mine. The
+reason of that is this: at every meal I eat, my master must give me as
+much food and drink as would be enough for a hundred men; and whosoever
+the lord or chief may be that takes me into his service, it is quite
+enough for him to have to provide for me, without having also to feed my
+servant.
+
+"Moreover, I am so very heavy and lazy that I should never be able to
+keep up with a company on march if I had to walk; and this is my reason
+for keeping a horse at all.
+
+"My name is the Gilla Dacker,[XCIX.] and it is not without good reason
+that I am so called. For there never was a lazier or worse servant than
+I am, or one that grumbles more at doing a day's work for his master.
+And I am the hardest person in the whole world to deal with; for, no
+matter how good or noble I may think my master, or how kindly he may
+treat me, it is hard words and foul reproaches I am likely to give him
+for thanks in the end.
+
+"This, O Finn, is the account I have to give of myself, and these are my
+answers to your questions."
+
+"Well," answered Finn, "according to your own account, you are not a
+very pleasant fellow to have anything to do with; and of a truth there
+is not much to praise in your appearance. But things may not be so bad
+as you say; and, anyhow, as I have never yet refused any man service and
+wages, I will not now refuse you."
+
+Whereupon Finn and the Gilla Dacker made covenants, and the Gilla Dacker
+was taken into service for a year.
+
+Then the big man turned to Conan Mail, and asked him whether the
+foot-service or the horse-service had the better pay among the Fena; and
+Conan answered that the horsemen had twice as much pay as the footmen.
+
+"If that be so," replied the Gilla Dacker, "I will join the
+horse-service, as I have a fine steed of my own; and indeed, if I had
+known this before, I would certainly have come hither on horseback,
+instead of walking.
+
+"And now, as to this same horse of mine, I find I must attend to him
+myself, as I see no one here worthy of putting a hand near him. So I
+will lead him to the nearest stud, as I am wont to do, and let him graze
+among your horses. I value him greatly, however, and it would grieve me
+very much if any harm were to befall him; so," continued he, turning to
+the king, "I put him under your protection, O king, and under the
+protection of all the Fena that are here present."
+
+At this speech the Fena all burst out laughing, to see the Gilla Dacker
+showing such concern for his miserable, worthless old skeleton of a
+horse.
+
+Howbeit, the big man, giving not the least heed to their merriment, took
+the halter off the horse's head, and turned him loose among the horses
+of the Fena.
+
+But now, this same wretched-looking old animal, instead of beginning to
+graze, as every one thought he would, ran in among the horses of the
+Fena, and began straightway to work all sorts of mischief. He cocked his
+long, hard, switchy tail straight out like a rod, and, throwing up his
+hind legs, he kicked about on this side and on that, maiming and
+disabling several of the horses. Sometimes he went tearing through the
+thickest of the herd, butting at them with his hard, bony forehead; and
+he opened out his lips with a vicious grin, and tore all he could lay
+hold on, with his sharp, crooked teeth, so that none were safe that came
+in his way either before or behind. And the end of it was, that not an
+animal of the whole herd escaped, without having a leg broken, or an eye
+knocked out, or his ribs fractured, or his ear bitten off, or the side
+of his face torn open, or without being in some other way cut or maimed
+beyond cure.
+
+At last he left them, and was making straight across to a small field
+where Conan Mail's horses were grazing by themselves, intending to play
+the same tricks among them. But Conan, seeing this, shouted in great
+alarm to the Gilla Dacker, to bring away his horse, and not let him work
+any more mischief; and threatening, if he did not do so at once, to go
+himself and knock the brains out of the vicious old brute on the spot.
+
+But the Gilla Dacker took the matter quite cool; and he told Conan that
+he saw no way of preventing his horse from joining the others, except
+some one put the halter on him and held him, which would, of course, he
+said, prevent the poor animal from grazing, and would leave him with a
+hungry belly at the end of the day.
+
+He said, moreover, that as he had no horse-boy, and must needs do
+everything for himself, he thought it quite time enough to look after
+his horse when he had to make ready for a journey. "But," said he to
+Conan, "there is the halter; and if you are in any fear for your own
+animals, you may go yourself and bring him away from the field."
+
+Conan was in a mighty rage when he heard this; and as he saw the big
+horse just about to cross the fence, he snatched up the halter, and
+running forward, with long strides, he threw it over the animal's head
+and thought to lead him back. But in a moment the horse stood stock
+still, and his body and legs became as stiff as if they were made of
+wood; and though Conan pulled and tugged with might and main, he was not
+able to stir him an inch from his place.
+
+He gave up pulling at last, when he found it was no use; but he still
+kept on holding the halter, while the big horse never made the least
+stir, but stood as if he had been turned into stone; the Gilla Dacker
+all the time looking on quite unconcernedly, and the others laughing at
+Conan's perplexity. But no one offered to relieve him.
+
+At last Fergus Finnvel, the poet, spoke to Conan, and said, "I never
+would have believed, Conan Mail, that you could be brought to do
+horse-service for any knight or noble in the whole world; but now,
+indeed, I see that you have made yourself a horse-boy to an ugly foreign
+giant, so hateful-looking and low-born that not a man of the Fena would
+have anything to say to him. As you have, however, to mind this old
+horse in order to save your own, would it not be better for you to mount
+him, and revenge yourself for all the trouble he is giving you, by
+riding him across the country, over the hill-tops, and down into the
+deep glens and valleys, and through stones and bogs and all sorts of
+rough places, till you have broken the heart in his big, ugly body?"
+
+Conan, stung by the cutting words of the poet, and by the jeers of his
+companions, jumped upon the horse's back, and began to beat him mightily
+with his heels, and with his two big, heavy fists, to make him go; but
+the horse seemed not to take the least notice and never stirred.
+
+"I know the reason he does not go," said Fergus Finnvel; "he has been
+accustomed to carry a horseman far heavier than you, that is to say,
+the Gilla Dacker; and he will not move till he has the same weight on
+his back."
+
+At this Conan Mail called out to his companions, and asked which of them
+would mount with him, and help to avenge the damage done to their
+horses.
+
+"I will go," said Coil Croda the Battle Victor, son of Criffan; and up
+he went. But the horse never moved.
+
+Dara Donn Mac Morna next offered to go, and mounted behind the others;
+and after him Angus Mac Art Mac Morna. And the end of it was, that
+fourteen men of the Clann Baskin and Clann Morna[23] got up along with
+Conan; and all began to thrash the horse together, with might and main.
+But they were none the better of it, for he remained standing stiff and
+immovable as before. They found, moreover, that their seat was not at
+all an easy one--the animal's back was so sharp and bony.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCIII.] Beltane, the first of May; Samin, the first of November.
+
+[XCIV.] Beta, a public house of hospitality.
+
+[XCV.] Offaly, now the name of two baronies in the county Kildare.
+
+Fera-call, or Fircal, an ancient territory in the present King's County.
+
+Brosna, a small river rising in the Slieve Bloma, or Slieve Bloom
+mountains, which flows by Birr, and falls into the Shannon near
+Banagher; usually called the Little Brosna, to distinguish it from the
+Great Brosna, which flows through King's County into the Shannon.
+
+The Twelve Mountains of Evlinn. (See note, page 97.)
+
+Knockainy, a small hill much celebrated in fairy lore, in the county
+Limerick, giving name to the village of Knockainy at its base. It
+appears from the text that it was more anciently called Collkilla, or
+hazel-wood.
+
+[XCVI.] Ardpatrick, a beautiful green hill, with a remarkable church
+ruin and graveyard on its summit, two miles from Kilfinane, county
+Limerick.
+
+Kenn-Avrat was the ancient name of Seefin mountain, rising over the
+village of Glenosheen, two miles from Ardpatrick. Slieve-Keen, the old
+name of the hill of Carrigeennamroanty, near Seefin.
+
+Fermoy, a well-known town and barony in the county Cork. It appears from
+the text that the district was anciently known by the name of
+Coill-na-drua, or the wood of the druids.
+
+Lehan, the ancient name of the district round Castlelyons, in the county
+Cork.
+
+Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. (See note, page
+184.)
+
+Curoi Mac Dara, a celebrated chief who flourished in the time of the Red
+Branch Knights of Ulster, viz., in the first century of the Christian
+era. Curoi had his residence on a mountain near Tralee, still called
+Caherconree (the fortress of Curoi), and his "patrimony" was South
+Munster. The remains of Curoi's great stone fortress are still to be
+seen on Caherconree.
+
+Loch Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+Caher-Dun-Isca, now the town of Caher, on the Suir, in Tipperary.
+
+Femin was the name of the great plain lying to the south and west of the
+mountain of Slievenaman, or Slieve-na-man-finn, near Clonmel, in
+Tipperary.
+
+Balla-Gavran, or the pass of Gavran, an ancient road, which ran by
+Gavran (now Gowran), in the county Kilkenny.
+
+Cratloe, a well-known district on the Clare side of the Shannon, near
+Limerick.
+
+[XCVII.] Cliach, the old name of the plain lying round Knockainy.
+
+[XCVIII.] Fomor, a gigantic warrior, a giant; its primitive meaning is
+"a sea-robber," commonly called a Fomorian. (See note 5 at the end.)
+
+[XCIX.] Gilla Dacker means "a slothful fellow"--a fellow hard to move,
+hard to manage, hard to have anything to do with.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONAN AND FIFTEEN OF THE FENA ARE CARRIED OFF BY THE GILLA DACKER'S
+HORSE.
+
+
+When the Gilla Dacker saw the Fena beating his horse at such a rate, he
+seemed very angry, and addressed the king in these words--
+
+"King of the Fena, I now see plainly that all the fine accounts I heard
+about you and the Fena are false, and I will not stay in your
+service--no, not another hour. You can see for yourself the ill usage
+these men are giving my horse without cause; and I leave you to judge
+whether any one could put up with it--any one who had the least regard
+for his horse. The time is, indeed, short since I entered your service,
+but I now think it a great deal too long; so pay me my wages, and let me
+go my ways."
+
+But Finn said, "I do not wish you to go; stay on till the end of your
+year, and then I will pay you all I promised you."
+
+"I swear," answered the Gilla Dacker, "that if this were the very last
+day of my year, I would not wait till morning for my wages, after this
+insult. So, wages or no wages, I will now seek another master; but from
+this time forth I shall know what to think of Finn Mac Cumal and his
+Fena!"
+
+With that the Gilla Dacker stood up as straight as a pillar, and,
+turning his face towards the south-west, he walked slowly away.
+
+When the horse saw his master leaving the hill, he stirred himself at
+once and walked quietly after him, bringing the fifteen men away on his
+back. And when the Fena saw this they raised a loud shout of laughter,
+mocking them.
+
+The Gilla Dacker, after he had walked some little way, looked back, and
+seeing that his horse was following, he stood for a moment to tuck up
+his skirts. Then, all at once changing his pace, he set out with long,
+active strides; and if you know what the speed of a swallow is, flying
+across a mountain-side, or the dry, fairy wind of a March day sweeping
+over the plains, then you can understand the swiftness of the Gilla
+Dacker, as he ran down the hill-side towards the south-west.
+
+Neither was the horse behindhand in the race; for, though he carried a
+heavy load, he galloped like the wind after his master, plunging and
+bounding forward with as much freedom as if he had nothing at all on his
+back.
+
+The men now tried to throw themselves off; but this, indeed, they were
+not able to do, for the good reason that they found themselves fastened
+firmly, hands and feet and all, to the horse's back.
+
+And now Conan, looking round, raised his big voice, and shouted to Finn
+and the Fena, asking them were they content to let their friends be
+carried off in that manner by such a horrible, foul-looking old spectre
+of a horse.
+
+Finn and the others, hearing this, seized their arms and started off in
+pursuit. Now the way the Gilla Dacker and his horse took was first
+through Fermorc,[C.] which is at the present day called Hy Conall Gavra;
+next over the wide, heathy summit of Slieve Lougher; from that to Corca
+Divna; and they ran along by Slieve Mish, till they reached Cloghan
+Kincat, near the deep green sea.
+
+During all this time Finn and his people kept them in view, but were not
+able to overtake them; and Ligan Lumina, one of the swiftest of the
+Fena, kept ahead of the others.
+
+The horse now passed by Cloghan Kincat without in the least abating his
+speed; and when he had arrived on the beach, even at the very water's
+edge, Ligan overtook him, and caught him by the tail with his two hands,
+intending to hold him till the rest of the Fena came up. He gave a
+mighty pull back; but the horse, not in the least checked by this, made
+no more ado but plunged forward through the waves, dragging Ligan after
+him hanging at his tail. And Ligan now found that he could neither help
+his friends nor free himself, for his two hands clung fast to the tail
+of the horse.
+
+And so the great horse continued his course without stop or stay,
+bringing the sixteen Fena with him through the sea. Now this is how they
+fared in the sea, while the horse was rushing swiftly farther and
+farther to the west: they had always a dry, firm strand under them, for
+the waters retired before the horse while behind them was a wild, raging
+sea, which followed close after, and seemed ready every moment to topple
+over their heads. But, though the billows were tumbling and roaring all
+round, neither horse nor riders were wetted by as much as a drop of
+brine or a dash of spray.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[C.] Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. Slieve Lougher,
+a celebrated mountain near Castle Island, in Kerry. Corca Divna, now the
+barony of Corkaguiny, the long peninsula lying west of Tralee, and
+containing the town of Dingle, and the mountain range of Slieve Mish.
+Cloghan Kincat, now called Cloghan, a small village on the northern
+coast of the peninsula.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PURSUIT.
+
+
+Now as to Finn and the others. They stood on the bank over the beach,
+watching the horse and men till they lost sight of them in the sea afar
+off; and then they sat them down, weary after their long chase, and full
+of sadness for the loss of their companions.
+
+After a long silence, Finn spoke and asked the chiefs what they thought
+best to be done. But they replied that he was far beyond them all in
+knowledge and wisdom; and they told him they would follow whatsoever
+counsel he and Fergus Finnvel, the poet, gave them. Then Finn told
+Fergus to speak his mind; and Fergus said--
+
+"My counsel is that we go straightway to Ben Edar,[CI.] where we shall
+find a ship ready to sail. For our forefathers, when they wrested the
+land from the gifted, bright-complexioned Dedannans, bound them by
+covenant to maintain this ship for ever, fitted with all things needful
+for a voyage, even to the smallest article, as one of the privileges of
+Ben Edar; so that if at any time one of the noble sons of Gael
+Glas[CII.] wished to sail to distant lands from Erin, he should have a
+ship lying at hand in the harbour ready to begin his voyage."
+
+They agreed to this counsel, and turned their steps without delay
+northwards towards Ben Edar. They had not gone far when they met two
+noble-looking youths, fully armed, and wearing over their armour
+beautiful mantles of scarlet silk, fastened by brooches of gold. The
+strangers saluted the king with much respect; and the king saluted them
+in return. Then, having given them leave to converse, he asked them who
+they were, whither they had come, and who the prince or chief was that
+they served. And the elder answered--
+
+"My name is Feradach, and my brother's name is Foltlebar; and we are the
+two sons of the king of Innia. Each of us professes an art; and it has
+long been a point of dispute between us, which art is the better, my
+brother's or mine. Hearing that there is not in the world a wiser or
+more far-seeing man than thou art, O king, we have come to ask thee to
+take us into thy service among thy household troops for a year, and at
+the end of that time to give judgment between us in this matter."
+
+Finn asked them what were the two arts they professed.
+
+"My art," answered Feradach, "is this: If at any time a company of
+warriors need a ship, give me only my joiner's axe and my
+crann-tavall,[CIII.] and I am able to provide a ship for them without
+delay. The only thing I ask them to do is this--to cover their heads
+close, and keep them covered, while I give the crann-tavall three blows
+of my axe. Then I tell them to uncover their heads; and lo, there lies
+the ship in harbour, ready to sail!"
+
+Then Foltlebar spoke and said, "This, O king, is the art I profess: On
+land I can track the wild duck over nine ridges and nine glens, and
+follow her without being once thrown out, till I drop upon her in her
+nest. And I can follow up a track on sea quite as well as on land, if I
+have a good ship and crew."
+
+Finn replied, "You are the very men I want; and I now take you both into
+my service. At this moment I need a good ship and a skilful pilot more
+than any two things in the whole world. And though our own track-men,
+namely, the Clann Navin, are good, yet we now need some one still more
+skilful, to follow the Gilla Dacker through unknown seas."
+
+Then the two brothers asked Finn what strait he was in at that moment,
+and why he wanted a ship and pilot so much. Whereupon Finn told them the
+whole story of the Gilla Dacker's doings from beginning to end. "And we
+are now," said he, "on our way to Ben Edar, to seek a ship, that we may
+follow this giant and his horse, and rescue our companions."
+
+Then Feradach said, "I will get you a ship--a ship that will sail as
+swiftly as a swallow can fly!"
+
+And Foltlebar said, "I will guide your ship in the track of the Gilla
+Dacker till ye lay hands on him, in whatsoever quarter of the world he
+may have hidden himself!"
+
+And so they turned back to Cloghan Kincat. And when they had come to the
+beach, Feradach told them to cover their heads; and they did so. Then he
+struck three blows of his axe on the crann-tavall; after which he bade
+them look. And lo, they saw a ship, fully fitted out with oars and
+sails, and with all things needed for a long voyage, riding before them
+in the harbour!
+
+Then Kylta Mac Ronan went to the top of a high hill; and, turning his
+face inland, he uttered three mighty shouts, which were taken up by the
+people of the next valley, and after them by those of the next valley
+beyond. And so the signal spread, till a shout of alarm was heard in
+every plain and hill-side, glen and valley, wood and wilderness, in the
+two provinces of Munster. And when the Fena heard these shouts, they
+ceased anon from their sports and pastimes; for they knew their king was
+in danger or strait of some kind. And they formed themselves into ranks
+and troops and battalions, and began their march; and it is not told how
+they fared till they reached Cloghan Kincat.
+
+Finn told them the whole story of the Gilla Dacker and his horse, and
+how he had carried away Conan and fifteen others to some far-off island
+in the Western Ocean. He also showed them the ship, and told them that
+he himself and a chosen band of the Fena were about to sail westward in
+quest of their friends.
+
+And Oisin asked him how many of the chief men of the Fena he wished to
+take with him.
+
+Finn replied, "I foresee that this will be a perilous quest; and I think
+all the chiefs here present few enough to bring with me."
+
+"Say not so, O king," said Oisin; "too many have gone already, and some
+must be left behind to guard the country, and to keep order. If fifteen
+good men go with you, and that you find the others, the whole party will
+be a match for any foe you are like to meet in these western lands."
+
+And Oscar and Gaul Mac Morna spoke in like manner.
+
+To this Finn agreed. Then he picked out fifteen men, the bravest and
+best, the most dexterous at the sword, and the swiftest of foot among
+the Fena.
+
+The question then arose, who should lead the Fena in the king's absence;
+and what they agreed on was that Oisin should remain behind and take
+command, as he was the eldest and bravest and wisest of the king's sons.
+
+Of those who were chosen to go with Finn, the chief men were Dermat
+O'Dyna; Gaul Mac Morna; Oscar, the son of Oisin; Aed Beg, the son of
+Finn; Fergus Finnvel, the poet; the three sons of Encarda; and Feradach
+and Foltlebar, the two sons of the king of Innia.
+
+So the king and his party took leave of Oisin and the rest. And sad,
+indeed, were they on both sides; for no one knew how far the king might
+have to sail among unknown seas and islands, or how long he should be
+away from Erin, or the spells and dangers he and his men might encounter
+in this pursuit.
+
+Then they went on board, and launched their ship on the cold, bright
+sea; and Foltlebar was their pilot and steersman. And they set their
+sail and plied their slender oars, and the ship moved swiftly westward
+till they lost sight of the shores of Erin; and they saw nothing all
+round them but a wide girdle of sea. After some days' sailing, a great
+storm came from the west, and the black waves rose up against them, so
+that they had much ado to keep their vessel from sinking. But through
+all the roaring of the tempest, through the rain and blinding spray,
+Foltlebar never stirred from the helm or changed his course, but still
+kept close on the track of the Gilla Dacker.
+
+At length the storm abated, and the sea grew calm. And when the darkness
+had cleared away, they saw to the west, a little way off, a vast rocky
+cliff towering over their heads to such a height, that its head seemed
+hidden among the clouds. It rose up sheer from the very water, and
+looked at that distance as smooth as glass, so that at first sight there
+seemed no way to reach the top.
+
+Foltlebar, after examining to the four points of the sky, found the
+track of the Gilla Dacker as far as the cliff, but no farther. And he
+accordingly told the heroes that he thought it was on the top of that
+rock the giant lived; and that, anyhow, the horse must have made his way
+up the face of the cliff with their companions.
+
+When the heroes heard this they were greatly cast down and puzzled what
+to do; for they saw no way of reaching the top of the rock; and they
+feared they should have to give up the quest and return without their
+companions. And they sat down and looked up at the cliff, with sorrow
+and vexation in their hearts.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CI.] Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin.
+
+[CII.] Gael Glas, the traditional ancestor of the Gaels.
+
+[CIII.] Crann-tav'all, a sort of sling for projecting stones, made of an
+elastic piece of wood, and strung somewhat like a cross-bow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA, IN QUEST OF THE GILLA DACKER, ENCOUNTERS THE
+WIZARD-CHAMPION AT THE WELL.
+
+
+When now they had been silent for a time, Fergus Finnvel, the poet,
+arose and said--
+
+"My friends, we have here amongst us one who has been fostered and
+taught from the child to the man, by Mannanan Mac Lir[8] in Fairyland,
+and by Angus,[1] the wisest of the Dedannans, at Bruga of the Boyne. He
+has been carefully trained by both in everything a warrior should learn,
+and in much druidical lore besides; so that he is skilled beyond us all
+in manly arts and champion-feats. But now it seems that all his arts and
+accomplishments go for nought, seeing that he is unable to make use of
+them just at the time that we stand most in need of them. On the top of
+that rock, doubtless, the Gilla Dacker lives, and there he holds Conan
+and the others in bondage; and surely this hero, who now sits idly with
+us here in our ship, should be able to climb up the face of that cliff,
+and bring us back tidings of our dear friends and companions."
+
+When Dermat O'Dyna heard this speech, his cheek grew red with shame, and
+he made this reply--
+
+"It is of me you have spoken these words, Fergus. Your reproaches are
+just; and though the task is hard, I will attempt to follow the track of
+the Gilla Dacker, and find out some tidings of our friends."
+
+So saying, Dermat arose, and girded on his armour, and put on his
+glittering helmet. He hung his sword at his left hip; and he took his
+two long, deadly spears, one in each hand, namely, the Crann-boi and the
+Ga-derg;[CIV.] and the battle-fury of a warrior descended on him, so
+that he looked a dreadful foe to meet in single combat.
+
+Then, leaning on the handles of his spears, after the manner of skilful
+champions, he leaped with a light, airy bound on the nearest shelf of
+rock. And using his spears and his hands, he climbed from ledge to
+ledge, while his companions watched him anxiously from below; till,
+after much toil, he measured the soles of his two feet on the green sod
+at the top of the rock. And when, recovering breath, he turned round and
+looked at his companions in the ship far below, he started back with
+amazement and dread at the dizzy height.
+
+He now looked inland, and saw a beautiful country spread out before
+him:--a lovely, flowery plain straight in front, bordered with pleasant
+hills, and shaded with groves of many kinds of trees. It was enough to
+banish all care and sadness from one's heart to view this country, and
+to listen to the warbling of the birds, the humming of the bees among
+the flowers, the rustling of the wind through the trees, and the
+pleasant voices of the streams and waterfalls.
+
+Making no delay, Dermat set out to walk across the plain. He had not
+been long walking when he saw, right before him, a great tree laden with
+fruit, overtopping all the other trees of the plain. It was surrounded
+at a little distance by a circle of pillar-stones; and one stone, taller
+than the others, stood in the centre near the tree. Beside this
+pillar-stone was a spring well, with a large, round pool as clear as
+crystal; and the water bubbled up in the centre, and flowed away towards
+the middle of the plain in a slender stream.
+
+Dermat was glad when he saw the well; for he was hot and thirsty after
+climbing up the cliff. He stooped down to take a drink; but before his
+lips touched the water, he heard the heavy tread of a body of warriors,
+and the loud clank of arms, as if a whole host were coming straight down
+on him. He sprang to his feet and looked round; but the noise ceased in
+an instant, and he could see nothing.
+
+After a little while he stooped again to drink; and again, before he had
+wet his lips, he heard the very same sounds, nearer and louder than
+before. A second time he leaped to his feet; and still he saw no one.
+He knew not what to think of this; and as he stood wondering and
+perplexed, he happened to cast his eyes on the tall pillar-stone that
+stood on the brink of the well; and he saw on its top a large, beautiful
+drinking-horn, chased with gold and enamelled with precious stones.
+
+"Now surely," said Dermat, "I have been doing wrong; it is, no doubt,
+one of the virtues of this well that it will not let any one drink of
+its waters except from the drinking-horn."
+
+So he took down the horn, dipped it into the well, and drank without
+hindrance, till he had slaked his thirst.
+
+Scarcely had he taken the horn from his lips, when he saw a tall
+wizard-champion[CV.] coming towards him from the east, clad in a
+complete suit of mail, and fully armed with shield and helmet, sword and
+spear. A beautiful scarlet mantle hung over his armour, fastened at his
+throat by a golden brooch; and a broad circlet of sparkling gold was
+bended in front across his forehead, to confine his yellow hair, and
+keep it from being blown about by the wind.
+
+As he came nearer, he increased his pace, moving with great strides;
+and Dermat now observed that he looked very wrathful. He offered no
+greeting, and showed not the least courtesy; but addressed Dermat in a
+rough, angry voice--
+
+"Surely, Dermat O'Dyna, Erin of the green plains should be wide enough
+for you; and it contains abundance of clear, sweet water in its crystal
+springs and green bordered streams, from which you might have drunk your
+fill. But you have come into my island without my leave, and you have
+taken my drinking-horn, and have drunk from my well; and this spot you
+shall never leave till you have given me satisfaction for the insult."
+
+So spoke the wizard-champion, and instantly advanced on Dermat with fury
+in his eyes. But Dermat was not the man to be terrified by any hero or
+wizard-champion alive. He met the foe half-way; and now, foot to foot,
+and knee to knee, and face to face, they began a fight, watchful and
+wary at first, but soon hot and vengeful, till their shields and helmets
+could scarce withstand their strong thrusts and blows. Like two enraged
+lions fighting to the death, or two strong serpents intertwined in
+deadly strife, or two great opposing billows thundering against each
+other on the ocean border; such was the strength and fury and
+determination of the combat of these two heroes.
+
+And so they fought through the long day, till evening came, and it began
+to be dusk; when suddenly the wizard-champion sprang outside the range
+of Dermat's sword, and leaping up with a great bound, he alighted in the
+very centre of the well. Down he went through it, and disappeared in a
+moment before Dermat's eyes, as if the well had swallowed him up. Dermat
+stood on the brink, leaning on his spear, amazed and perplexed, looking
+after him in the water; but whether the hero had meant to drown himself,
+or that he had played some wizard trick, Dermat knew not.
+
+He sat down to rest, full of vexation that the wizard-champion should
+have got off so easily. And what chafed him still more was that the Fena
+knew nought of what had happened, and that when he returned, he could
+tell them nothing of the strange hero; neither had he the least token or
+trophy to show them after his long fight.
+
+Then he began to think what was best to be done; and he made up his mind
+to stay near the well all night, with the hope of finding out something
+further about the wizard-champion on the morrow.
+
+He walked towards the nearest point of a great forest that stretched
+from the mountain down to the plain on his left; and as he came near, a
+herd of speckled deer ran by among the trees. He put his finger into the
+silken loop of his spear, and, throwing it with an unerring cast,
+brought down the nearest of the herd.
+
+Then, having lighted a fire under a tree, he skinned the deer and fixed
+it on long hazel spits to roast, having first, however, gone to the
+well, and brought away the drinking-horn full of water. And he sat
+beside the roasting deer to turn it and tend the fire, waiting
+impatiently for his meal; for he was hungry and tired after the toil of
+the day.
+
+When the deer was cooked, he ate till he was satisfied, and drank the
+clear water of the well from the drinking-horn; after which he lay down
+under the shade of the tree, beside the fire, and slept a sound sleep
+till morning.
+
+Night passed away and the sun rose, bringing morning with its abundant
+light. Dermat started up, refreshed after his long sleep, and, repairing
+to the forest, he slew another deer, and fixed it on hazel spits to
+roast at the fire as before. For Dermat had this custom, that he would
+never eat of any food left from a former meal.
+
+And after he had eaten of the deer's flesh and drunk from the horn, he
+went towards the well. But though his visit was early, he found the
+wizard-champion there before him, standing beside the pillar-stone,
+fully armed as before, and looking now more wrathful than ever. Dermat
+was much surprised; but before he had time to speak the wizard-champion
+addressed him--
+
+"Dermat O'Dyna, you have now put the cap on all your evil deeds. It was
+not enough that you took my drinking-horn and drank from my well: you
+have done much worse than this, for you have hunted on my grounds, and
+have killed some of my speckled deer. Surely there are many
+hunting-grounds in Erin of the green plains, with plenty of deer in
+them; and you need not have come hither to commit these robberies on me.
+But now for a certainty you shall not go from this spot till I have
+taken revenge for all these misdeeds."
+
+And again the two champions attacked each other, and fought during the
+long day, from morning till evening. And when the dusk began to fall,
+the wizard-champion leaped into the well, and disappeared down through
+it, even as he had done the day before.
+
+The selfsame thing happened on the third day. And each day, morning and
+evening, Dermat killed a deer, and ate of its flesh, and drank of the
+water of the well from the drinking-horn.
+
+On the fourth morning, Dermat found the wizard-champion standing as
+usual by the pillar-stone near the well. And as each morning he looked
+more angry than on the morning before, so now he scowled in a way that
+would have terrified any one but Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+And they fought during the day till the dusk of evening. But now Dermat
+watched his foe narrowly; and when he saw him about to spring into the
+well, he closed on him and threw his arms round him. The wizard-champion
+struggled to free himself, moving all the time nearer and nearer to the
+brink; but Dermat held on, till at last both fell into the well. Down
+they went, clinging to each other, Dermat and the wizard-champion; down,
+down, deeper and deeper they went; and Dermat tried to look round, but
+nothing could he see save darkness and dim shadows. At length there was
+a glimmer of light; then the bright day burst suddenly upon them; and
+presently they came to the solid ground, gently and without the least
+shock.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CIV.] See note, page 302.
+
+[CV.] The original word, which I have translated "wizard-champion," is
+_gruagach_. This word literally means "hairy," "a hairy fellow;" and it
+is often used in the sense of "giant." But in these romantic tales it is
+commonly used to signify a champion who has always something of the
+supernatural about him, yet not to such a degree as to shield him
+completely from the valour of a great mortal hero like Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA IN TIR-FA-TONN.[CVI.]
+
+
+At the very moment they reached the ground, the wizard-champion, with a
+sudden effort, tore himself away from Dermat's grasp and ran forward
+with great speed. Dermat leaped to his feet; and he was so amazed at
+what he saw around him that he stood stock still and let the
+wizard-champion escape: a lovely country, with many green-sided hills
+and fair valleys between, woods of red yew trees, and plains laughing
+all over with flowers of every hue.
+
+Right before him, not far off, lay a city of great tall houses with
+glittering roofs; and on the side nearest to him was a royal palace,
+larger and grander than the rest. On the level green in front of the
+palace were a number of knights, all armed, and amusing themselves with
+various warlike exercises of sword and shield and spear.
+
+Straight towards this assembly the wizard-champion ran; which, when
+Dermat saw, he set off in pursuit, hoping to overtake him. But the
+wizard-champion had too long a start, and when he reached the exercise
+green, the knights opened to the right and left, leaving a broad way
+through which he rushed. He never halted or looked behind till he had
+got inside the palace gate; and the moment he had passed in, the knights
+closed their ranks, and stood facing Dermat with threatening looks and
+gestures.
+
+Nothing daunted, Dermat held on his pace towards them; and now those of
+the front rank started forward with spears and swords, intending to
+crush him at once, and hew his body to mincemeat. But it was not terror
+nor weakness nor a desire of flight that this produced in Dermat, for
+his battle-fury was on him; and he rushed through them and under them
+and over them, as a hawk rushes among a flight of sparrows, or like a
+whale through a shoal of little fishes, or like a raging wolf among a
+flock of sheep, or like a vast billow among a fleet of small vessels, or
+like a great brown torrent rushing down the steep side of a mountain,
+that sweeps everything headlong before it. So did Dermat cleave a wide
+laneway through the hosts, till, from a solid band of warriors, he
+turned them into a scattered crowd, flying in all directions. And those
+that did not fall by his hand, ran hither and thither, some to hide
+themselves in the thick forests and remote, wooded glens of the
+surrounding country; while others rushed in through the outer gate of
+the palace, and shut themselves up in the strongest part of the
+fortress, neither did they deem themselves safe till they had shot home
+every bolt, and securely fastened every strong iron lock.
+
+At last not a living soul remained on the green, and Dermat sat down,
+weary after his battle-toil, and smarting all over with wounds. He was
+grieved and downcast also, for he knew not where he was, and he saw no
+chance that he should be able either to find any tidings of the friends
+he was in search of, or to return to his companions in the ship.
+
+At length, being quite overcome with weariness, he fell into a deep
+sleep. After sleeping for some time, he was awakened by a smart blow. He
+started up, and saw a young man standing over him, tall, and of a
+commanding appearance, with long, golden hair, and a manly, open
+countenance. Now this young man had come to Dermat, and finding him
+asleep in such a dangerous place, he struck him with the flat of his
+sword to awaken him. In an instant Dermat sprang to his feet and seized
+his arms; but the youth addressed him in a friendly voice, and said--
+
+"Dermat O'Dyna, put up your arms; I am no enemy, and I have come, not to
+harm, but to serve you. This, indeed, is a strange place for you to fall
+asleep, before the very door of the castle, and within sight of your
+enemies. Come now with me, and I will give you a better place to sleep
+in, where you will also get a welcome and kindly entertainment."
+
+This speech pleased Dermat very much; and he thanked the young man and
+went with him. After walking for some time, they came to a large
+splendid house, and passing through the outer gate they entered the
+banqueting hall. There they found a noble company of twelve score and
+ten knights, and almost as many beautiful ladies, with their long hair
+falling on their shoulders, shining like the golden flower of the
+marsh-flag, and gentle and modest in their looks and conversation. They
+wore mantles of scarlet satin, and each mantle was fastened in front by
+a brooch of burnished gold.
+
+The company sat at tables round the walls of the banquet hall, some
+feasting, some playing chess, and some listening to the music of harps.
+When the two heroes entered, all the knights and ladies rose and
+received them with much respect, and they welcomed Dermat and invited
+him to join their entertainment. But the young prince--for he was in
+truth a prince--pointing to Dermat's clothes and arms, all soiled and
+stained, told them that he had endured much toil that day, and that he
+wanted rest and refreshment.
+
+He then brought Dermat away, and ordered the attendants to prepare a
+bath in a great caldron. He put soothing balsams and healing herbs into
+it with his own hands, and when Dermat had bathed he was immediately
+healed of his wounds, and he came forth refreshed and cheerful. The
+prince then directed that his clothes should be put aside, and had him
+clad in rich garments like the others.
+
+Dermat now joined the company, and ate and drank, for he had taken
+neither food nor drink since he had made his meal on the deer early that
+morning near the well; after which he talked and was cheerful with the
+others. Then rose up the harpers, and the professors of divers arts and
+sciences, and one after another they played their sweet music, and
+recited their poems and their tales of the heroes of the olden time. And
+when they had ended, the knights gave them gifts of gold and silver and
+jewels. At last the company broke up, and Dermat was shown to a bed
+richly ornamented, and soft with the red feathers of wild fowl, and soon
+he fell into a sound sleep after his long day's adventures.
+
+Now Dermat marvelled much at all he saw and heard; and he knew not what
+place he was in, or who the people were, that had treated him with such
+kindness. So next morning, when the company had again assembled, he
+stood up, and addressed the prince with gentle words and modest
+demeanour; and this is what he said--
+
+"I am much surprised, O prince, at what I have seen, and at all that has
+befallen me in this land. Though I am here a stranger, thou hast shown
+me much kindness, and these noble knights and ladies have permitted me
+to join their sports, and have treated me with much gentleness and
+consideration. I wish to know, then, who thou art, O prince, and what
+country this is, of which I have never before heard, and who is the king
+thereof. Tell me also, I pray thee, the name of the champion who fought
+with me for four days at the well, till at last he escaped from me at
+the palace."
+
+The prince replied, "I will tell you all, Dermat, as you have asked,
+concealing nothing. This country is Tir-fa-tonn; the champion who fought
+with you is called the Knight of the Fountain, and that very champion is
+king of this land. I am the brother of the king, and my name is the
+Knight of Valour. Good reason indeed have I to be kind to you, Dermat
+O'Dyna, for though you do not remember me, I spent a year and a day in
+the household of Finn the son of Cumal.
+
+"A part of this kingdom belongs by right to me. But the king and his son
+have seized on my patrimony, and have banished me from the palace,
+forcing me to live here in exile with a few of my faithful followers.
+
+"It is my intention, however, to make war on the king for my part of the
+kingdom; and right glad I am that you have come hither, for I would
+rather have you on my side than all the other Fena put together, for
+your nobleness of mind and your valour in battle.
+
+"I have here in my household seven score and ten heroes, all champions
+of great deeds; and if you consent to aid me, these shall be placed
+under your command. By day you shall fight against the king of
+Tir-fa-tonn and his son, and by night you shall feast and rest and sleep
+with me in this palace. If you enter into friendship with me and fight
+on my side, well I know that I shall win back my right without delay."
+
+Dermat agreed to this. So he and the Knight of Valour made a covenant;
+and, placing hand in hand, they pledged themselves to observe faithfully
+the conditions of the league of friendship.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVI.] Tir-fa-tonn, literally "the country beneath the wave." (See note
+13 at the end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+FINN, IN QUEST OF DERMAT, FIGHTS MANY BATTLES.
+
+
+As to Finn Mac Cumal and those that remained behind with him in the
+ship, I will now relate what befell them.
+
+It was now many days since Dermat had left them, and they marvelled much
+that he did not return with tidings of the Gilla Dacker. At length, when
+they began to be alarmed, the two sons of the king of Innia offered to
+go in search of him; but Finn said no, for that they should all go
+together.
+
+So Feradach and Foltlebar took all the cables and ropes they could find
+in the ship, and tied them end to end in hard, sure knots, till they had
+a rope long enough to reach from the top of the rock to the bottom. Then
+they clambered up the steep face of the cliff, bringing with them the
+end of the rope; and one by one they drew up Finn and the rest. And when
+they looked round, they were as much surprised and delighted as Dermat
+was at the look of the country.
+
+Foltlebar now made a search, and soon found the track of Dermat; and the
+whole party set out to walk across the plain, Foltlebar leading the way.
+Having travelled some distance, they saw the great fruit tree afar off;
+and, turning to the left, they found a place where a fire had been
+lighted, and near it the remains of several meals of deer's flesh. By
+this they knew that it was here Dermat had slept, for all were well
+aware of his custom not to eat of what was left from a meal.
+
+They then went towards the tree, and there they found the traces of
+deadly combat--the ground all trampled and ploughed up, and a broken
+spear handle lying at the brink of the well. While they stood pondering
+on these things, with anxious hearts, they saw a horseman at a distance,
+speeding towards them across the plain. In a little while he came up and
+reined in.
+
+He was a young man of majestic mien, fair and noble of countenance; and
+he rode a beautiful chestnut steed, with a bridle of twisted gold, and a
+saddle of surpassing splendour, ornamented all over with gold and
+jewels.
+
+He alighted and saluted Finn and the Fena, and told them they were
+welcome to his country, for that he was king; and he put his hand on
+Finn's neck and kissed his cheek three times. Then he invited them to go
+with him, saying that the Plain of the Fountain was a comfortless
+resting-place after a long journey.
+
+Finn's heart was glad at this, for he and his companions were weary;
+and they set out to walk across the plain with the young king. Having
+walked a good distance, they came in sight of a noble palace, with tall
+towers and carved front. As they came near, they were met by a company
+of knights on the level green in front, who welcomed them with gentle
+words. And so they passed into the palace. A bath was prepared, and they
+bathed and were refreshed after their toils. Then they sat down to
+supper; and while they ate and drank, the harpers played for them, and
+the poets told their tales and sang their songs.
+
+They slept that night in the palace; and next day they mingled with the
+knights on the green, and took part in their games and pastimes. In the
+evening they sat down to a feast. The people of the palace were ranged
+at tables according to rank and inheritance, every man in his proper
+place.
+
+Then the feast went on; and abundance of the newest food and of the
+oldest drink was served out; and they ate of the savoury food, and drank
+of the sparkling wines and of the strong ales, till they became merry
+and gently intoxicated. And Finn could not call to mind that he ever saw
+an entertainment in the house of either king or chief better ordered. In
+this manner they were feasted and entertained for three days and three
+nights.
+
+At the end of that time a meeting was held by the king on the palace
+green. And Finn stood up and said--
+
+"Tell me, I pray thee, thy name and the name of this country, which I
+have never seen before, or even heard of."
+
+"This country," replied the king, "is called Sorca, of which I am king;
+and although you know us not, we know you well, for the fame of your
+deeds has reached even to this land. But now I wish to know why you have
+come hither; also the reason why you have brought so few companions, and
+where the rest have tarried."
+
+Then Finn told him the whole story from beginning to end; how the Gilla
+Dacker and his great horse had carried off sixteen of their chief men;
+"And," added Finn, "I and these fifteen companions of mine are now in
+quest of them."
+
+The king replied, "This is a dangerous undertaking; and you and your
+fifteen men, valiant even as you are, are too few to venture into
+unknown lands, where you may meet with many enemies. Now my knights are
+brave and generous, and they love battle and adventure. Wherefore I will
+place a band of them under your command, who will follow you
+whithersoever you go, and who will not be behindhand even with the Fena
+in facing hardship and danger."
+
+Finn stood up to thank the king; but before he had time to speak, they
+saw a messenger speeding towards them across the plain from the
+north-west, breathless, and begrimed all over with mud and dust. When he
+had come in presence of the company, he bowed low to the king, and,
+standing up, waited impatient for leave to speak.
+
+The king asked him what news he had brought and he replied--
+
+"Bad and direful news I have for thee, O king. A foreign fleet has come
+to our shores, which seems to cover all the sea, even as far as the eye
+can reach; and until the stars of heaven are counted, and the sands of
+the sea, and the leaves of the woods, the hosts that are landing from
+their black ships shall not be numbered. Even already they have let
+loose their plunderers over the country, who are burning and spoiling
+the farmsteads and the great mansions; and many noble heroes and keepers
+of houses of hospitality, and many people of the common sort, have been
+slain by them. Some say that it is the King of the World and his host,
+who, after conquering every country he has yet visited, has come now to
+ravage this land with fire and sword and spear, and bring it under his
+power; but I know not if this be true. And this, O king, is the news I
+bring thee."
+
+When the messenger had ended, the king spoke nought, though his
+countenance, indeed, showed trouble; but he looked earnestly at Finn.
+Finn understood this to mean that the king sought his help; and, with
+clear voice, he spoke--
+
+"Thou hast been generous to me and my people in our day of need, O king
+of Sorca; and now thou shalt not find the Fena lacking in grateful
+memory of thy kindness. We will, for a time, give up the pursuit of the
+Gilla Dacker, and we will place ourselves under thy command, and help
+thee against these marauders. Neither do I fear the outcome of this
+war; for many a time have we met these foreigners on the shores of Erin
+and elsewhere, and they have always yielded to us in the battle-field."
+
+The king of Sorca was glad of heart when he heard these words; and he
+sent his swift scouts all over the country to gather his fighting men.
+And when all had come together, he arranged them in fighting order, and
+marched towards the shore where the foreigners were spoiling the land.
+And they met the plundering parties, and drove them with great slaughter
+back to their ships, retaking all the spoils.
+
+Then they formed an encampment on the shore, with ramparts and deep
+ditches and long rows of pointed stakes all round. And each day a party
+of the foreigners landed, led by one of their captains, who were met by
+an equal number of the men of Sorca, led by one of the Fena; and each
+time they were driven back to their ships, after losing their best men.
+
+When, now, this had continued for many days, the King of the World
+called a meeting of the chiefs of his army, and asked their counsel as
+to what should be done. And they spoke as one man, that their best
+chiefs had fallen, and that they were in worse case now for overcoming
+the men of Sorca than they were at first; that their sages and prophets
+had declared against them; and that they had met with ill luck from the
+day of their arrival. And the advice they gave the king was to depart
+from the shores of Sorca, for there seemed no chance of conquering the
+country as long as the Fena were there to help the king.
+
+So the king ordered the sails to be set, and he left the harbour in the
+night with his whole fleet, without bringing the king of Sorca under
+subjection, and without imposing tribute on the people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+FINN AND DERMAT MEET.
+
+
+When the people of Sorca and the Fena arose next morning, not a ship was
+in sight; and they began to rejoice greatly, finding themselves freed
+from this invasion. And while the king and Finn, with the chiefs and
+people, stood eagerly conversing on all these matters, they saw a troop
+at a distance coming towards them, with banners and standards and arms
+glittering in the morning sun. Now they wondered much who these might
+be; and Finn desired that some one might go and bring back tidings.
+
+So Fergus Finnvel went with a few followers, and when he was yet a good
+way off, he knew Dermat O'Dyna at the head of the troop, and ran forward
+with joy to meet him. And they embraced, even as brothers embrace who
+meet after being long parted. Then they came towards the assembly; and
+when the Fena saw Dermat they shouted with joy and welcome And Dermat,
+on his part, could scarce restrain the excess of his joyfulness; for,
+indeed, he did not expect to meet his friends so soon; and he embraced
+them one by one, with glad heart, beginning with Finn.
+
+Then Finn inquired from Dermat all particulars, what places he had
+visited since the day he had climbed up the rock, and whether he had
+heard any news of their lost companions; and he asked him also who were
+they--those valiant-looking fighting men--he had brought with him.
+
+Dermat told him of all his adventures from first to last--of his long
+combat at the well with the Knight of the Fountain, of his descent to
+Tir-fa-tonn, and how the Knight of Valour had entertained him hospitably
+in his palace. He related also how he headed the men of the Knight of
+Valour, and made war on the king of Tir-fa-tonn (who was also called the
+Knight of the Fountain, the wizard-champion who fought with Dermat at
+the well), whom he slew, and defeated his army.
+
+"And now," continued he, bringing forth the Knight of Valour from among
+the strange host, "this is he who was formerly called the Knight of
+Valour, but who is now the king of Tir-fa-tonn. Moreover, this king has
+told me, having himself found it out by his druidical art, that it was
+Avarta the Dedannan (the son of Illahan of the Many-coloured Raiment)
+who took the form of the Gilla Dacker, and who brought the sixteen Fena
+away to the Land of Promise,[8] where he now holds them in bondage."
+
+Finn and the young king then put hand in hand and made covenants of
+lasting friendship with each other. And the Fena were much rejoiced that
+they had at last got some tidings of their lost companions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CONAN AND HIS COMPANIONS FOUND AND RESCUED.
+
+
+Now after they had rested some days in the palace of the king of Sorca,
+Fergus Finnvel told Finn that it was time to begin once more their quest
+after Conan and the others. They held council, therefore; and the
+resolution they came to was to return to the rock at the spot where they
+had turned aside from the track of the Gilla Dacker, and to begin their
+search anew from that. And when both the king of Sorca and the king of
+Tir-fa-tonn would have sent men with them, Finn thanked them, but said
+that the small party of Fena he had with him were quite enough for that
+adventure.
+
+So they took leave of the two kings, and went back to the rock, and
+Foltlebar at once found the track. He traced it from the very edge of
+the rock across the plain to the sea at the other side; and they brought
+round their ship and began their voyage. But this time Foltlebar found
+it very hard to keep on the track; for the Gilla Dacker, knowing that
+there were not in the world men more skilled in following up a quest
+than the Fena, took great pains to hide all traces of the flight of
+himself and his horse; so that Foltlebar was often thrown out; but he
+always recovered the track after a little time.
+
+And so they sailed from island to island, and from bay to bay, over many
+seas and by many shores, ever following the track, till at length they
+arrived at the Land of Promise. And when they had made the land, and
+knew for a certainty that this was indeed the Land of Promise, they
+rejoiced greatly; for in this land Dermat O'Dyna had been nurtured by
+Mannanan Mac Lir of the Yellow Hair.
+
+Then they held council as to what was best to be done; and Finn's advice
+was that they should burn and spoil the country, in revenge of the
+outrage that had been done to his people. Dermat, however, would not
+hear of this. And he said--
+
+"Not so, O king. The people of this land are of all men the most skilled
+in druidic art; and it is not well that they should be at feud with us.
+Let us rather send to Avarta a trusty herald, to demand that he should
+set our companions at liberty. If he does so, then we shall be at peace;
+if he refuse, then shall we proclaim war against him and his people, and
+waste this land with fire and sword, till he be forced, even by his own
+people, to give us back our friends."
+
+This advice was approved by all. And then Finn said--
+
+"But how shall heralds reach the dwelling of this enchanter; for the
+ways are not open and straight, as in other lands, but crooked and made
+for concealment, and the valleys and plains are dim and shadowy, and
+hard to be traversed?"
+
+But Foltlebar, nothing daunted by the dangers and the obscurity of the
+way, offered to go with a single trusty companion; and they took up the
+track and followed it without being once thrown out, till they reached
+the mansion of Avarta. There they found their friends amusing themselves
+on the green outside the palace walls; for, though kept captive in the
+island, yet were they in no wise restrained, but were treated by Avarta
+with much kindness. When they saw the heralds coming towards them, their
+joy knew no bounds; they crowded round to embrace them, and asked them
+many questions regarding their home and their friends.
+
+At last Avarta himself came forth, and asked who these strangers were;
+and Foltlebar replied--
+
+"We are of the people of Finn Mac Cumal, who has sent us as heralds to
+thee. He and his heroes have landed on this island, guided hither by me;
+and he bade us tell thee that he has come to wage war and to waste this
+land with fire and sword, as a punishment for that thou hast brought
+away his people by foul spells, and even now keepest them in bondage."
+
+When Avarta heard this, he made no reply, but called a council of his
+chief men, to consider whether they should send back to Finn an answer
+of war or of peace. And they, having much fear of the Fena, were minded
+to restore Finn's people, and to give him his own award in satisfaction
+for the injury done to him; and to invite Finn himself and those who had
+come with him to a feast of joy and friendship in the house of Avarta.
+
+Avarta himself went with Foltlebar to give this message. And after he
+and Finn had exchanged friendly greetings, he told them what the council
+had resolved; and Finn and Dermat and the others were glad at heart. And
+Finn and Avarta put hand in hand, and made a league of friendship.
+
+So they went with Avarta to his house, where they found their lost
+friends; and, being full of gladness, they saluted and embraced each
+other. Then a feast was prepared; and they were feasted for three days,
+and they ate and drank and made merry.
+
+On the fourth day, a meeting was called on the green to hear the award.
+Now it was resolved to make amends on the one hand to Finn, as king of
+the Fena, and on the other, to those who had been brought away by the
+Gilla Dacker. And when all were gathered together, Finn was first asked
+to name his award; and this is what he said--
+
+"I shall not name an award, O Avarta; neither shall I accept an eric
+from thee. But the wages I promised thee when we made our covenant at
+Knockainy, that I will give thee. For I am thankful for the welcome thou
+hast given us here; and I wish that there should be peace and friendship
+between us for ever."
+
+But Conan, on his part, was not so easily satisfied; and he said to
+Finn--
+
+"Little hast thou endured, O Finn, in all this matter; and thou mayst
+well waive thy award. But hadst thou, like us, suffered from the sharp
+bones and the rough carcase of the Gilla Dacker's monstrous horse, in a
+long journey from Erin to the Land of Promise, across wide seas, through
+tangled woods, and over rough-headed rocks, thou wouldst then, methinks,
+name an award."
+
+At this, Avarta, and the others who had seen Conan and his companions
+carried off on the back of the big horse, could scarce keep from
+laughing; and Avarta said to Conan--
+
+"Name thy award, and I will fulfil it every jot: for I have heard of
+thee, Conan, and I dread to bring the gibes and taunts of thy foul
+tongue on myself and my people."
+
+"Well then," said Conan, "my award is this: that you choose fifteen of
+the best and noblest men in the Land of Promise, among whom are to be
+your own best beloved friends; and that you cause them to mount on the
+back of the big horse, and that you yourself take hold of his tail. In
+this manner you shall fare to Erin, back again by the selfsame track the
+horse took when he brought us hither--through the same surging seas,
+through the same thick thorny woods, and over the same islands and rough
+rocks and dark glens. And this, O Avarta, is my award," said Conan.
+
+Now Finn and his people were rejoiced exceedingly when they heard
+Conan's award--that he asked from Avarta nothing more than like for
+like. For they feared much that he might claim treasure of gold and
+silver, and thus bring reproach on the Fena.
+
+Avarta promised that everything required by Conan should be done,
+binding himself in solemn pledges. Then the heroes took their leave; and
+having launched their ship on the broad, green sea, they sailed back by
+the same course to Erin. And they marched to their camping-place at
+Knockainy, where they rested in their tents.
+
+Avarta then chose his men. And he placed them on the horse's back, and
+he himself caught hold of the tail; and it is not told how they fared
+till they made harbour and landing-place at Cloghan Kincat. They delayed
+not, but straightway journeyed over the selfsame track as before, till
+they reached Knockainy.
+
+Finn and his people saw them afar off coming towards the hill with great
+speed; the Gilla Dacker, quite as large and as ugly as ever, running
+before the horse; for he had let go the tail at Cloghan Kincat. And the
+Fena could not help laughing heartily when they saw the plight of the
+fifteen chiefs on the great horse's back; and they said with one voice
+that Conan had made a good award that time.
+
+When the horse reached the spot from which he had at first set out, the
+men began to dismount. Then the Gilla Dacker, suddenly stepping forward,
+held up his arm and pointed earnestly over the heads of the Fena
+towards the field where the horses were standing; so that the heroes
+were startled, and turned round every man to look. But nothing was to be
+seen except the horses grazing quietly inside the fence.
+
+Finn and the others now turned round again, with intent to speak to the
+Gilla Dacker and bring him and his people into the tents; but much did
+they marvel to find them all gone. The Gilla Dacker and his great horse
+and the fifteen nobles of the Land of Promise had disappeared in an
+instant; and neither Finn himself nor any of his chiefs ever saw them
+afterwards.
+
+
+So far we have related the story of the pursuit of the Gilla Dacker and
+his horse.
+
+
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+FINN, THE SON OF CUMAL, SEEKS THE PRINCESS GRANIA TO WIFE.
+
+
+On a certain day, Finn, the son of Cumal, rose at early morn in Allen of
+the broad hill-slopes, and, going forth, sat him down on the green lawn
+before the palace, without companion or attendant. And two of his people
+followed him, namely, Oisin his son, and Dering the son of Dobar
+O'Baskin.
+
+Oisin spoke to him and asked, "Why, O king, hast thou come forth so
+early?"
+
+"Cause enough have I indeed," replied Finn; "for I am without a wife
+since Manissa, the daughter of Garad of the Black Knee, died; and who
+can enjoy sweet sleep when his life is lonely like mine, with no wife to
+comfort and cheer him? This, my friends, is the cause of my early
+rising."
+
+And Oisin said, "Why should you be without a wife if you desire one? For
+there is not, within the sea-circle of green Erin, a maiden that we will
+not bring you, either by consent or by force, if you only turn the
+light of your eyes on her."
+
+Then Dering spoke and said, "I know where there is a maiden, who in all
+respects is worthy to be thy wife."
+
+And when Finn asked who she was, Dering replied--
+
+"The maiden is Grania, daughter of king Cormac,[22] the son of Art, the
+son of Conn the Hundred-fighter; the most beautiful, the best
+instructed, and the most discreet in speech and manner of all the
+maidens of Erin."
+
+"There has been strife between me and Cormac for a long time," said
+Finn, "and it may happen that he will not give me his daughter in
+marriage. But go ye to Tara in my name, you and Oisin, and ask the
+maiden for me: if the king should refuse, so let it be; but I can better
+bear a refusal to you than to myself."
+
+"We will go," said Oisin; "but it is better that no man know of our
+journey till we return."
+
+So the two heroes took leave of Finn and went their way; and nothing is
+told of what befell them till they reached Tara. It chanced that the
+king was at this time holding a meeting; and the chiefs and great nobles
+of Tara were assembled round him. And when the two warriors arrived,
+they were welcomed, and the meeting was put off for that day; for the
+king felt sure that it was on some business of weight they had come.
+
+After they had eaten and drunk, the king, sending away all others from
+his presence, bade the two chiefs tell their errand. So Oisin told him
+they had come to seek his daughter Grania in marriage for Finn the son
+of Cumal.
+
+Then the king said, "In all Erin there is scarce a young prince or noble
+who has not sought my daughter in marriage; and she has refused them
+all. And it is on me that the ill feeling and reproach caused by her
+refusals have fallen; for she has ever made me the bearer of her
+answers. Wherefore now you shall come to my daughter's presence, and I
+will not mention the matter to her till she give you an answer from her
+own lips: so shall I be blameless if she refuse."
+
+So they went to the apartments of the women, at the sunny side of the
+palace. And when they had entered the princess's chamber, the king sat
+with her on the couch and said--
+
+"Here, my daughter, are two of the people of Finn the son of Cumal, who
+have come to ask thee as a wife for him."
+
+And Grania, giving, indeed, not much thought to the matter, answered, "I
+know not whether he is worthy to be thy son-in-law; but if he be, why
+should he not be a fitting husband for me?"
+
+The two messengers were satisfied with this answer, and retired. And
+Cormac made a feast for them; and they ate and drank and made merry with
+the chiefs and nobles of the palace; after which the king bade them tell
+Finn to come at the end of a fortnight to claim his bride.
+
+So the two heroes returned to Allen, and told how they had fared in
+their quest. And as all things come at last to an end, so this fortnight
+wore slowly away; and at the end of the time, Finn, having collected
+round him the chief men of the seven standing battalions of the Fena to
+be his guard, marched to Tara. The king received him with great honour,
+and welcomed the Fena, and they were feasted with the nobles of Erin in
+the great banquet hall of Micorta.[CVII.] And the king sat on his throne
+to enjoy the feast with his guests, having Finn on his right hand, and
+on his left the queen, Etta, the daughter of Atan of Corca; and Grania
+sat next the queen, her mother, on the left. And all the others sat
+according to their rank and patrimony.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA SECRETLY ESPOUSES THE PRINCESS GRANIA.
+
+
+Now while the feast went on, it chanced that Dara of the Poems, one of
+Finn's druids, sat near Grania. And he recited for her many lays about
+the deeds of her forefathers; after which a pleasant conversation arose
+between them. And when they had talked for some time, she asked him--
+
+"What means all this feasting? And why has Finn come with his people on
+this visit to my father the king?"
+
+Dara was surprised at this question, and answered, "If thou dost not
+know, it is hard for me to know."
+
+And Grania answered, "I wish, indeed, to learn from you what has brought
+Finn to Tara."
+
+"It is strange to hear thee ask this question," said the druid. "Knowest
+thou not that he has come to claim thee for his wife?"
+
+Grania was silent for a long time after hearing this. And again she
+spoke--
+
+"If, indeed, Finn had sought me for his son Oisin, or for the youthful
+Oscar, there would be nothing to wonder at; but I marvel much that he
+seeks me for himself, seeing that he is older than my father."
+
+Then Grania meditated in silence; and after a time she said to the
+druid--
+
+"This is a goodly company, but I know not one among them, except only
+Oisin, the son of Finn. Tell me now who is that warrior on the right of
+Oisin."
+
+"That knightly warrior," answered the druid, "is Gaul Mac Morna the
+Terrible in Battle."
+
+"Who is the youthful champion to the right of Gaul?" asked Grania.
+
+"That is Oscar, the son of Oisin," said the druid.
+
+"Who is the graceful and active-looking chief sitting next Oscar?" asked
+the princess.
+
+"That is Kylta Mac Ronan the Swift-footed," said the druid.
+
+"Next to Kylta Mac Ronan sits a champion with fair, freckled skin,
+raven-black curls, a gentle, handsome, manly countenance, and soft
+voice: pray who is he?"
+
+"That is Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face, the favourite of maidens, and
+beloved of all the Fena for his high-mindedness, his bravery, and his
+generous disposition."
+
+"Who is he sitting at Dermat's shoulder?" asked Grania.
+
+"That is Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin," replied the druid; "a
+valiant champion, and also a druid and a man of science."
+
+Then Grania called her handmaid, and said to her, "Bring me the large
+jewelled, gold-chased drinking-horn that lies in my chamber."
+
+The handmaid brought the drinking-horn; and Grania, having filled it to
+the brim, said--
+
+"Take it now to Finn from me, and tell him that I desire him to drink
+from it."
+
+The handmaiden did so, and Finn took a full draught. He passed the
+drinking-horn to the king, and the king drank; and after him the queen.
+Then again Grania bade the handmaid bring it to Carbri of the Liffey,
+the king's son; and she ceased not till all she wished to drink had
+drunk from the gold-chased horn. And after a little time, those who had
+drunk fell into a deep sleep, like the sleep of death.
+
+Then the princess rose from her seat, and, walking softly across the
+hall, sat down near Dermat O'Dyna; and with downcast eyes and low voice,
+she said--
+
+"Wilt thou, Dermat, return my love if I give it to thee?"
+
+Dermat heard her at first with amazement and alarm. Then for a moment,
+even before he was aware, his heart leaped with joy; but when he
+bethought him of his duty to his chief, he hardened his mind, and
+answered with cold looks and words--
+
+"The maiden who is betrothed to Finn, I will not love; and even if I
+were so minded, I dare not."
+
+And with eyes still cast down, Grania said, "I know well it is thy duty,
+and not thy heart, that prompts thee to speak so. Thou seest how it is
+with me; and I am forced to speak more boldly than a maiden should. Finn
+has come to ask me for his wife; but he is an old man, even older than
+my father, and I love him not. But I love thee, Dermat, and I beseech
+thee to save me from this hateful marriage. And, lest thou think that my
+love for thee is only a passing fancy, hear now what befell.
+
+"Of a day when a hurling match was played on the green of Tara, between
+Mac Luga and the Fena on the one side, and Carbri of the Liffey and the
+men of Tara on the other, I sat high up at the window of my sunny
+chamber to see the game. Thou didst remain sitting with some others that
+day, not meaning to take part in the play. But at last, when the game
+began to go against thy friends, I saw thee start up; and, snatching the
+hurlet from the man nearest to thee, thou didst rush into the thick of
+the crowd; and before sitting down thou didst win the goal three times
+on the men of Tara. At that hour my eyes and my heart were turned to
+thee; and well I knew thee to-day in this banquet hall, though I knew
+not thy name till the druid told me. At that same hour, too, I gave thee
+my love--what I never gave, and never will give, to any other."
+
+Then was Dermat sore troubled. He strove with himself, but strove in
+vain; for he could not help loving the princess with his whole heart.
+Yet none the less did he hide his thoughts; for his duty to his chief
+prevailed. And with looks and words cold and stern, he replied--
+
+"I marvel greatly that thou hast not given thy love to Finn, who
+deserves it much better than any other man alive. And still more do I
+marvel that thou hast lighted on me beyond all the princes and nobles of
+Tara; for truly there is not one among them less worthy of thy love than
+I. But that thou shouldst be my wife, by no means can this be; for even
+were I to consent, there is not in Erin a fastness or a wilderness,
+however strong or remote, that could shelter us from Finn's vengeance."
+
+Then Grania said, "I read thy thoughts; and I know thou art striving
+against what thy heart prompts. And now, O Dermat, I place thee under
+gesa,[12] and under the bonds of heavy druidical spells--bonds that true
+heroes never break through, that thou take me for thy wife before Finn
+and the others awaken from their sleep; and save me from this hateful
+marriage."
+
+And Dermat, still unyielding, replied, "Evil are those gesa thou hast
+put on me; and evil, I fear, will come of them. But dost thou not know,
+princess, that whenever Finn sleeps at Tara, it is one of his privileges
+to have in his own keeping the keys of the great gates; so that even if
+we so willed it, we should not be able to leave the fortress?"
+
+"There is a wicket gate leading out from my apartments," said Grania,
+"and through that we shall pass forth."
+
+"That I cannot do," answered Dermat; "for it is one of my gesa[12] never
+to enter a king's mansion, or leave it, by a wicket gate."
+
+And Grania answered, "I have heard it said that every true champion, who
+has been instructed in all the feats that a warrior should learn, can
+bound over the highest rampart of a fort by means of the handles of his
+spears; and well I know that thou art the most accomplished champion
+among the Fena. I will now pass out through the wicket gate; and even if
+thou dost not follow, I will fly alone from Tara."
+
+And so she went forth from the banquet hall.
+
+Then Dermat, much doubting how to act, spoke to his friends and asked
+counsel of them. And first he addressed Oisin, the son of Finn, and
+asked him how he should deal with the heavy gesa-bonds that had been
+laid on him by the princess; and what he should do in the case.
+
+"You are blameless in regard to these bonds," answered Oisin; "and I
+counsel you to follow Grania; but guard yourself well against the wiles
+of Finn."
+
+"O dear friend Oscar," spoke Dermat again, "what think you is best for
+me to do, seeing that these heavy gesa-bonds have been put on me?"
+
+"I say you should follow Grania," answered Oscar; "for he, indeed, is
+but a pitiful champion who fears to keep his bonds."
+
+"What counsel do you give me, Kylta?" said Dermat to Kylta Mac Ronan.
+
+"I say," answered Kylta, "that I would gladly give the world's wealth
+that the princess had given me her love; and I counsel you to follow
+her."
+
+Last of all, Dermat spoke to Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, and
+said, "Give me your judgment in this hard matter, friend Dering."
+
+And Dering answered, "If you espouse Grania, I foresee that your death
+will come of it, which grieves me even to think of; but even so, I
+counsel you to follow the princess rather than break through your gesa."
+
+And Dermat, doubting even still, asked for the last time, "Is this, my
+friends, the counsel you all give?"
+
+And they all answered, "Yes," as with the voice of one man.
+
+Then Dermat arose and put on his armour and his helmet; and he took his
+shield, and his two heavy spears, and his sword. And with tears he bade
+farewell to his dear companions; for well he knew that it would be long
+before they should meet again; and he foresaw trouble and danger.
+
+Then he went forth to where the steep side of the inner mound
+overlooked the outer rampart; and, placing his two spears point
+downwards, and leaning on them after the manner of skilful champions,
+with two light, airy bounds he cleared rampart and ditch, and measured
+the length of his two feet on the level green outside. And there the
+princess met him; and he said to her, with voice and manner still
+distant and stern--
+
+"Evil will certainly come of this espousal, O princess, both to thee and
+to me. Far better would it be for thee to choose Finn and to pass me by;
+for now we shall wander without home or rest, fleeing from his wrath.
+Return, then, princess, return even now through the wicket gate, for the
+sleepers have not yet awakened; and Finn shall never learn what has
+happened."
+
+But Grania, gentle and sad indeed, but quite unmoved, replied, "I will
+never return; and until death takes me I will not part from thee."
+
+Then at last Dermat yielded and strove no longer; and putting off his
+sternness of manner and voice, he spoke gently to the princess and
+said--
+
+"I will hide my thoughts from thee no more, Grania. I will be thy
+husband, all unworthy of thee as I am; and I will guard thee and defend
+thee to the death from Finn and his hirelings."
+
+And they plighted their faith, and vowed solemn vows to be faithful to
+each other as man and wife for ever.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVII.] See foot-note, page 55.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FLIGHT AND PURSUIT.
+
+
+Then Grania showed Dermat the fenced meadow where her father's horses
+grazed, and bade him yoke two horses to a chariot. And when he had done
+so, he and Grania sat in the chariot and travelled with all speed
+westward, till they reached Ath-Luan.[CVIII.]
+
+And when they had come to the ford, Dermat said, "Finn will doubtless
+pursue us, and it will be all the easier for him to follow our track,
+that we have the horses."
+
+And Grania answered, "As we are now so far from Tara, we may leave the
+chariot and horses here, and I will fare on foot henceforward."
+
+So they alighted from the chariot; and Dermat, leading one of the horses
+across, left them both some distance above the ford, one at each side of
+the river. And he took up Grania in his strong arms, and brought her
+tenderly across the ford, so that not even the sole of her foot, or the
+skirt of her mantle was wetted. Then they walked against the stream for
+a mile, and turned south-west, till they reached the Wood of the two
+Tents.[CIX.]
+
+In the midst of the wood, where it was thickest, Dermat lopped off
+branches and wove a hut, where they rested. And he brought Grania the
+wild animals of the wood to eat, and gave her the water of a clear
+spring to drink.
+
+As to Finn, the son of Cumal, I will now tell what befell him. When the
+king and his guests arose from their sleep at early dawn next morning,
+they found Dermat and Grania gone; and a burning jealousy seized on
+Finn, and his rage was so great that for a time all his strength left
+him. Then he sent for his tracking-men, namely, the Clann Navin; and he
+commanded them forthwith to follow the track of Dermat and Grania. This
+they did with much ease as far as Ath-Luan, while Finn and the others
+followed after; but when they had come to the ford, they lost the track.
+Whereupon Finn, being now indeed easily kindled to wrath, told them that
+unless they took up the track again speedily, he would hang every man of
+the Clann Navin on the edge of the ford.
+
+So the trackers, being sore afraid, searched upwards against the stream,
+and found the two horses where they had been left, one on each side of
+the river. And going on a mile further, they came to the spot where
+Dermat and Grania had turned from the river; and there they lighted on
+the south-west track, Finn and the Fena still following. And when the
+Clann Navin had pointed out to Finn the direction of the track, he
+said--
+
+"Well do I know now where we shall find Dermat and Grania; for of a
+certainty they have hidden themselves in the Wood of the two Tents."
+
+Now it chanced that Oisin, and Oscar, and Kylta, and Dering were present
+when Finn spoke these words; and they were troubled, for they loved
+Dermat. And going aside, they held council among themselves, and Oisin
+spoke--
+
+"There is much likelihood, friends, that Finn speaks truth; for he is
+far-seeing, and judges not hastily. It is needful, therefore, that we
+send Dermat warning, lest he be taken unawares. My counsel is that you,
+Oscar, find out Finn's hound, Bran, and tell him to go to the Wood of
+the two Tents with a warning to Dermat; for Bran does not love his own
+master Finn better than he loves Dermat."
+
+So Oscar called Bran secretly, and told him what he should do. Bran
+listened with sagacious eye and ears erect, and understood Oscar's words
+quite well. Then, running back to the rear of the host, so that Finn
+might not see him, he followed the track without once losing it, till he
+arrived at the Wood of the two Tents. There he found Dermat and Grania
+asleep in their hut, and he put his head into Dermat's bosom.
+
+Dermat started up from his sleep, and seeing Bran, he awakened Grania,
+and said--
+
+"Here is Bran, Finn's hound; he has come to warn me that Finn himself is
+near."
+
+And Grania trembled and said, "Let us take the warning, then, and fly!"
+
+But Dermat answered, "I will not leave this hut; for however long we
+fly, we cannot escape from Finn; and it is not worse to fall into his
+hands now than at any other time. Howbeit, they shall not come into this
+fastness unless I permit them."
+
+Then great fear fell on Grania; but, seeing Dermat gloomy and downcast,
+she urged the point no further.
+
+Again Oisin spoke to his three companions and said, "I fear me that Bran
+may not have been able to baffle Finn, or that some other mischance may
+have hindered him from finding Dermat; so we must needs send him another
+warning. Bring hither, therefore, Fergor, Kylta's errand-man."
+
+And Kylta brought forward Fergor.
+
+Now this Fergor had a voice so loud that his shout was heard over the
+three nearest cantreds.
+
+So they caused him to give three shouts that Dermat might hear. And
+Dermat heard Fergor's shouts, and, awakening Grania from her sleep, said
+to her--
+
+"I hear the shout of Fergor, Kylta's errand-man. And he is with Kylta,
+and Kylta is with Finn; and I know that my friends have sent me this
+warning, as a sign that Finn himself is coming."
+
+And again Grania trembled and said, "Let us take this warning and fly!"
+
+But Dermat answered, "I will not fly; and we shall not leave this wood
+till Finn and the Fena overtake us. Howbeit, none shall come into this
+fastness unless I permit them."
+
+And Grania was in great fear; but this time Dermat looked gloomy and
+stern, and she pressed the matter no further.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVIII.] Ath-Luan, now Athlone, on the Shannon. In ancient times the
+river had to be crossed by a ford, where the bridge is now built.
+
+[CIX.] The Wood of the two Tents was situated in the territory of
+Clanrickard, in the county Galway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FASTNESS OF THE SEVEN NARROW DOORS.
+
+
+Now as to Finn. He and the others went forward till they reached the
+Wood of the two Tents. And he sent forward the Clann Navin to make
+search; who went, and having made their way to the thickest part of the
+wood, they came to a fence which they could not cross.
+
+For Dermat had cleared a space round his hut, and surrounded it with a
+fence that no man could pierce, with seven narrow doors of strong poles
+woven with saplings, to face seven different parts of the wood.
+
+Then the Clann Navin climbed up to a high tree branch, and looked over
+the fence; and they saw Dermat with a lady. And when they had returned,
+Finn asked them if Dermat and Grania were in the wood. And they
+answered--
+
+"Dermat, indeed, is there, and we saw a lady with him; but whether she
+be Grania or not we cannot tell, for we know not the princess."
+
+"May ill luck attend Dermat, and all his friends for his sake!" said
+Finn. "I know he is in this wood; and he shall never leave it till he
+give me quittance for the injury he has done me."
+
+And Oisin said, "Certain it is, that you, Finn, are blinded by jealousy;
+else you would never think that Dermat would await you on this plain,
+with no stronger fastness to shelter him from your wrath than the Wood
+of the two Tents."
+
+To which Finn, being angry, replied, "Your words will profit you
+nothing, Oisin; neither will your friendship for Dermat avail him aught.
+Well I knew, indeed, when I heard Fergor's three shouts, that it was ye
+who caused him to shout, as a warning signal to Dermat; and I know also
+that ye sent my dog Bran to him with another warning. But these warnings
+will not avail you; for he shall never leave this wood till he pay me
+such eric[10] as I seek for the injury he has done me."
+
+Then Oscar spoke and said, "Surely, Finn, it is mere folly to believe
+that Dermat would wait here for you, knowing, as he does, that you seek
+his head."
+
+As Oscar spoke these words, they arrived at the fence; and Finn
+answered, "Who then, think you, has cleared the wood in this manner, and
+fenced the space with this strong, sheltering enclosure, and fitted it
+with these narrow doors? But indeed," added he, "I will find out the
+truth of the matter in another way." So, raising his voice a little, he
+called out, "Tell us now, Dermat, which of us is telling truth, Oscar or
+I."
+
+And Dermat, who would not hide when called on, answered from within,
+"You never erred in your judgment, O king: Grania and I are here; but
+none shall come in unless I permit them."
+
+Then Finn placed his men around the enclosure, a company at each narrow
+door; and he said to each company, "If Dermat tries to escape by this
+door, seize him and keep him securely for me."
+
+Now when Grania saw these preparations, and overheard Finn's words, she
+was overcome with fear, and wept and trembled very much. And Dermat had
+pity on his wife, and comforted her; and he kissed her three times,
+bidding her be of good cheer, for that all would be well with them yet.
+
+And when Finn saw this--for he stood with some others viewing the hut
+from a mound at a little way off--a flame of burning jealousy went
+through his heart; and he said--
+
+"Now of a certainty Dermat shall not escape from me; and I shall have
+his head for all these injuries!"
+
+Now Angus of Bruga,[1] the wisest and most skilled in magic arts of all
+the Dedannan race, was Dermat's foster father. For he had reared him
+from childhood, and had taught him all the arts and accomplishments of a
+champion; and he loved him even as a father loves his only son.
+
+And it was revealed to Angus that Dermat was in deadly strait So he
+arose and travelled on the wings of the cool, east wind, neither did he
+halt till he reached the Wood of the two Tents; and he passed into the
+hut without being perceived by Finn and his men. And when Dermat saw the
+old man his heart leaped with joy.
+
+Angus greeted Dermat and Grania, and said, "What is this thing thou hast
+done, my son?"
+
+And Dermat answered, "The princess Grania, daughter of the king of Tara,
+asked me to take her for my wife, putting heavy gesa-bonds on me; and I
+did so, and we fled from her father's house. And Finn, the son of Cumal,
+has pursued us with intent to kill me, for he sought the princess to
+wife for himself."
+
+And Angus said, "Come now, children, under my mantle, one under each
+border, and I will bring you both away from this place without the
+knowledge of Finn."
+
+But Dermat answered, "Take Grania; but for me, I will not go with you.
+However, I will leave this place; and if I am alive I will follow you.
+But if they slay me, send the princess to her father, and tell him to
+treat her neither better nor worse on account of taking me for her
+husband."
+
+Then Dermat kissed Grania, and bade her be of good cheer, for that he
+feared not his foes. And Angus placed her under his mantle, and, telling
+Dermat whither to follow, went forth from the enclosure without the
+knowledge of Finn and the Fena. They turned south then, and nothing is
+told of what befell them till they came to the Wood of the two Sallows,
+which is now called Limerick.
+
+Now as to Dermat. After Angus and Grania had left him, he girded on his
+armour, and took his sharp weapons in his hands; and he stood up tall
+and straight like a pillar, meditating in silence for a space. Then he
+went to one of the seven narrow doors, and asked who was outside.
+
+"No enemy of thine is here, but Oisin and Oscar, with the men of the
+Clann Baskin. Come out to us, and no one will dare to harm thee."
+
+"I must needs find the door where Finn himself keeps guard," answered
+Dermat; "so I will not go out to you."
+
+He went to the second narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Kylta Mac Ronan with the Clann Ronan around him. Come out at this door,
+and we will fight to the death for thy sake."
+
+"I will not go out to you," answered Dermat; "for I do not wish to bring
+Finn's anger on you for treating me with kindness."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Conan of the Grey Rushes and the Clann Morna. We are no friends to
+Finn; but thee we all love. Come out to us, then, and no one will dare
+to harm thee."
+
+"Of a certainty I will not go out at this door," answered Dermat; "for
+well I know that Finn would rather see you all dead than that I should
+escape!"
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"A friend and a dear comrade of thine is here; Cuan, the chief of the
+Munster Fena, and his Munster men with him. Thou and we come from the
+same territory; and if need be we will give our lives in fight for thy
+sake."
+
+"I will not go out to you," said Dermat; "for it would bring Finn's sure
+displeasure on you to act kindly towards me."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Finn, the son of Glore of the Loud Voice, chief of the Fena of Ulster,
+and the Ulster men around him. Thou and we come not from the same
+territory; but we all love thee, Dermat; and now come forth to us, and
+who will dare to wound or harm thee?"
+
+"I will not go out to you," replied Dermat; "you are a faithful friend
+of mine, and your father in like manner; and I do not wish you to earn
+the enmity of Finn on my account."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"No friend of thine! Here stand the Clann Navin watching for thee;
+namely, Aed the Lesser, and Aed the Tall, and Gonna the Wounder, and
+Gothan the Loud-voiced, and Cuan the Tracker, with all their men. We
+bear thee no love; and if thou come out at this door, we shall make thee
+a mark for our swords and spears!"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Lying and mean-faced dogs! It is not fear of you
+that keeps me from going forth at this door; but I do not wish to defile
+my spear with the blood of your shoeless, tracking vagabonds!"
+
+And he went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Finn, the son of Cumal, the son of Art, the son of Trenmore O'Baskin,
+and with him the Leinster Fena. No love awaits thee here; and if thou
+come forth we will cleave thee, flesh and bones!"
+
+"The door I have sought I have found at last!" cried Dermat; "for the
+door where thou, Finn, standest, that, of a certainty, is the very door
+by which I shall pass out!"
+
+Then Finn charged his men, under pain of death, not to let Dermat pass.
+But Dermat, watching an unguarded place, rose by means of his two spears
+with a light, airy bound over the fence, and alighted on the clear space
+outside; and running swiftly forward, was in a moment beyond the reach
+of sword and spear. And so dismayed were they by his threatening look,
+that not a man attempted to follow him.
+
+Then, turning southward, he never halted till he came to the Wood of the
+two Sallows, where he found Angus and Grania in a warm hut, with a boar
+fixed on hazel spits roasting before a great flaming fire. Dermat
+greeted them; and the spark of life all but leaped from Grania's heart
+with joy when she saw him.[CX.] So he told them all that had befallen
+him; and they ate their meal and slept in peace that night, till the
+morning of next day filled the world with light.
+
+Then Angus arose with the dawn, and said to Dermat, "I will now depart,
+my son; but Finn will still pursue you, and I leave you this counsel to
+guide you when I am gone. Go not into a tree having only one trunk;
+never enter a cave that has only one opening; never land on an island of
+the sea that has only one channel of approach; where you cook your food,
+there eat it not; where you eat, sleep not there; and where you sleep
+to-night, sleep not there to-morrow night!"
+
+So Angus bade them farewell; and they were sad after him.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CX.] Original: "It was little but that the salmon of her life fled
+through her mouth with joy before Dermat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR THREE VENOMOUS HOUNDS ON THE TRACK OF
+DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+After Angus was gone, Dermat and Grania journeyed westward, keeping the
+Shannon on their right, till they reached the Rough Stream of the
+Champions, which is now called the Laune.[CXI.] They rested there; and
+Dermat killed a salmon with his spear, and fixed it on a hazel spit to
+broil on the near bank; and he crossed the river with Grania, to eat it
+on the further bank, as Angus had told him. And after they had eaten,
+they sought a sleeping-place further west.
+
+They rose early next morning, and journeyed still west, till they
+reached the Grey Moor of Finnlia.[CXII.] There they met a man of great
+size, noble in gait and feature, but with arms and armour not befitting
+his appearance. Dermat greeted him, and asked who he was; and he
+replied--
+
+"My name is Modan, and I am seeking a lord whom I may serve for pay."
+
+"If I take you into my service," asked Dermat, "what can you do for us?"
+
+"I will serve you by day and watch for you by night," answered Modan.
+
+Whereupon they entered into bonds of agreement with one another, Modan
+to serve by day and watch by night, and Dermat to pay him wages.
+
+Then the three went westward till they reached the river of
+Carra,[CXIII.] and Modan lifted Dermat and Grania with the greatest
+ease, and bore them dry across the stream. From that further west to
+Beha,[CXIV.] and Modan bore them over this stream in like manner. Here
+they found a cave, on the side of the hill over that part of the sea
+called Tonn Toma,[CXV.] namely, the hill of Curra-Kenn-Ammid; and Modan
+prepared a couch of soft rushes and birch tops in the innermost part of
+the cave, for Dermat and Grania. After this he went to the nearest wood
+and cut him a long, straight quicken tree rod; and, having put a hair
+and a hook on the rod, and a holly berry on the hook, he stood on the
+brink of the stream, and with three casts he hooked three salmon. Then
+he put the rod by for next day; and, putting the hook and the hair under
+his girdle, he returned to Dermat and Grania. And he broiled the fish,
+and they ate their meal, Modan giving the largest salmon to Dermat, the
+second in size to Grania, and keeping the smallest for himself. After
+which Dermat and Grania went to sleep in the cave, and Modan kept watch
+and ward at the mouth, till morning arose with its abundant light.
+
+Dermat rose early and set out for the nearest high hill, to look round
+the country, telling Grania to keep watch at the mouth of the cave while
+Modan slept. Having come to the top of the hill, he viewed the country
+all round to the four points of the sky; and after a little while, he
+saw a fleet of black ships approaching from the west. When they had come
+near enough to the shore, a company of nine nines landed at the very
+foot of the hill where Dermat stood. He went to them, and, after
+greeting them, asked who they were, and from what country they had come.
+
+"We are three sea-champions from the Iccian Sea,[CXVI.] who are at the
+head of this troop," replied they, "and our names are Ducoss, Fincoss,
+and Trencoss;[CXVII.] and we have come hither at the suit of Finn the
+son of Cumal. For a certain chief named Dermat O'Dyna has rebelled
+against him, and is now an outlaw, flying through the country from one
+fastness to another. And Finn has asked us to come with our fleet to
+watch the coast, while he himself watches inland, so that this marauder
+may no longer escape punishment. We hear, moreover, that this Dermat is
+valiant and dangerous to attack, and we have brought hither three
+venomous hounds to loose them on his track, and scent him to his
+hiding-place: fire cannot burn them, water cannot drown them, and
+weapons cannot wound them. And now tell us who thou art, and whether
+thou hast heard any tidings of this Dermat O'Dyna."
+
+"I saw him, indeed, yesterday," answered Dermat. "I know him well too,
+and I counsel you to follow your quest warily; for if you meet with
+Dermat O'Dyna you will have no common man to deal with."
+
+Then he asked if they had got any wine in their ships. They replied
+that they had; so he asked that a tun might be brought, as he wished to
+drink; and he told them he would show them a champion-feat after he had
+drunk. Two men were accordingly sent on board for a tun of wine. When
+they had brought it, Dermat raised it in his arms and drank; and the
+others drank in like manner till the tun was empty.
+
+Then he said, "I will now show you a champion-feat that Dermat O'Dyna
+taught me; and I challenge any man among you to do it after me. And from
+this you may learn what manner of man you will have to deal with, should
+you have the ill luck to meet with Dermat himself."
+
+So saying, he brought the tun to the crest of the hill, and set it down
+at the edge of a steep cliff. Then, leaping up on it, he turned it
+cunningly aside from the cliff, and let it roll down the smooth slope of
+the hill till it reached the very bottom, while he himself remained
+standing on it the whole time. And three times did he do this while the
+strangers looked on.
+
+But they laughed, mocking him, and said, "Do you call that a
+champion-feat indeed? Truly, you have never in your life seen a good
+champion-feat!"
+
+Thereupon one among them started up and brought the tun to the top of
+the hill, intending to do the same feat; and, placing it on the edge of
+the cliff, he leaped up on it. And while he stood on it, Dermat pushed
+it with his foot to set it going. But the moment it moved, the man lost
+his balance, and while the tun went rolling down the face of the hill,
+he himself fell over the cliff, and was dashed to pieces on the sharp
+edges and points of the rocks.
+
+Another man tried the same thing, and he in like manner fell down and
+was killed among the rocks. And the end of the matter was, that before
+they would acknowledge themselves beaten, fifty of their men attempted
+the feat, and every man of the fifty fell over the cliff and was killed.
+So the others went on board their ships, gloomy and heart-sore.
+
+Dermat returned to the cave, and Grania's heart was glad when she saw
+him. Modan went then, and putting the hair and the hook on the rod as
+before, he hooked three salmon; and he went back to the cave and broiled
+them on hazel spits. And they ate their meal; and Modan kept watch and
+ward, while Dermat and Grania slept in the cave, till the pleasant
+morning filled the world with light.
+
+Dermat rose up with the dawn, and telling Grania to keep watch while
+Modan slept, he went to the same hill, and found the three sea-champions
+with their men on the shore before him. He greeted them, and asked
+whether they wished for any more champion-feats. But they answered that
+they would much rather he would give them some tidings of Dermat O'Dyna.
+Whereupon he said--
+
+"I have seen a man who saw him this very morning. And now I will show
+you a champion-feat he taught me, in order that you may know what is
+before you, should you meet with Dermat O'Dyna himself."
+
+When he had said this, he threw off helmet and tunic and armour, till
+only his shirt remained over his brawny shoulders; and, taking the
+Ga-boi,[CXVIII.] the spear of Mannanan Mac Lir, he fixed it firmly in
+the earth, standing point upwards. Then, walking back some little way,
+he ran towards the spear, and, rising from the earth with a bird-like
+bound, he alighted softly on the very point; and, again leaping off it,
+he came to the ground on his feet without wound or hurt of any kind.
+
+Then arose one of the strange warriors and said, "If you call that a
+champion-feat, it is plain that you have never seen a good champion-feat
+in your life!"
+
+And so saying, he ran swiftly towards the spear and made a great bound;
+but he fell heavily on the sharp point, so that it pierced him through
+the heart, and he was taken down dead. Another man attempted the feat,
+and was killed in like manner; and before they ceased, fifty of their
+men were slain by Dermat's spear. Then they bade him draw his spear from
+the earth, saying that no more should try that feat; and they went on
+board their ships.
+
+So Dermat returned to the cave; and Modan hooked three salmon; and
+Dermat and Grania ate their meal and slept till morning, Modan keeping
+watch.
+
+Next morning, Dermat went to the hill, bringing two strong forked poles
+cut from the wood. He found the three sea-champions with their men on
+the shore; and he greeted them, and said--
+
+"I have come to-day to show you a champion-feat I learned from Dermat
+O'Dyna, that you may know what to expect if you should meet with Dermat
+himself."
+
+He then fixed the poles standing firmly in the earth; and he placed the
+Morallta, that is, the long sword of Angus of the Bruga, in the forks,
+edge upwards, the hilt on one, and the point on the other, binding it
+firmly with withes. Then, rising up with a bound, he alighted gently on
+the edge; and he walked cunningly three times from hilt to point, and
+from point to hilt, and then leaped lightly to the earth without wound
+or hurt. And he challenged the strangers to do that feat.
+
+Then one arose and said, "There never yet was done a champion-feat by a
+man of Erin, that one among us will not do likewise."
+
+And he leaped up, intending to alight on his feet; but he came down
+heavily on the sharp edge, so that the sword cut him clean in two.
+Another tried the same, and was killed also; and, they ceased not till
+as many were killed that day by Dermat's sword as were killed on each of
+the two days before.
+
+When they were about to return to their ships, they asked him had he got
+any tidings of Dermat O'Dyna; and he answered--
+
+"I have seen him this day: I will now go to seek him, and methinks I
+shall bring him to you in the morning."
+
+Then he returned to the cave; and he and Grania ate their meal, and
+slept that night, while Modan kept watch.
+
+Next morning, Dermat arose with the dawn, and this time he arrayed
+himself for battle. He put on his heavy armour--no man who wore it could
+be wounded through it, or above it, or beneath it. He hung the Morallta
+at his left hip, the sword of Angus of the Bruga, which never left
+anything for a second blow; and he took his two thick-handled spears,
+the Ga-derg and the Ga-boi, whose wounds no one ever recovered.
+
+Then he awakened Grania, telling her to keep watch till he returned,
+that Modan might sleep. And when she saw him so arrayed, she trembled
+with fear, for she well knew that this was his manner of preparing for
+battle. And she asked him what he meant to do to-day, and whether Finn's
+pursuers had found them. But he, to quiet her fears, put off the matter
+lightly, and said, "It is better to be prepared, lest the enemy come in
+my way;" and this soothed her.
+
+So he went to the hill, and met the strangers on the shore as before.
+And they asked him had he any tidings to give them of Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+He answered, "He is not very far off, for I have seen him just now."
+
+"Then," said they, "lead us to his hiding-place, that we may bring his
+head to Finn the son of Cumal."
+
+"That would, indeed, be an ill way of repaying friendship," answered he.
+"Dermat O'Dyna is my friend; and he is now under the protection of my
+valour: so of this be sure, I will do him no treachery."
+
+And they replied wrathfully, "If thou art a friend to Dermat O'Dyna,
+thou art a foe to Finn; and now we will take thy head and bring it to
+him along with the head of Dermat."
+
+"You might indeed do that with much ease," answered Dermat, "if I were
+bound hand and foot; but being as I am, free, I shall defend myself
+after my usual custom."
+
+Then he drew the Morallta from its sheath, and, springing forward to
+meet them as they closed on him, he clove the body of the foremost in
+two with one blow. Then he rushed through them and under them and over
+them, like a wolf among sheep, or a hawk among sparrows, cleaving and
+slaughtering them, till only a few were left, who hardly escaped to
+their ships.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXI.] The river Laune, flowing from the Lakes of Killarney into Dingle
+Bay.
+
+[CXII.] The Grey Moor of Finnlia (_Bogach-Fhinnléithe_ in the original)
+was somewhere between the river Laune and the river Caragh, but the name
+is now forgotten.
+
+[CXIII.] The river of Carra, the Caragh river, flowing into Dingle Bay
+from the beautiful lake Caragh, twenty miles west of Killarney.
+
+[CXIV.] Beha, the river Behy, about a mile and a half west from the
+Caragh, flowing through Glanbehy into Rossbehy creek.
+
+[CXV.] Tonn Toma, the wave of Toma (a woman). The word Tonn (a wave or
+billow) was often applied to the sea-waves that break over certain
+sandbanks and rocks with an exceptionally loud roaring. Tonn Toma is the
+name of a sandbank at the head of Dingle Bay, just outside the extreme
+point of Rossbehy peninsula; and in the winter storms, the sea thunders
+on this sandbank, and indeed on the whole length of the beach of the
+peninsula, so as often to be heard twenty miles inland. This roaring is
+popularly believed to predict rain.
+
+There is a chain of three hills, Stookaniller, Knockatinna, and
+Knockboy, lying between Behy bridge on the east and Drung mountain on
+the west, and isolated from the hills to the south-east by the valley of
+Glanbehy. These hills rise directly over Tonn Toma; and the old Gaelic
+name, Currach-Cinn-Adhmuid (the moor of the head [or hill] of timber)
+must have been anciently applied to one or all of them.
+
+(See, for an account of the great historical _tonns_ of Ireland, the
+author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places," series ii. page
+251.)
+
+[CXVI.] Iccian Sea (Irish, _Muir nIcht_), the Irish name for the sea
+between England and France.
+
+[CXVII.] Ducoss, Fincoss, and Trencoss, _i.e._ Blackfoot, Whitefoot, and
+Strongfoot.
+
+[CXVIII.] Dermat had two spears, the great one called the Ga-derg or
+Crann-derg (red javelin), and the small one called Ga-boi or Crann-boi
+(yellow javelin): he had also two swords: the Morallta (great fury), and
+the Begallta (little fury). These spears and swords he got from Mannanan
+Mac Lir and from Angus of the Bruga. He carried the great spear and
+sword in affairs of life and death; and the smaller in adventures of
+less danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+WHAT BEFELL THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR THREE VENOMOUS HOUNDS.
+
+
+After this Dermat returned to the cave without wound or hurt; and he and
+Grania ate and slept, and Modan watched till morning. Then he repaired
+to the hill, fully armed as before, and standing right over the ships,
+he struck his hollow-sounding shield[CXIX.] with his spear for a
+challenge, till the whole shore and the surrounding hills re-echoed. And
+Ducoss straightway armed himself and came ashore to fight Dermat single
+hand.
+
+Now Dermat by no means wished to slay his foe immediately, being,
+indeed, intent on worse punishment. So he closed with Ducoss; and the
+two champions, throwing aside their weapons, seized each other round the
+waists with their sinewy arms. Then they twisted and tugged and wrestled
+in deadly silence; and their swollen sinews strained and crackled; and
+the earth trembled beneath their feet; like two great writhing serpents,
+or like two raging lions, or like two savage bulls that strive and
+struggle to heave each other with horns interlocked. Thus did the heroes
+contend; till at last Dermat, heaving Ducoss on his shoulder, dashed him
+helpless and groaning to the ground; and instantly seizing him, he bound
+him in hard iron bonds.
+
+Fincoss came next against Dermat, and after him Trencoss; but he
+overcame them both, and bound them with like bonds; and then, leaving
+the three writhing with pain, he said to them--
+
+"I would strike off your heads, but that I wish to prolong your
+torment; for none can release you from these bonds till you die!"
+
+Dermat then returned to the cave; and he and Grania ate their meal and
+slept that night, Modan watching. In the morning, Dermat told Grania all
+that had happened from beginning to end; how fifty of the foreigners had
+been killed each day for the first three days; how he had slain a much
+greater number on the fourth day; and how he had overcome and bound the
+three sea-champions in hard iron bonds.
+
+"I have left them bound on the hill," continued he, "instead of killing
+them; because I would rather their torment to be long than short. For
+there are only four men in Erin that can loosen the bonds I tie; that is
+to say, Oisin, and Oscar, and Mac Luga, and Conan Mail; and I think no
+one of these will free them. Finn will doubtless hear of their state,
+and the news will sting him to the heart. But he will know that we are
+here; so we must now leave this cave, to escape him, and also to escape
+the three venomous dogs."
+
+So they came forth from the cave, and travelled eastward till they came
+to the Grey Moor of Finnlia; and whenever Grania was tired, or when they
+had to walk over rugged places, Modan lifted her tenderly and carried
+her, without ever being in the least tired himself. And so they
+journeyed, till they reached the broad, heathery slopes of Slieve
+Lougher;[CXX.] and they sat down to rest on the green bank of a stream
+that wound through the heart of the mountain.
+
+Now as to the sea-strangers. Those of them that were left alive landed
+from their ships, and coming to the hill, found their three chiefs bound
+tightly, hand and foot and neck. And they tried to loose them, but only
+made their bonds the tighter. While they were so engaged, they saw
+Finn's errand-woman coming towards them, with the speed of a swallow, or
+of a weasel, or of the swift, cold wind blowing over a mountain-side.
+When she had come near, she greeted them, and, seeing the bodies of the
+slain, she asked who it was that had made that fearful slaughter.
+
+"Tell us first," said they, "who art thou that makest this inquiry?"
+
+"I am Derdri of the Black Mountain, the errand-woman of Finn the son of
+Cumal," she replied; "and he has sent me hither to look for you."
+
+And they said, "We know not who made this slaughter; but we can tell
+thee his appearance, for that we know well. He was a tall warrior, with
+a fair, handsome, open countenance, and jet-black, curly hair. He has
+been three days fighting against us; and what grieves us even more than
+the slaughter of our men is that our three chiefs lie here bound by him
+so firmly that we are not able to loose them from their bonds."
+
+"Alas, friends!" said Derdri; "you have sped but badly at the very
+beginning of your quest; for this man was Dermat O'Dyna himself. And now
+loose your three venomous dogs on his track without delay; and I will
+return and send Finn to meet you."
+
+Then they brought forth the three hounds, and loosed them on the track
+of Dermat; and leaving one of their druids to attend to the three
+fettered chiefs, they followed the hounds till they came to the cave,
+where they found the soft, rushy bed of Dermat and Grania. From that
+they fared east, and crossing the Carra, and the Grey Moor of Finnlia,
+and the Laune, they reached at length the broad, heathy Slieve Lougher.
+
+As Dermat sat by the mountain stream with Grania and Modan, looking
+westward, he saw the silken banners of the foreigners at a distance as
+they approached the hill. In front of all marched three warriors with
+mantles of green, who held the three fierce hounds by three chains. And
+Dermat, when he saw the hounds, was filled with loathing and hatred of
+them. Then Modan lifted Grania, and walked a mile with Dermat up the
+stream into the heart of the mountain.
+
+When the green-clad warriors saw them, they loosed one of the three
+hounds; and when Grania heard his hoarse yelps down the valley, she was
+in great dread. But Modan bade her not fear, for that he would deal with
+this hound; and then, turning round, he drew forth from beneath his
+girdle a small hound-whelp, and placed it on the palm of his hand. There
+it stood till the great hound came up raging, with jaws wide open; when
+the little whelp leaped from Modan's hand down the dog's throat, and
+broke his heart, so that he fell dead. And after that the whelp leaped
+back again on Modan's hand; and Modan put him under his girdle.
+
+Then they walked another mile up the stream through the mountain, Modan
+bringing Grania. But the second hound was loosed, and soon overtook
+them; and Dermat said--
+
+"I will try the Ga-derg on this hound. For no spell can guard against
+the magic spear of Angus of the Bruga; and I have heard it said also
+that there is no charm that can shield the throat of an animal from
+being wounded."
+
+Then, while Modan and Grania stood to look, Dermat, putting his finger
+into the silken loop of the spear, threw a cast, and drove the
+spear-head down the hound's throat, so that the entrails of the brute
+were scattered about; and Dermat, leaping forward, drew the spear, and
+followed Modan and Grania.
+
+After they had walked yet another mile, the third hound was loosed; and
+Grania, seeing him coming on, said, trembling--
+
+"This is the fiercest of the three, and I greatly fear him; guard
+yourself, Dermat, guard yourself well against this hound!"
+
+Even while she spoke, the hound overtook them at the place called
+Duban's Pillar-stone; and as they stood looking back at him, Dermat
+stepped in front of Grania to shield her. The hound rose with a great
+spring over Dermat's head to seize Grania; but Dermat grasped him by
+the two hind legs as he passed, and, swinging him round, he struck his
+carcase against a rock and dashed out his brains.
+
+Then, putting his tapering finger into the silken string of the Ga-derg,
+he threw the spear at the foremost of the green-clad knights, and slew
+him. He made another cast of the Ga-boi and brought down the second
+warrior; and, drawing the Morallta, he sprang on the third, and swept
+off his head.
+
+When the foreigners saw their leaders slain, they fled hither and
+thither in utter rout. And Dermat fell upon them with sword and spear,
+scattering and slaughtering them, so that there seemed no escape for
+them, unless, indeed, they could fly over the tops of the trees, or hide
+themselves under the earth, or dive beneath the water. And when Derdri
+of the Black Mountain saw this havoc, she ran, panic-stricken and crazed
+with fright, off the field towards the hill where the three kings lay
+bound.
+
+Now as to Finn. Tidings were brought to him of what happened to the
+three sea-kings, and how they were lying bound in hard bonds on the hill
+over Tonn-Toma. So he set out straightway from Allen, and travelled by
+the shortest ways till he reached the hill. And when he saw the three
+champions, he was grieved to the heart; for he knew of old that the iron
+fetters bound by Dermat slew by slow torment, and that none could loose
+them except Oisin, or Oscar, or Mac Luga, or Conan Mail.
+
+And Finn asked Oisin to loose the bonds and relieve the kings.
+
+"I cannot do so," answered Oisin, "for Dermat bound me under gesa[12]
+never to loose any warrior that he should bind."
+
+He next asked Oscar; but the young warrior answered, "None shall be
+released by me who seeks to harm Dermat O'Dyna. Fain would I indeed put
+heavier bonds on them."
+
+And when he asked Mac Luga and Conan, they refused in like manner.
+
+Now while they were speaking in this wise, they saw the errand-woman,
+Derdri of the Black Mountain, running towards them, breathless and with
+failing steps, and her eyes starting from the sockets with terror. And
+Finn asked her what tidings she had brought.
+
+"Tidings indeed, O king, tidings of grievous mishap and woe!" Whereupon
+she told him all that she had seen--how Dermat O'Dyna had killed the
+three fierce hounds, and had made a slaughter of the foreigners. "And
+hardly, indeed," she cried, "hardly have I myself got off scathless with
+the news!"
+
+The three kings, hearing this, and being worn out with the straitness
+and torment of their bonds, died at the same moment. And Finn caused
+them to be buried in three wide graves; and flagstones were placed over
+them with their names graved in Ogam;[CXXI.] and their funeral rites
+were performed. Then, with heart full of grief and gall, Finn marched
+northwards with his men to Allen of the green hill-slopes.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXIX.] A usual form of challenge among the ancient Irish warriors. It
+is very curious that this custom is remembered to the present day in the
+_patois_ of the peasantry, even where the Irish language is no longer
+spoken. In the south, and in parts of the west, they call a
+distinguished fighting man a _buailim sciach_, an expression which means
+literally, "I strike the shield."
+
+[CXX.] Slieve Lougher, a mountain near Castle Island. (See note, page
+237.)
+
+[CXXI.] See note, page 36.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SHARVAN, THE SURLY GIANT, AND THE FAIRY QUICKEN TREE OF DOOROS.
+
+
+Now touching Dermat and Grania. They travelled eastward from Slieve
+Lougher, through Hy Conall Gavra, keeping the Shannon on their left,
+till they reached the Wood of the two Sallow Trees, which is now called
+Limerick. Here they rested; and Dermat killed a wild deer, and they ate
+of its flesh, and drank pure spring water, and slept that night. Next
+morning Modan bade them farewell, and left them. And Dermat and Grania
+were sad after him, for he was very gentle, and had served them
+faithfully.
+
+On that same day they departed from the Wood of the two Sallows; and
+nothing is related of what befell them till they arrived at the Forest
+of Dooros, in the district of Hy Ficra[CXXII.] of the Moy, which was at
+that time guarded by Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann.
+
+Now this is the history of Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann. On a certain
+occasion, a game of hurley was played by the Dedannans against the Fena,
+on the plain beside the Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth.[CXXIII.] They
+played for three days and three nights, neither side being able to win a
+single goal from the other during the whole time. And when the
+Dedannans found that they could not overcome the Fena, they suddenly
+withdrew from the contest, and departed from the lake, journeying in a
+body northwards.
+
+The Dedannans had for food during the game, and for their journey
+afterwards, crimson nuts and arbutus apples and scarlet quicken berries,
+which they had brought from the Land of Promise.[CXXIV.] These fruits
+were gifted with many secret virtues; and the Dedannans were careful
+that neither apple nor nut nor berry should touch the soil of Erin. But
+as they passed through the Wood of Dooros, in Hy Ficra of the Moy, one
+of the scarlet quicken berries dropped on the earth; and the Dedannans
+passed on, not heeding.
+
+From this berry a great quicken tree[CXXV.] sprang up, which had the
+virtues of the quicken trees that grow in Fairyland. For its berries had
+the taste of honey, and those who ate of them felt a cheerful flow of
+spirits, as if they had drunk of wine or old mead; and if a man were
+even a hundred years old, he returned to the age of thirty, as soon as
+he had eaten three of them.
+
+Now when the Dedannans heard of this tree, and knew of its many virtues,
+they would not that any one should eat of the berries but themselves;
+and they sent a Fomor[CXXVI.] of their own people to guard it, namely,
+Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann; so that no man dared even to approach
+it. For this Sharvan was a giant of the race of the wicked Cain, burly
+and strong; with heavy bones, large, thick nose, crooked teeth, and one
+broad, red, fiery eye in the middle of his black forehead. And he had a
+great club tied by a chain to an iron girdle which was round his body.
+He was, moreover, so skilled in magic that fire could not burn him,
+water could not drown him, and weapons could not wound him; and there
+was no way to kill him but by giving him three blows of his own club. By
+day he sat at the foot of the tree, watching; and at night he slept in a
+hut he had made for himself, high up among the branches.
+
+Into this land Dermat came, knowing well that he should be safe there
+from the pursuit of Finn. For Sharvan did not let any of the Fena hunt
+in Hy Ficra. And neither they nor any others dared to come near the
+great Wood of Dooros, for dread of the giant; so that the land around
+the quicken tree for many miles was a wilderness.
+
+Dermat, leaving Grania behind in safe shelter, went boldly to the giant,
+where he sat at the foot of the tree, and told him he wished to live
+amidst the woods of Hy Ficra, and chase its wild animals for food.
+Whereupon the giant, bending his red eye on him, told him, in words few
+and surly, that he might live and hunt where he pleased, as long as he
+did not take and eat the berries of the quicken tree.
+
+So Dermat built him a hunting-booth near a spring, in the thick of the
+Forest of Dooros; and, clearing a space all round, fenced it with strong
+stakes interwoven with tough withes, leaving one narrow door well
+barred and secured. And they lived in peace for a time, eating the flesh
+of the wild animals of Dooros, which Dermat brought down each day in the
+chase, and drinking the water of the well.
+
+Now let us speak of Finn, the son of Cumal. One day, soon after his
+return to Allen, as he and his household troops were on the exercise
+green before the palace, a company of fifty horsemen were seen
+approaching from the east, led by two taller and nobler looking than the
+others. Having come near, they bowed low and greeted the king; and when
+he asked them who they were, and from whence they had come, they
+answered--
+
+"We are enemies of thine, who now desire to make peace; and our names
+are Angus, the son of Art Mac Morna, and Aed, the son of Andala Mac
+Morna. Our fathers were present at the battle of Knocka,[27] aiding
+those who fought against thy father, Cumal, when he was slain; for which
+thou didst afterwards slay them both, and didst outlaw us, their sons,
+though indeed we were blameless in the matter, seeing that we were not
+born till after the death of Cumal. However, we have come now to ask
+this boon of thee: that thou make peace with us, and give us the places
+our fathers held in the ranks of the Fena."
+
+"I will grant your request," answered Finn, "provided you pay me eric
+for the death of my father."
+
+"We would indeed pay thee eric willingly if we could," answered they;
+"but we have neither gold, nor silver, nor cattle, nor wealth of any
+kind to give."
+
+And then Oisin spoke and said, "Ask them not for eric, O king; surely
+the death of their fathers should be eric enough."
+
+But Finn replied, "Of a truth, I think, Oisin, that if any one should
+slay me, it would not be hard to satisfy you in the matter of an eric.
+But, indeed, none of those who fought at Knocka against my father, and
+none of their sons, shall ever get peace from me, or join the Fena,
+without such eric as I demand."
+
+Then Angus, one of the two, asked, "What eric dost thou require, O
+king?"
+
+"I ask only one or the other of two things," answered Finn; "namely, the
+head of a warrior, or the full of my hand of the berries of a quicken
+tree."
+
+"I will give you counsel, ye sons of Morna, that will stand you in good
+stead, if you follow it," said Oisin, addressing the two strange chiefs;
+"and my counsel is, that you return to the place from whence you came,
+and seek this peace no longer. Know that the head the king seeks from
+you is the head of Dermat O'Dyna, the most dangerous of all the Fena to
+meddle with, who is well able to defend himself, even if you were twenty
+times as many as you are; and who will certainly take your heads if you
+attempt to take his. Know also that the berries Finn seeks from you are
+the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros. And it is hard to say if this
+be not a more perilous quest than the other; for the quicken tree
+belongs to the Dedannans, who have sent Sharvan, the surly giant of
+Lochlann, to guard it day and night."
+
+But the two chiefs, unmoved by what they had heard from Oisin, said that
+they would rather perish in seeking out the eric than return to their
+mother's country. So, leaving their people in the care of Oisin, they
+set out on their quest. They travelled through the Wood of the two
+Sallows, and from that to Dooros of the Moy, where they found the track
+of Dermat and Grania, and followed it till they came to the
+hunting-booth. Dermat heard their voices and footsteps outside, and,
+snatching up his weapons, went to the door and asked who was there.
+
+"We are Aed, the son of Andala Mac Morna, and Angus, the son of Art Mac
+Morna," they replied. "We have come hither from Allen of Leinster, to
+get either the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or a handful of the berries of the
+quicken tree of Dooros; for Finn, the son of Cumal, has demanded of us
+that we bring him either the one or the other, as an eric for the
+killing of his father."
+
+Dermat laughed when he heard this, and said, "Truly this is not pleasant
+news for me to hear, for I am Dermat O'Dyna. But however, friends, I am
+not willing to give you my head, and you will find it no easy matter to
+take it. And as for the berries, these are quite as hard to get; for you
+will have to fight the surly giant Sharvan, who cannot be burned with
+fire, or drowned with water, or wounded with weapons. But woe to the man
+who falls under the power of Finn, the son of Cumal. And you have come,
+methinks, on a bootless quest; for even if you should be able to bring
+him either of the two things he asks for, he will not grant you the
+place or the rank ye seek after all. And now," asked Dermat, "which of
+the two do ye wish to strive for first, my head or the quicken berries?"
+
+And they answered, "We will do battle with thee first."
+
+So Dermat opened the door, and they made ready for the combat. Now this
+is the manner in which they agreed to fight: to throw aside their
+weapons, and to use the strength of their hands alone. And if the sons
+of Morna were able to overcome Dermat, they should take his head to
+Finn; but if, on the other hand, they were overpowered and bound by
+Dermat, their heads should be in like manner forfeit to him. But the
+fight was, indeed, a short one; for these two chiefs were even as
+children in Dermat's hands, and he bound them in close and bitter bonds.
+
+Now when Grania heard of the berries of the quicken tree, she was seized
+with a longing desire to taste them. At first she strove against it and
+was silent, knowing the danger; but now she was not able to hide it any
+longer, and she told Dermat that she should certainly die if she did not
+get some of the berries to eat. This troubled Dermat, for he did not
+wish to quarrel with the giant Sharvan; but, seeing that harm might come
+to Grania if she did not get the berries, he told her he would go and
+get some for her, either by good will or by force.
+
+When the sons of Morna heard this, they said, "Loose these bonds, and we
+will go with thee and help thee to fight the giant."
+
+But Dermat answered, "Not much help, indeed, could ye give me, as I
+think, for the mere sight of this giant would be enough to unman you.
+But even were it otherwise, I would not seek your help, for if I fight
+at all I shall fight unaided."
+
+And they said, "Even so, let us go. Our lives are now forfeit to thee,
+but grant us this request before we die, to let us see thee fight this
+giant."
+
+And he consented to this.
+
+So Dermat went straightway to the quicken tree, followed by the two sons
+of Morna; and he found the giant lying asleep at the foot of the tree.
+He dealt him a heavy blow to awaken him, and the giant, raising his
+head, glared at him with his great red eye, and said--
+
+"There has been peace between us hitherto; do you now wish for strife?"
+
+"I seek not strife," answered Dermat; "but the Princess Grania, my wife,
+the daughter of king Cormac Mac Art, longs to taste of these quicken
+berries; and if she does not get them she will die. This is why I have
+come; and now I pray you give me a few of the berries for the princess."
+
+But the giant answered, "I swear that if the princess and her child were
+now dying, and that one of my berries would save them, I would not give
+it!"
+
+Then Dermat said, "I do not wish to deal unfairly with you; and I have
+accordingly awakened you from your sleep, and made my request openly,
+wishing for peace. But now understand that before I leave this spot, I
+will have some of these quicken berries, whether you will or no."
+
+When the giant heard this, he rose up, and, seizing his club, dealt
+Dermat three great blows, which the hero had much ado to ward off; nor
+did he escape without some hurt, even though his shield was tough and
+his arm strong. But now, watching narrowly, and seeing that the giant
+expected to be attacked with sword and spear, he suddenly threw down his
+weapons and sprang upon him, taking him unguarded. He threw his arms
+round his body, and, heaving him with his shoulder, hurled him with
+mighty shock to the earth; and then, seizing the heavy club, he dealt
+him three blows, dashing out his brains with the last.
+
+Dermat sat down to rest, weary and breathless. And the sons of Morna,
+having witnessed the fight from beginning to end, came forth rejoiced
+when they saw the giant slain. Dermat told them to drag the body into
+the wood and bury it out of sight, lest Grania might see it and be
+affrighted; and when they had done so, he sent them for the princess.
+When she had come, Dermat said to her--
+
+"Behold the quicken berries, Grania: take now and eat."
+
+But she answered, "I will eat no berries except those that are plucked
+by the hands of my husband."
+
+So Dermat stood up and plucked the berries; and Grania ate till she was
+satisfied. And he also plucked some for the sons of Morna, and said--
+
+"Take these berries now, friends, as much as you please, and pay your
+eric to Finn; and you may, if you are so minded, tell him that it was
+you who slew Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann."
+
+They answered, "We will bring to Finn as much as he demanded, one
+handful and no more; and we grudge even so much."
+
+Then they thanked Dermat very much; for he had given them the berries,
+what they should never have been able to get for themselves; and though
+their lives were forfeit to him, he had not so much as mentioned the
+matter, but had allowed them to return freely. And after bidding Dermat
+and Grania farewell, they went their ways.
+
+After that Dermat left his hunting-booth, and he and Grania lived
+thenceforth in Sharvan's hut among the branches. And they found the
+berries on the top of the tree the most delicious of all; those on the
+lower branches being as it were bitter in comparison.
+
+When the sons of Morna reached Allen, Finn asked them how they had
+fared, and whether they had brought him the eric: and they answered--
+
+"Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann, is slain; and here we have
+brought thee the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros as eric for the
+death of thy father, Cumal, that we may have peace from thee, and be
+placed in our due rank among the Fena."
+
+Finn took the berries and knew them; and he smelled them three times,
+and said--
+
+"These, indeed, are the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros; but they
+have passed through the hands of Dermat O'Dyna, for I smell his touch.
+And sure I am that it was Dermat, and not you, who slew Sharvan, the
+surly giant. It shall profit you nothing, indeed, to have brought me
+these berries; neither will you get from me the peace you seek, nor your
+place among the Fena, till you pay me fair eric for my father's death.
+For you have gotten the berries not by your own strength; and you have,
+besides, made peace with my enemy. And now I shall go to the Wood of
+Dooros, to learn if Dermat abides near the quicken tree."
+
+After this he gathered together the choice men of the seven battalions
+of the Fena, and marched with them to Dooros of Hy Ficra. They followed
+Dermat's track to the foot of the quicken tree, and found the berries
+without any one to guard them; and they ate of them as much as they
+pleased.
+
+Now it was noon when they had come to the tree; and the sun shone hot,
+and Finn said--
+
+"We shall rest under this tree till evening come, and the heat pass
+away; for well I know that Dermat O'Dyna is on the tree among the
+branches."
+
+And Oisin said, "Truly your mind must be blinded by jealousy, if you
+think that Dermat O'Dyna has waited for you on that tree, since he knows
+well that you seek his head."
+
+Finn answered nothing to this speech, but called for a chess-board and
+men.[26] And he and Oisin sat down to a game; while Oscar and Mac Luga
+and Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, sat near Oisin to advise him; for
+Finn played against them all. They played on for a time warily and
+skilfully, till at last Oisin had only one move to make; and Finn said--
+
+"One move more would win you the game, Oisin, but I challenge all your
+helpers to show you that move." And Oisin was puzzled.
+
+Dermat had been viewing the game from the beginning, where he sat among
+the branches; and he said, speaking to himself--
+
+"Pity that you should be in a strait, Oisin, and I not near to advise
+your move."
+
+Grania, sitting near, overheard him, and said, "It is a small matter
+whether Oisin win or lose a game; far worse is it for you to be in this
+hut, while the men of the seven battalions of the Fena are round about
+you, waiting to kill you."
+
+Then Dermat, not giving heed to Grania's words, plucked a berry, and,
+flinging it down with true aim, struck Oisin's chess-man--the man that
+should be moved. And Oisin moved the man, and won the game against Finn.
+
+The game was begun again, and it went on till it came to the same pass
+as before, Oisin having to make only one move to win, but that move hard
+to make out. And again Dermat threw a berry and struck the right man;
+and Oisin made the move, and won the game.
+
+A third time the game went on, and Dermat struck the chess-man as
+before; and Oisin won the game the third time. Whereupon the Fena raised
+a mighty shout.
+
+"I marvel not that you should win the game, Oisin," said Finn, "seeing
+that you have the best help of Oscar, and the zeal of Dering, and the
+skill of Mac Luga; and that, along with all, you have been prompted by
+Dermat O'Dyna."
+
+"It shows a mind clouded by great jealousy," said Oscar, "that you
+should think that Dermat O'Dyna is in that tree waiting for you to kill
+him."
+
+"Which of us tells truth, Dermat," said Finn, looking up, "Oscar or I?"
+
+"You, Finn, have never yet erred in your judgment," answered Dermat from
+the tree; "for indeed I am here with the princess Grania, in the hut of
+Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann."
+
+And, looking up, Finn and the others saw them plainly through an opening
+in the branches.
+
+But now Grania, seeing the danger, began to tremble with great fear, and
+to weep; and Dermat, taking pity on her, comforted her and kissed her
+three times.
+
+And Finn, seeing this, said, "Much more than this did it grieve me the
+night you espoused Grania, and brought her away from Tara before all the
+men of Erin; but even for these kisses you shall certainly pay quittance
+with your head!"
+
+Whereupon Finn, being now bent on killing Dermat, arose, and ordered his
+hirelings to surround the tree, catching hand in hand, so as to leave no
+gap; and he warned them, on pain of death, not to let Dermat pass out.
+Having done this, he offered a suit of armour and arms, and a high place
+of honour among the Fena, to any man who would go up into the tree, and
+either bring him the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or force him to come down.
+
+Garva of Slieve Cua[CXXVII.] started up and said, "Lo, I am the man! For
+it was Dermat's father, Donn, that slew my father; and I will now avenge
+the deed."
+
+And he went up the tree.
+
+Now it was revealed to Angus of the Bruga that Dermat was in deadly
+strait; and he came to the tree to his aid, without the knowledge of the
+Fena; and Dermat and Grania were filled with joy when they saw the old
+man.
+
+And when Garva, climbing from branch to branch, had come near the hut,
+Dermat dealt him a blow with his foot, which dashed him to the ground
+among the Fena. And Finn's hirelings cut off his head on the spot, for
+Angus had caused him to take the shape of Dermat; but after he was slain
+he took his own shape, so that all knew that it was Garva of Slieve Cua
+that had been killed.
+
+Then Garva of Slieve Crot[CXXVIII.] said, "It was Dermat's father,
+Donn, that slew my father; and I will now avenge the deed on Dermat."
+
+So saying, he went up the tree. But Angus gave him a blow which hurled
+him to the ground under the shape of Dermat, so that the hirelings fell
+on him and slew him. And then Finn told them that it was not Dermat they
+had killed, but Garva of Slieve Cua.
+
+Garva of Slieve Gora[CXXIX.] next started up, and said that his father
+had been slain by Dermat's father; and he began to climb up the tree to
+take Dermat's head in revenge. But Dermat flung him down like the
+others, while Angus gave him for the time the shape of Dermat, so that
+the hirelings slew him.
+
+And so matters went on till the nine Garvas had fallen; namely, Garva of
+Slieve Cua, Garva of Slieve Crot, Garva of Slieve Gora, Garva of Slieve
+Mucka,[CXXX.] Garva of Slieve-more, Garva of Slieve Luga, Garva of
+Ath-free, Garva of Slieve Mish, and Garva of Drom-more. And full of
+grief and bitterness was the heart of Finn, witnessing this.
+
+Then Angus said he would take Grania away from that place of danger. And
+Dermat was glad, and said--
+
+"Take her with thee; and if I live till evening I will follow you. But
+if Finn slays me, send her to Tara to her father, and tell him to use
+her well."
+
+Then Dermat kissed his dear wife; and Angus, having thrown his mantle
+round her, passed out from the tree without the knowledge of the Fena,
+and went straightway to Bruga of the Boyne.
+
+After Angus and Grania had gone, Dermat, addressing Finn from the tree,
+said--
+
+"I will now go down from this tree; and I will slaughter many of thy
+hirelings before they slay me. For I see that thou art resolved to
+compass my death; and why should I fear to die now more than at a future
+time? There is, indeed, no escape for me, even should I pass from this
+place unharmed; since I can find no shelter in Erin from thy wrath.
+Neither have I a friend in the far-off countries of this great world to
+give me protection, seeing that I have from time to time dealt defeat
+and slaughter among them, every one, for thy sake. For never have the
+Fena been caught in any strait or danger, that I did not venture my life
+for them and for thee. When we went to battle, moreover, I was always in
+front of you; and I was always behind you when leaving the field. And
+now I care no longer to seek to prolong my life; but of a certainty thou
+shalt purchase my death dearly, for I shall avenge myself by dealing
+destruction among thy hirelings."
+
+"Dermat speaks truly," said Oscar; "and now let him have mercy and
+forgiveness; for he has suffered enough already."
+
+"I swear that I will never grant him peace or forgiveness to the end of
+my life," answered Finn, "till he has given me the eric I seek from him
+for the injury he has done me; that is to say, his head."
+
+"Shame it is to hear thee say so, and a sure mark of jealousy," answered
+Oscar. "And now I take the body and life of Dermat under the protection
+of my knighthood and valour; and I pledge the word of a true champion,
+that sooner shall the firmament fall on me, or the earth open up and
+swallow me, than that I shall let any man harm Dermat O'Dyna!"
+
+Then, looking upwards, he said, "Come down now, Dermat, and thou shalt
+certainly go in safety from this place; for as long as I am alive, no
+man will dare to offer thee hurt!"
+
+Then Dermat, choosing that side of the tree where the men stood nearest
+to the trunk, walked along a thick branch unseen, and, leaning on the
+shafts of his spears, he sprang forward and downward with a light, airy
+bound, and alighted outside the circle of those who stood round with
+joined hands; and in a moment he was beyond the reach of sword and
+spear. And Oscar joined him, looking back threateningly, so that no man
+of Finn's hirelings durst follow.
+
+So the two heroes fared on together, crossing the Shannon; and nothing
+is told of what befell them till they reached Bruga of the Boyne, where
+they met Angus and Grania. And Grania was almost beside herself with joy
+when she saw Dermat without wound or hurt of any kind. And the two
+champions were welcomed by Angus; and Dermat related to him and Grania
+the whole story, how he had escaped from Finn and his hirelings, Oscar
+helping. And as Grania listened, her spirit almost left her, at the
+deadly peril Dermat had passed through.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXII.] Hy Ficra, now the barony of Tireragh, in Sligo.
+
+[CXXIII.] The Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth, _i.e._ Loch Lein, or
+the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+[CXXIV.] The Land of Promise, or Fairyland. (See note 8 at the end.)
+
+[CXXV.] Quicken tree. (See note, page 177.)
+
+[CXXVI.] Fomor, a giant. (See note, page 227.)
+
+[CXXVII.] Slieve Cua, the ancient name of the highest of the
+Knockmeal-down mountains, in Waterford.
+
+[CXXVIII.] Slieve Crot, the ancient name of the Galty mountains.
+
+[CXXIX.] Slieve Gora, a mountainous district in the barony of Clankee,
+County Cavan.
+
+[CXXX.] Slieve Mucka, now Slievenamuck (the mountain of the pig), a long
+mountain ridge in Tipperary, separated from the Galties by the Glen of
+Aherlow. Slieve Luga, a mountainous district, formerly belonging to the
+O'Garas, in the barony of Costello, county Mayo. Slieve Mish, a mountain
+range west of Tralee.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE ATTACK OF THE WITCH-HAG.
+
+
+Now as regards Finn. After the departure of Dermat and Oscar, his heart
+was filled with anger and bitterness, and he vowed he would never rest
+till he had revenged himself on Dermat. And, leaving the Wood of Dooros,
+he marched eastward till he reached Allen. Making no delay, he ordered
+his trusted servants to make ready his best ship, and to put therein
+food and drink for a voyage. Then going on board, he put out to sea; and
+nothing is told of him till he reached the Land of Promise,[8] where his
+old nurse lived.
+
+When he appeared before her, she gave him a joyful welcome. And after he
+had eaten and drunk, she asked him the cause of his journey, knowing
+that some weighty matter had brought him thither. So he told her the
+whole story of what Dermat O'Dyna had done against him; and said that he
+had come to seek counsel from her how he should act. "For," he said, "no
+strength or cunning of men can compass his death; magic alone can
+overmatch him."
+
+Then the old woman told him that she would go with him next day and work
+magic against Dermat. Whereupon Finn was much rejoiced, and they rested
+that night.
+
+Next day, they set out, Finn and his people and his nurse; and it is not
+told how they fared till they reached Bruga of the Boyne. And the men of
+Erin knew not that they had come thither, for the witch-hag threw a
+druidical mist round them, so that no man might see them.
+
+It chanced that Dermat hunted that day in the forest, alone; for Oscar
+had gone from Bruga the day before. When this was known to the
+witch-hag, she caused herself to fly into the air by magic, on a
+water-lily, having by her spells turned the pale flat leaf into a broad
+millstone with a hole in the middle. And, rising over the tops of the
+trees, she floated on the clear, cold wind, till she had come straight
+over the hero. Then, standing on the flat millstone, she began to aim
+deadly poisoned darts at him through the hole. And no distress Dermat
+ever suffered could compare with this; for the darts stung him even
+through his shield and armour, the witch having breathed venomous spells
+on them.
+
+Seeing at last that there was no escape from death unless he could slay
+the witch-hag, he seized the Ga-derg, and, leaning backwards, flung it
+with sure aim at the millstone, so that it went right through the hole,
+and pierced the hag; and she fell dead at Dermat's feet. Then he
+beheaded her, and brought the head to Angus of the Bruga; and he
+related to him and to Grania how he had escaped that great danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+PEACE AND REST AT LAST.
+
+
+Angus arose next morning, and, going to Finn, asked him whether he would
+make peace with Dermat. Finn, seeing that he was worsted in every
+attempt against the hero, and that moreover he had lost his nurse and
+many of his men, told Angus that he was weary of the quarrel, and that
+he was fain to make peace on whatever terms Dermat should choose.
+
+He next went to Tara to the king, Cormac, the grandson of Conn. Him he
+asked in like manner whether he was willing to grant Dermat peace and
+forgiveness; and Cormac answered that he was quite willing.
+
+Then he came to Dermat and said, "Peace is better for thee: art thou
+willing now to be at peace with Finn and Cormac?"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Gladly will I make peace, if they grant me such
+conditions as befit a champion and the husband of the princess Grania."
+
+And when Angus asked what these conditions were, he answered--
+
+"The cantred which my father had, that is to say, the cantred of
+O'Dyna,[CXXXI.] without rent or tribute to the king of Erin; also the
+cantred of Ben-Damis,[CXXXII.] namely, Ducarn of Leinster. These two to
+be granted to me by Finn; and he shall not hunt over them, nor any of
+his Fena, without my leave. And the king of Erin shall grant me the
+cantred of Kesh-Corran,[CXXXIII.] as a dowry with his daughter. On these
+conditions will I make peace."
+
+Angus went to Finn, and afterwards to the king, with these conditions.
+And they granted them, and forgave Dermat all he had done against them
+during the time he was outlawed. So they made peace. And Cormac gave his
+other daughter to Finn to wife.
+
+Dermat and Grania went to live in the cantred of Kesh-Corran, far away
+from Finn and Cormac; and they built a house for themselves, namely,
+Rath-Grania, in which they abode many years in peace. And Grania bore
+Dermat four sons and one daughter. And his possessions increased year by
+year, insomuch that people said that no man of his time was richer than
+Dermat, in gold and silver and jewels, in sheep, and in cattle-herds.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXI.] The cantred of O'Dyna, now the barony of Corkaguiny, in Kerry.
+(See note, page 237.)
+
+[CXXXII.] The cantred of Ben-Damis, or Ducarn of Leinster, probably the
+district round Douce mountain, in the county Wicklow.
+
+[CXXXIII.] The district round the mountain of Kesh-Corran, in Sligo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DEATH OF DERMAT.
+
+
+Now when many years had passed, Grania said one day to Dermat--
+
+"It is surely a thing unworthy of us, seeing the greatness of our
+household and our wealth, and the number of our folk, that we should
+live in a manner so much removed from the world. And in a special manner
+it is unbecoming that the two most illustrious men in Erin have never
+been in our house, namely, my father the king, and Finn the son of
+Cumal."
+
+For indeed she had not seen her father since the night she had left Tara
+with Dermat, and her heart yearned for him.
+
+"Wherefore say you this, Grania?" answered Dermat; "for though there is
+indeed peace between us, they are both none the less enemies of mine;
+and for this reason have I removed my dwelling far apart from them."
+
+And Grania said, "Their enmity has surely softened with length of time:
+and now I would that you give them a feast: so shall we win back their
+friendship and love."
+
+And in an evil hour Dermat consented.
+
+For a full year were they preparing for that great feast, and when it
+was ready, messengers were sent to invite the king, with his house-folk,
+and Finn, with the chief men of the seven batallions of the Fena. So
+they came, with their attendants and followers, their horses and dogs;
+and they lived for a whole year in Rath-Grania, hunting and feasting.
+
+It chanced one night, at the end of the year, long after all had gone to
+rest, that Dermat heard, through the silence of the night, the distant
+yelping of a hound; and he started up from his sleep. But Grania, being
+scared, started up also, and, throwing her arms round him, asked him
+what he had seen.
+
+"I have heard the voice of a hound," answered Dermat; "and I marvel much
+to hear it at midnight."
+
+"May all things guard thee from harm!" said Grania. "This is surely a
+trap laid for thee by the Dedannans, unknown to Angus of the Bruga: and
+now lie down on thy bed again."
+
+Dermat lay down, but did not sleep, and again he heard the hound's
+voice. He started up, and this time was fain to go and look to the
+matter; but Grania caught him and kept him back a second time, saying
+that it was not meet for him to seek a hound whose voice he heard in the
+night.
+
+A gentle slumber now fell on Dermat, and he slept through a good part of
+the night. But the yelping of the hound came a third time, and awakened
+him, so that he started up; and it being now broad day, he told Grania
+that he would go to seek the hound, and find out why he was abroad in
+the night.
+
+And though Grania consented, she felt, she knew not why, ill at ease;
+and she said--
+
+"Bring with you the Morallta, the sword of Mannanan Mac Lir, and the
+Ga-derg,[A] Angus's spear; for there may be danger."
+
+But Dermat, regarding the matter lightly, and forced by fate to the
+worse choice, answered--
+
+"How can danger arise from such a small affair? I will bring the
+Begallta and the Ga-boi;[CXXXIV.] and I will also bring my good hound
+Mac-an-coill, leading him by his chain."
+
+So Dermat went forth, and he delayed not till he reached the summit of
+Ben-Gulban,[CXXXV.] where he found Finn; and Dermat, offering him no
+salute, asked him who it was that held the chase. Finn answered--
+
+"Some of our men came out from Rath-Grania at midnight with their
+hounds; and one of the hounds coming across the track of a wild boar,
+both men and dogs have followed it up. I indeed would have held them
+back, but the men were eager, and left me here alone. For this is the
+track of the wild boar of Ben-Gulban, and they who follow him are bent
+on a vain and dangerous pursuit. Often has he been chased; and he has
+always escaped, after killing many men and dogs. Even now thou canst see
+in the distance that the Fena are flying before him; and he has slain
+several this morning. He is coming towards this hillock where we stand;
+and the sooner we get out of his way the better."
+
+But Dermat said he would not leave the hillock through fear of any wild
+boar.
+
+"It is not meet that thou shouldst tarry here," answered Finn. "Dost
+thou not know that thou art under gesa[12] never to hunt a boar?"
+
+Dermat answered, "I know nothing of these gesa; wherefore were they
+placed on me?"
+
+And Finn said, "I will tell thee of this matter, for well do I remember
+it. When thou wert taken to Bruga of the Boyne, to be fostered by Angus,
+the son of Angus's steward was fostered with thee, that he might be a
+companion and playmate to thee. Now the steward, being a man of the
+common sort, agreed to send each day to Bruga, food and drink for nine
+men, as a price for having his son fostered with thee--thy father, Donn,
+being one of the nobles of the Fena. And thy father was accordingly
+permitted to visit the house of Angus when it pleased him, with eight
+companions, and claim the food sent by the steward; and when he did not
+come, it was to be given to Angus's house-folk.
+
+"It chanced on a certain day that I was at Allen of the broad
+hill-slopes, with the chief men of the seven battalions of the Fena. And
+Bran Beg O'Bucan brought to my mind, what indeed I had forgotten, that
+it was forbidden to me to sleep at Allen more than nine nights one after
+another, and that the next would be the tenth.
+
+"Now this restriction had not been placed on any of the Fena save
+myself, and they all went into the hall except thy father and a few
+others. Then I asked where we should get entertainment for that night.
+And thy father, Donn, answered that he would give me entertainment at
+Bruga of the Boyne; where food and drink awaited himself and his
+companions whenever he visited Angus. Donn said, moreover, that he had
+not been to see his son for a year, and that we were sure to get a
+welcome.
+
+"So Donn and I and the few that were with us went to the house of Angus,
+bringing our hounds; and Angus welcomed us. And thou and the steward's
+son were there, two children. After a while we could see that Angus
+loved thee, Dermat, very much, but that the house-folk loved the son of
+the steward; and thy father was filled with jealousy, that the people
+should show fondness for him and not for thee.
+
+"After night had fallen, it chanced that our hounds quarrelled over some
+broken meat we had thrown to them, and began to fight in the court; and
+the women and lesser people fled from them hither and thither. The son
+of the steward happened to run between thy father's knees, who, calling
+now to mind how the people favoured him more than thee, gave him a
+sudden strong squeeze with his knees, and killed him on the spot. And,
+without being seen by any one, he threw him under the feet of the
+hounds.
+
+"When at last the dogs were put asunder, the child was found dead; and
+the steward uttered a long, mournful cry. Then he came to me and said--
+
+"'Of all the men in Angus's house to-night, I have come worst out of
+this uproar; for this boy was my only child. And now, O Finn, I demand
+eric from thee for his death; for thy hounds have slain him.'
+
+"I told him to examine the body of his son, and that if he found the
+mark of a hound's tooth or nail, I would give him eric. So the child was
+examined, but no hurt--either bite or scratch--was found on him.
+
+"Then the steward laid me under fearful bonds of druidical gesa,[12] to
+find out for him who slew his son. So I called for a chess-board and
+some water, and, having washed my hands, I put my thumb under my tooth
+of knowledge;[25] and then it was revealed to me that the boy had been
+slain by thy father. Not wishing to make this known, I now offered to
+pay eric for the boy; but the steward refused, saying that he should
+know who killed his son. So I was forced to tell him: whereupon he
+said--
+
+"'It is easier for Donn to pay me eric than for any other man in this
+house. And the eric I demand is that his son be placed between my knees:
+if the lad gets off safe, then I shall follow up the matter no further.'
+
+"Angus was very wroth at this; and thy father would have struck off the
+steward's head if I had not come between and saved him.
+
+"The steward said no more, but went aside and brought forth a druidical
+magic wand, and, striking his son with it, he turned him into a great
+bristly wild boar, having neither ears nor tail. And, holding the wand
+aloft, he chanted this incantation over the boar--
+
+ "By this magical wand,
+ By the wizard's command,
+ I appoint and decree,
+ For Dermat and thee,
+ The same bitter strife,
+ The same span of life:
+ In the pride of his strength,
+ Thou shalt slay him at length:
+ Lo, Dermat O'Dyna
+ Lies stretched in his gore;
+ Behold my avengers,
+ The tusks of the boar!
+ And thus is decreed,
+ For Donn's cruel deed,
+ Sure vengeance to come--
+ His son's bloody doom;
+ By this wand in my hand,
+ By the wizard's command!
+
+"The moment he had ended the incantation, the boar rushed out through
+the open door, and we knew not whither he betook himself.
+
+"When Angus heard the steward's words, he laid a command on thee never
+to hunt a wild boar, that so thou mightest avoid the doom foretold for
+thee.
+
+"That same boar is the wild boar of Binbulbin; and he is now rushing
+furiously towards us. Come, then, let us leave this hill at once, that
+we may avoid him in time!"
+
+"I know nothing of these incantations and prohibitions," replied Dermat;
+"or if, as thou sayest, they were put on me in my boyhood, I forget them
+all now. And neither for fear of this wild boar of Ben-Gulban nor of any
+other wild beast will I leave this hillock. But thou, before thou goest,
+leave me thy hound, Bran, to help and encourage my dog, Mac-an-coill."
+
+"I will not leave him," answered Finn; "for often has Bran chased this
+boar, and has always barely escaped with his life. And now I leave; for
+lo, here he comes over yonder hill-shoulder."
+
+So Finn went his ways, and left Dermat standing alone on the hill. And
+after he had left Dermat said--
+
+"I fear me, indeed, that thou hast begun this chase hoping that it would
+lead to my death. But here will I await the event; for if I am fated to
+die in this spot, I cannot avoid the doom in store for me."
+
+Immediately the boar came rushing up the face of the hill, with the Fena
+following far behind. Dermat loosed Mac-an-coill against him, but to no
+profit; for the hound shied and fled before him at the first glance.
+Then Dermat said, communing with himself--
+
+"Woe to him who does not follow the advice of a good wife! For this
+morning Grania bade me bring the Morallta and the Ga-derg; but I brought
+instead the Begallta and the Ga-boi, disregarding her counsel."
+
+Then, putting his white taper finger into the silken loop of the Ga-boi,
+he threw it with careful aim, and struck the boar in the middle of the
+forehead; but to no purpose, for the spear fell harmless to the ground,
+having neither wounded nor scratched the boar, nor disturbed even a
+single bristle.
+
+Seeing this, Dermat, though indeed he knew not fear, felt his courage a
+little damped. And thereupon drawing the Begallta from its sheath, he
+dealt a blow on the boar's neck, with the full strength of his brawny
+arm. But neither did he fare better this time; for the sword flew in
+pieces, leaving the hilt in his hand, while not a bristle of the boar
+was harmed.
+
+And now the boar rushed on him as he stood defenceless, and with furious
+onset hurled him headlong to the earth; and, turning round, he gashed
+the hero's side with his tusk, inflicting a deep and ghastly wound.
+Turning again, he was about to renew the attack, when Dermat flung the
+hilt of the sword at him, and drove it through the skull to his brain,
+so that the brute fell dead on the spot.
+
+Finn and the Fena now came up, and found Dermat lying pale and bleeding,
+in the pangs of death. And Finn said--
+
+"It likes me well, Dermat, to see thee in this plight; only I am grieved
+that all the women of Erin cannot see thee also. For now, indeed, the
+surpassing beauty of thy form, that they loved so well, is gone from
+thee, and thou art pale and deformed!"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Alas, O Finn! these words surely come from thy
+lips only, and not from thy heart. And indeed it is in thy power to heal
+me even now if thou wilt."
+
+"How should I heal thee?" asked Finn.
+
+"It is not hard for thee to do so," answered Dermat. "For when, at the
+Boyne, the noble gift of foreknowledge was given to thee,[25] this gift
+also thou didst receive--that to whomsoever thou shouldst give a drink
+of water from the closed palms of thy two hands, he should be healed
+from sickness or wounds, even though he stood at the point of death."
+
+"Why should I heal thee by giving thee drink from my hands?" replied
+Finn. "For of a certainty thou of all men dost least deserve it from
+me."
+
+"Thou surely speakest hastily, not remembering past services," answered
+Dermat. "Well, indeed, do I deserve that thou shouldst heal me. Dost
+thou forget the day thou didst go with the chiefs and nobles of the
+Fena, to the house of Derca, the son of Donnara, to a banquet? And even
+as we sat down, and before the feast began, Carbri of the Liffey, son of
+Cormac, with the men of Tara, and of Bregia, and of Meath, and of
+Carmna, surrounded the palace, intent on slaying thee and all thy
+people. And they uttered three great shouts, and threw firebrands to
+burn the palace over our heads. Then thou didst arise and prepare to
+issue forth, but I put thee back and bade thee enjoy thy feast; and,
+leaving the banquet untasted, I rushed forth with a chosen few of my own
+men, and quenched the flames. Thrice we made a circuit of the palace,
+dealing slaughter amongst thy foes, so that we left fifty of them dead
+after each circuit. And having put Carbri and his men to flight, we
+returned to join the feast. Had I asked thee for a drink that night,
+gladly wouldst thou have given it to me. And yet, not more justly was it
+due to me then than it is now."
+
+"Ill dost thou deserve a healing drink from me, or any other favour,"
+said Finn; "for it was thy part to guard Grania the night we came to
+Tara; but thou didst espouse her secretly, and didst fly with her from
+Tara, knowing that she was betrothed to me."
+
+"Lay not the blame of that on me," said Dermat; "for Grania put me under
+heavy gesa, which for all the wealth of the world I would not break
+through--no, not even for life itself. Neither did I rest on my own
+judgment in the matter; for well thou knowest that Oisin, and Oscar, and
+Dering, and Mac Luga counselled me to the course I took.
+
+"And now, O Finn, I pray thee let me drink from thy hands, for I feel
+the weakness of death coming on me. And thou wilt not gainsay that I
+deserve it, if thou wilt only remember the feast that Midac, the son of
+Colga, made for thee in the Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees.[CXXXVI.]
+To this feast Midac invited thee and thy companions; while to the Palace
+of the Island he brought secretly the King of the World with a great
+host, and the three kings of the Island of the Torrent, with intent to
+slay thee and all thy Fena.
+
+"Now Midac caused some of the clay of the Island of the Torrent to be
+placed under you, with foul spells, in the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+so that your feet and your hands clove to the ground. And it was
+revealed to thee that the King of the World was about to send a chief
+with a troop of warriors, to slay you, helpless as you were, and to
+bring him your heads to the Palace of the Island.
+
+"But at that same time, I came to thee outside the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees; and thou didst make known to me your deadly strait. Then did I
+take thee, Finn, and those who were with thee, under the protection of
+my knighthood and valour; and I went to the ford to defend it against
+the foreigners.
+
+"And after a little time the three dragon-like kings of the Island of
+the Torrent came towards the palace: but I defended the ford, and,
+venturing my life for thee, I bore their attack and slew them all three.
+And I swept off their heads, and brought them, all gory as they were, in
+the hollow of my shield, to the palace where you lay miserably bound;
+and, sprinkling the clay with the blood, I broke the spell and set you
+free. And had I asked thee for a drink on that night, O Finn, of a
+surety thou wouldst not have refused me.
+
+"And many another deadly strait did I free you from, since the day I was
+admitted among the Fena, always putting myself forward to the post of
+danger, and perilling my life for your safety; and now why dost thou
+requite me with this foul treachery?
+
+"Moreover, many a king's son and many a brave warrior hast thou slain;
+and thou hast earned the enmity of powerful foes: neither is there yet
+an end of it. For the day will come--I see it even now--a day of direful
+overthrow and slaughter,[CXXXVII.] when few, alas! of the Fena will be
+left to tell the tale. Then thou shalt sorely need my help, O Finn, and
+sorely shalt thou rue this day. I grieve not, indeed, for thee, but for
+my dear, faithful companions--for Oscar and Mac Luga and Dering, and
+more than all for Oisin, who shall long outlive the others in sad old
+age.[CXXXVIII.] Alas! how deadly shall be their strait when I am not
+near to aid them!"
+
+Then Oscar, moved with pity even to tears, addressing Finn, said,
+"Although I am nearer akin to thee, O king, than to Dermat, yet I cannot
+suffer that he die, when a drink from thy hands would heal him. Bring
+him, then, a drink without delay."
+
+And Finn answered, "I know of no well on this mountain from which to
+bring drink."
+
+"Therein thou speakest not truth," said Dermat; "for thou knowest that
+not more than nine paces from thee, hidden under yonder bush, is a well
+of crystal water."
+
+Thereupon Finn went to the well, and, holding his two hands tightly
+together, he brought up some of the water, and came towards Dermat; but
+after he had walked a little way, he let it spill through his fingers,
+saying that he was not able to bring water in his hands so far.
+
+"Not so, Finn," said Dermat. "I saw thee that of thy own will thou didst
+let it spill. And now, O king, hasten, for death is on me."
+
+Again he went to the well, and was bringing the water slowly, while
+Dermat followed the dripping hands with his eyes; but when Finn thought
+of Grania he let the water spill a second time. And Dermat, seeing
+this, uttered a piteous sigh of anguish.
+
+And now was Oscar no longer able to contain his grief and rage; and he
+said, "I swear, O king, if thou dost not bring the water, that only one
+of us two--thou or I--shall leave this hill alive!"
+
+Hearing Oscar's words, and seeing the frowning looks of the others, Finn
+dipped up the water a third time, and was hastening forward; but before
+he had got half-way, Dermat's head dropped backwards, and his life
+departed.
+
+And all the Fena present raised three long loud cries of sorrow for
+Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+Then Oscar, looking fiercely on Finn, spoke and said, "Would that thou
+thyself lay dead here instead of Dermat! For now indeed the noblest
+heart of the Fena is still; and our mainstay in battle and danger is
+gone. Ah! why did I not foresee this? Why was I not told that Dermat's
+life was linked with the life of the wild boar of Ben-Gulban? Then would
+I have stayed this chase, and put off the evil day!"
+
+And Oscar wept; and Oisin, and Dering, and Mac Luga wept also, for
+Dermat was much loved by all.
+
+After a time, Finn said, "Let us now leave this hill, lest Angus of the
+Bruga overtake us. For although we had no hand in Dermat's death,
+nevertheless he may not believe us."
+
+So Finn and the Fena departed from the hill, Finn leading Dermat's dog,
+Mac-an-coill. But Oisin, and Oscar, and Dering, and Mac Luga turned
+back, and with tears, threw their mantles over Dermat; after which they
+followed the others.
+
+Grania sat that day on the highest rampart of Rath-Grania, watching for
+Dermat's return; for a dark fear haunted her mind on account of this
+chase. And when at last the Fena came in view, she saw Dermat's dog led
+by Finn; but not seeing Dermat himself, she said--
+
+"Ah me! what is this I see? Surely if Dermat were alive, it is not by
+Finn that Mac-an-coill would be led to his home!"
+
+And as she spoke she fell forward off the rampart, and lay long in a
+swoon as if her spirit had fled, while her handmaid stood over her,
+weeping and distracted. And when at last she opened her eyes, then
+indeed they told her that Dermat was dead; and she uttered a long and
+piteous cry, so that her women and all the people of the court came
+round her to ask the cause of her sorrow. And when they were told that
+Dermat had perished by the wild boar of Ben-Gulban, they raised three
+loud, bitter cries of lamentation, which were heard in the glens and
+wildernesses around, and which pierced the clouds of heaven.
+
+When at length Grania became calm, she ordered that five hundred of her
+people should go to Ben-Gulban, to bring home the body of Dermat. Then,
+turning to Finn, who still held Mac-an-coill in his hand, she asked him
+to leave her Dermat's hound; but Finn refused, saying that a hound was a
+small matter, and that he might be allowed to inherit at least so much
+of Dermat's riches. When Oisin heard this, he came forward and took the
+hound from the hand of Finn and gave him to Grania.
+
+At the time that the men left Rath-Grania to go for the body of Dermat,
+it was revealed to Angus that the hero was lying dead on Ben-Gulban. And
+he set out straightway, and travelling on the pure, cool wind, soon
+reached the mountain; so that when Grania's people came up, they found
+him standing over the body, sorrowing, with his people behind him. And
+they held forward the wrong sides of their shields in token of peace.
+
+Then both companies, having viewed the dead hero, raised three mighty
+cries of sorrow, so loud and piercing that they were heard in the wastes
+of the firmament, and over the five provinces of Erin.
+
+And when they had ceased, Angus spoke and said, "Alas! why did I abandon
+thee, even for once, O my son? For from the day I took thee to Bruga, a
+tender child, I have watched over thee and guarded thee from thy foes,
+until last night. Ah! why did I abandon thee to be decoyed to thy doom
+by the guileful craft of Finn? By my neglect hast thou suffered, O
+Dermat; and now, indeed, I shall for ever feel the bitter pangs of
+sorrow!"
+
+Then Angus asked Grania's people what they had come for. And when they
+told him that Grania had sent them to bring the body of Dermat to
+Rath-Grania, he said--
+
+"I will bring the body of Dermat with me to Bruga of the Boyne; and I
+will keep him on his bier, where he shall be preserved by my power, as
+if he lived. And though I cannot, indeed, restore him to life, yet I
+will breathe a spirit into him, so that for a little while each day he
+shall talk with me."
+
+Then he caused the body to be placed on a golden bier, with the hero's
+javelins fixed one on each side, points upwards. And his people raised
+the bier and carried it before him; and in this manner they marched
+slowly to Bruga of the Boyne.
+
+Grania's people then returned; and when they had told her the whole
+matter, though she was grieved at first, yet in the end she was content,
+knowing how Angus loved Dermat.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXIV.] See note, page 302.
+
+[CXXXV.] Now Benbulbin, a mountain five miles north of the town of
+Sligo.
+
+[CXXXVI.] See this story told at length, page 177.
+
+[CXXXVII.] A prophetic allusion to the battle of Gavra. (See note 28 at
+the end.)
+
+[CXXXVIII.] A prophetic allusion to the events related in the story of
+"Oisin in Tirnanoge," page 385.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN.
+
+IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW FINN'S HAIR WAS CHANGED IN ONE DAY FROM THE
+COLOUR OF GOLD TO SILVERY GREY.[CXXXIX.]
+
+
+Culand, the smith of the Dedannans,[1] who lived at Slieve
+Cullinn,[CXL.] had two beautiful daughters, Milucra and Aina. They both
+loved Finn,[23] and each sought him for her husband.
+
+As they walked together one evening near Allen,[CXLI.] they fell to
+talking of many things; and their conversation turning at last on their
+future husbands, Aina said she would never marry a man with grey hair.
+
+When Milucra heard this, she resolved with herself that if she could not
+get Finn, she would plan so that he should not marry her sister Aina. So
+she departed immediately, and, turning her steps northwards, she
+summoned the Dedannans to meet her at Slieve Cullinn. Having brought
+them all together, she caused them to make her a lake[CXLII.] near the
+top of the mountain; and she breathed a druidical virtue on its waters,
+that all who bathed in it should become grey.
+
+On a morning not long after this, Finn happened to be walking alone on
+the lawn before the palace of Allen, when a doe sprang out from a
+thicket, and, passing quite close to him, bounded past like the wind.
+Without a moment's delay, he signalled for his companions and dogs; but
+none heard except his two hounds, Bran and Skolan. He instantly gave
+chase, with no other arms than his sword, Mac-an-Lona, and accompanied
+only by his two dogs; and before the Fena[23] knew of his absence, he
+had left Allen of the green slopes far behind.
+
+The chase turned northwards; and though the hounds kept close to the
+doe, the chief kept quite as close to the hounds the whole way. And so
+they continued without rest or pause, till they reached Slieve Cullinn,
+far in the north.
+
+Here the doe made a sudden turn and disappeared; and what direction she
+took, whether east or west, Finn knew not, for he never caught sight of
+her after. And he marvelled much that any doe in the world should be
+able to lead Bran and Skolan so long a chase, and escape from them in
+the end. Meantime they kept searching, Finn taking one side of the hill
+and the dogs another, so that he was at last left quite alone.
+
+While he was wandering about the hill and whistling for his hounds, he
+heard the plaintive cry of a woman at no great distance; and, turning
+his steps towards the place, he saw a lady sitting on the brink of a
+little lake, weeping as if her heart would break. Never before did the
+chieftain see a maiden so lovely. The rose colour on her cheeks was
+heightened by her grief; her lips were like ruddy quicken berries; the
+delicate blossom of the apple tree was not more white than her neck; her
+hair fell in heavy golden ringlets on her shoulders; and as she looked
+up at the chief, her eyes beamed like stars on a frosty night.
+
+Finn accosted her; and, seeing that she ceased her weeping for a moment,
+he asked her had she seen his two hounds pass that way.
+
+"I have not seen thy hounds," she replied, "nor have I been at all
+concerned in the chase; for, alas, there is something that troubles me
+more nearly, a misadventure that has caused me great sorrow!"
+
+And as she spoke these words, she burst out weeping and sobbing more
+bitterly than before.
+
+Finn was greatly moved at this, so much so, that he quite forgot all
+about his hounds and his own troubles; and he asked her--
+
+"What is the cause of this great grief, gentle lady? Has death robbed
+you of your husband or your child, or what other evil has befallen you?
+I am much concerned to see a lady in such distress; and I wish you to
+tell me if anything can be done to lighten your sorrow, or to remove the
+cause of it?"
+
+She replied, "I had a precious gold ring on my finger, which I prized
+beyond anything in the world; and it has fallen from me into the water.
+I saw it roll down the steep slope at the bottom, till it went quite out
+of my sight. This is the cause of my sorrow, and thou canst remedy the
+mishap if thou wilt. The Fena are sworn never to refuse help to a woman
+in distress; and I now put on thee those gesa[12] that true heroes dare
+not break through, to search for the ring, and cease not till thou find
+it and restore it to me."
+
+Though the chief had indeed at the moment no inclination to swim, he
+could not refuse a prayer urged in this manner. So he plunged in without
+a moment's hesitation, and examined the lake on all sides, diving and
+searching into every nook and cranny at the bottom.
+
+After swimming in this manner three times round and round the lake, he
+found the ring at last; and, approaching the lady, he handed it to her
+from the water. The moment she had got it she sprang into the lake
+before his eyes, and, diving down, disappeared in an instant.
+
+The chief, wondering greatly at this strange behaviour, stepped forth
+from the water; but as soon as his feet had touched the dry land, he
+lost all his strength, and fell on the brink, a withered, grey old man,
+shrunken up and trembling all over with weakness. He sat him down in
+woful plight; and soon his hounds came up. They looked at him wistfully
+and sniffed and whined around him; but they knew him not, and, passing
+on, they ran round the lake, searching in vain for their master.
+
+On that day the Fena were assembled in the banquet hall of the palace of
+Allen; some feasting and drinking, some playing chess, and others
+listening to the sweet music of the harpers. While all were in this wise
+pleasantly engaged, Kylta Mac Ronan[23] stood up in the midst, and said
+in the hearing of all--
+
+"I have observed, friends, that our master and king, Finn the son of
+Cumal, has not been amongst us to-day, as is his wont; and I wish to
+know whither he has gone."
+
+This speech caused a sudden alarm amongst us; for no one knew aught of
+the chief, or was aware till that moment that he was absent at all; and
+we knew not wherefore he had disappeared or whither he had gone. In the
+midst of our anxious tumult, the envious and foul-mouthed Conan Mail[23]
+stood up, and said--
+
+"I have never heard sweeter music than your words, Kylta! The Fena are
+now about to seek for their king; and my only wish is that their quest
+may last for a whole year, and that it may prove a vain search in the
+end! Be not cast down, however, O Fena; if you should fail to find the
+son of Cumal, you will not be so ill off as you think; for I will
+undertake to be your king from this time forth!"
+
+Though we were at the time more inclined to be sad than mirthful, being
+weighed down with much anxiety, we could not help laughing when we heard
+the loud, foolish talk of Conan Mail; but we took no further notice of
+him.
+
+Inquiring now from the lesser people about the palace, we found that the
+chief and his two dogs had followed a doe northwards. So, having
+mustered a strong party of the Fena, we started in pursuit. Kylta and I
+took the lead, the rest keeping close behind; and in this order we
+followed the track, never taking rest or slackening speed till we
+reached Slieve Cullinn.
+
+We began to search round the hill, hoping to find either the chief
+himself or some person who might give us tidings of him. After wandering
+among brakes and rough, rocky places, we at last espied a grey-headed
+old man sitting on the brink of a lake. I went up to him to ask a
+question, followed by the rest of the Fena. At first I thought he might
+be a fisherman who had come up from the plains to fish; but when we came
+near him, he seemed so wretched an old creature, all shrivelled up, with
+the skin hanging in wrinkles over the bare points of his bones, that I
+felt quite sure he was not a fisherman, and that he was reduced to that
+state more by sickness and want than by old age.
+
+I asked the poor old man if he had seen a noble-looking hero pass that
+way, with two hounds, chasing a doe. He never answered a word, neither
+did he stir from where he sat, or even look up; but at the question, his
+head sank on his breast, and his limbs shook all over as with palsy.
+Then he fell into a sudden fit of grief, wringing his hands and uttering
+feeble cries of woe.
+
+We soothed him and used him gently for a time, hoping he might speak at
+last; but to no purpose, for he still kept silent. Then at last growing
+impatient, and thinking that this might be a mere headstrong humour, we
+drew our swords, and threatened him with instant death if he did not at
+once tell us all he knew of the chief and his hounds--for we felt sure
+he had seen them. But he only lamented the more, and still answered
+nothing.
+
+At last, after this had gone on for some time, and when we were about to
+leave him, he beckoned to Kylta Mac Ronan; and when Kylta had come near,
+the old man whispered into his ear the dreadful secret. And then we all
+came to know the truth. When we found that the withered old man was no
+other than our beloved king, Finn, himself, we uttered three shouts of
+lamentation and anger, so loud and prolonged that the foxes and badgers
+rushed affrighted from their dens in the hollows of the mountain.
+
+Conan now stepped forward, looking very fierce; and, unsheathing his
+sword with mighty bluster, he began in a loud voice to revile Finn and
+the Fena with the foulest language he could think of. And he ended by
+saying that he meant to slay the king that moment--
+
+"Now, O Finn Mac Cumal, I will certainly strike off your head; for you
+are the man that never gave me credit for valour, or praised my noble
+deeds in battle. Ever since your father, Cumal of the Hosts, was slain
+on the field of Knocka[CXLIII.] by the Clann Morna[23] of the Golden
+Shields, you have been our bitter foe; and it is against your will that
+any of us are now alive. I am very glad to see you, Finn Mac Cumal,
+brought down to what you now are; and I only wish that the rest of the
+Clann Baskin[23] were like you. Then should I very soon make short work
+of them all; and joyful to me would be the task of raising a great carn
+to their memory!"
+
+To which Oscar replied with great scorn, "It is not worth while drawing
+a sword to punish thee, Conan Mail, vain and foolish boaster as thou
+art; and besides, we have at present something else to think of. But if
+it were not for the trouble that now lies heavy on us on account of our
+king, I would of a certainty chastise thee by breaking all the bones of
+thy mouth with my fist!"
+
+"Cease, Oscar," returned Conan, in a voice still louder than before;
+"cease your foolish talk! It is actions and not words that prove a man;
+and as to the noble warlike deeds done in past times by the Fena, it
+was by the Clann Morna they were performed, and not by the
+chicken-hearted Clann Baskin!"
+
+The fiery Oscar could bear this no longer. He rushed towards Conan Mail;
+but Conan, terrified at his vengeful look, ran in amongst the Fena with
+great outcry, beseeching them to save him from the rage of Oscar. We
+straightway confronted the young hero, and checked him in his headlong
+career; and after much ado, we soothed his anger and made peace between
+him and Conan.
+
+When quietness was restored, Kylta asked Finn how this dread evil had
+befallen him, who was the enchanter, and whether there was any hope of
+restoring him to his own shape. Finn told him that it was the daughter
+of Culand the smith who had transformed him by her spells. And then he
+recounted how she had lured him to swim in the lake, and how, when he
+came forth, he was turned into a withered old man.
+
+We now made a framework litter of slender poles, and, placing our king
+on it, we lifted him tenderly on our shoulders. And, turning from the
+lake, we marched slowly up-hill till we came to the fairy palace of
+Slieve Cullinn, where we knew the daughter of Culand had her dwelling
+deep under ground.[19] Here we set him down, and the whole troop began
+at once to dig, determined to find the enchantress in her cave-palace,
+and to take vengeance on her if she did not restore our chief.
+
+For three days and three nights we dug, without a moment's rest or
+pause, till at length we reached her hollow dwelling; when she,
+affrighted at the tumult and at the vengeful look of the heroes,
+suddenly started forth from the cave and stood before us. She held in
+her hand a drinking-horn of red gold, which was meant for the king. Yet
+she appeared unwilling, and held it back, notwithstanding the
+threatening looks of the Fena. But, happening to cast her eyes on the
+graceful and manly youth, Oscar, she was moved with such admiration and
+love for him that she wavered no longer, but placed the fairy
+drinking-horn in the hands of the king. No sooner had he drunk from it,
+than his own shape and features returned, save only that his hair
+remained of a silvery grey.
+
+When we gazed on our chief in his own graceful and manly form, we were
+all pleased with the soft, silvery hue of the grey hairs. And, though
+the enchantress appeared ready to restore this also, Finn himself told
+her that it pleased him as it pleased the others, and that he chose to
+remain grey for the rest of his life.
+
+When the king had drunk from the horn, he passed it to Mac Reth, who
+drank from it in like manner and gave it to Dering. Dering, after
+drinking, was about to hand it to the next, when it gave a sudden twist
+out of his hand, and darted into the loose earth at our feet, where it
+sank out of sight. We ran at once to recover it; but, though we turned
+up the earth deeply all round, we were not able to find the
+drinking-horn. This was a disappointment that vexed us exceedingly, for
+if we had all drunk from it, we should have been gifted with a
+foreknowledge of future events.
+
+A growth of slender twigs grew up afterwards over the spot where it sank
+into the ground; and this little thicket is still gifted with a part of
+the virtue of the golden drinking-horn. For any one who looks on it in
+the morning fasting, will know in a moment all things that are to happen
+that day.
+
+So ended the Chase of Slieve Cullinn; and in this wise it came to pass
+that Finn's hair was turned in one day from golden yellow to silvery
+grey.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXIX.] It is necessary to remind the reader that this story and the
+two following are related by Oisin, in his old age, to St. Patrick. (See
+the prefatory note to the story of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," p. 385; and see
+also note 23 at the end.)
+
+[CXL.] Now Slieve Gullion, a lofty, isolated mountain in the south of
+the county Armagh, celebrated in legendary lore.
+
+[CXLI.] The Hill of Allen, in Kildare, where Finn had his palace. (See
+note 23 at the end.)
+
+[CXLII.] The little lake for which this legendary origin is assigned
+lies near the top of Slieve Gullion. There were several wells in Ireland
+which, according to the belief of old times, had the property of turning
+the hair grey. Giraldus Cambrensis tells us of such a well in Munster;
+and he states that he once saw a man who had washed a part of his head
+in this well, and that the part washed was white, while the rest was
+black!
+
+It is to be observed that the peasantry of the district retain to this
+day a lingering belief in the power of the lake of Slieve Gullion to
+turn the hair grey.
+
+[CXLIII.] Knocka, now Castleknock, near Dublin. (See note 27 at the
+end.)
+
+
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD.
+
+
+IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW AILNA, THE WIFE OF MERGAH OF THE SHARP
+SPEARS, IN ORDER TO BE REVENGED ON THE FENA FOR THE DEATH OF HER
+HUSBAND, TRANSFORMED HERSELF INTO A DEER, AND DECOYED THEM TILL SHE GOT
+THEM INTO THE POWER OF HER BROTHER, DRYANTORE, A GIANT AND AN ENCHANTER;
+HOW HE THREW THEM INTO A DUNGEON, WITH INTENT TO KILL THEM; AND HOW THEY
+WERE IN THE END SET FREE BY CONAN MAIL.[CXLIV.]
+
+
+Finn and the Fena[23] went one day to hunt at Slieve Fuad.[CXLV.] When
+they had come very near to the top of the mountain, a deer suddenly
+bounded from a thicket right before them, very large and fierce, with a
+great pair of sharp, dangerous antlers. At once they loosed their dogs
+and gave chase; and those who were scattered here and there about the
+hill gave up the pursuit of smaller game to join the main body for it
+was very seldom they fell in with a deer that promised better sport.
+
+She led them through rugged places, over rocks and bogs, and into deep
+glens. The hounds several times surrounded her; but she fought her way
+with so much strength and fury that she always escaped, after killing
+many of the dogs and disabling some of the men.
+
+Soon she left Slieve Fuad behind, nor did she slacken speed till she
+reached the green hill of Lidas, while the hunters and dogs followed in
+full chase close behind. She then made her way across the open country
+to a rugged and bushy hill--the hill of Carrigan;[CXLVI.] and here they
+suddenly lost her among the rocks and thickets. They searched round the
+hill without avail, north, south, east, and west, till all, both men and
+dogs, were quite scattered; and Finn and Dara the Melodious were left
+alone.
+
+At length Finn's dog, Skolan, started the deer once more, and again the
+chase began. Back over the selfsame course she ran, by the hill of
+Lidas, and straight on towards Slieve Fuad, Finn and Dara close on her
+track; while the main body of the Fena followed far behind, guided by
+the cries of the dogs.
+
+When the deer reached Slieve Fuad, she again took cover and disappeared
+at the very spot where they had first started her; and the two chiefs,
+after beating the thickets on every side, were at length forced to give
+up the search.
+
+A druidical mist now rose up, darkening the air, and enfolding them on
+every side; so that they lost their way. They tried many times to regain
+the path, but to no purpose; for they only lost themselves more and
+more among the quagmires and thickets. At last they sat down to rest,
+weary and baffled; and Dara played a mournful strain on his timpan;
+after which they sounded the Dord-Fian,[CXLVII.] as a signal to their
+friends.
+
+When the Fena heard the Dord-Fian sounding afar off, they felt sure that
+their leader was in trouble or strait of some kind; and they started to
+his relief, making northwards straight towards the point from which they
+thought the signal came. But they had not gone far when they heard it
+sounding from the east, and altered their course accordingly. Again it
+changed to the west; and no sooner had they set forward in that
+direction than it seemed to come from the south. In this manner were
+they led hither and thither, till they became quite bewildered; and they
+found themselves no nearer to those they were in search of, for every
+time they heard the Dord-Fian, it seemed as far off as ever.
+
+Meantime Finn and Dara, after resting for a time, again started off,
+intent on trying once more to reach their friends; for they heard their
+shouts, and knew they were seeking them. As they were making their way
+through the thick fog, they heard a voice at a little distance, as if
+from one in distress; and, turning their steps that way, they met a
+young woman, very beautiful, and very pleasing in manner, but looking
+weary and sore perplexed, and all over in sad plight from the bogs and
+brambles.
+
+Finn accosted her in a gentle voice, asking how she came to be alone in
+a place so wild.
+
+She replied, "I and my husband were journeying along over the plain,
+when we heard the melodious cry of hounds; and he left me to follow the
+chase, telling me to continue along the same path, and promising to
+rejoin me without delay. But this fairy fog has risen around me, and I
+have lost my way, so that I know not now in what direction to go."
+
+Finn then asked her name and the name of her husband.
+
+"My husband's name is Lavaran, and mine is Glanlua. But I perceive that
+you are one of the Fena; and indeed I think, from your arms and from
+your noble mien, that you must be the great chief Finn himself. If this
+be so, I place myself under your protection; and I know well that you
+will lead me safely out of this place to my husband; for the Fena never
+yet refused their help to a woman in distress."
+
+Finn replied, "You are quite right, lady, for I am Finn; and this chase
+that has parted you and your husband belongs to me. We will certainly
+take you under our protection, and we will neither abandon you on this
+mountain, nor suffer any one to harm you. But as to leading you to your
+husband, it is not at present in our power to do that; for you must
+know, lady, that we also have been set astray by this magical fairy fog.
+Nevertheless, we will do the best we can; and now you had better come
+with us."
+
+So the three set forward in the direction they thought most likely to
+lead to the open plain.
+
+After walking for some time, they heard a low, sweet strain of fairy
+music; and they stopped to listen. It seemed to be near them and around
+them in the fog, so that Finn thought it came from the spot where the
+lady stood; and she thought it came from Finn or Dara: and the music was
+followed by shouts and noise, as if from a great company. When the noise
+ceased, the music began again more sweetly than before; so that they
+felt heavy, and as if inclined to sleep. Still more drowsy and powerless
+they became as they listened; and at last they all three sank on the
+ground, in a trance deep and deathlike.
+
+After a time they awoke, and slowly regained their senses; though they
+were so weak that they could scarcely move. The fog had cleared away,
+leaving the air bright and warm; and when they were able to look around,
+they found themselves on the margin of a blue lake. The part of the lake
+that lay in front of them was narrow, and quite calm and smooth; but on
+each side, to the right and left, it opened out into two broad,
+green-bordered seas, with great waves tumbling wildly about, as if the
+waters were torn up by whirlwinds. But where they sat, not a breath was
+blowing. And looking across the narrow part, they saw a stately palace
+right before them on the opposite shore.
+
+As they were gazing at all these strange things, silent and much
+astonished, they saw a warrior coming forth from the palace, in size
+like a giant, rough and fierce-looking, with a beautiful woman by his
+side. The two walked quickly down to the shore, and, plunging in, they
+swam straight across the middle of the lake. And Dara and Glanlua,
+turning to Finn, said--
+
+"Of a surety, it is not for our good yonder strangers are approaching;
+but to work us treachery and mischief!"
+
+This forecast turned out to be true. The large warrior and the beautiful
+lady had no sooner gained the land than they came up to Finn and his two
+companions; and without speaking a word, the giant seized them roughly,
+and led them down to the shore of the lake. For the two heroes were
+still so weak from the spell of the fairy music that they were not able
+to raise a hand to defend either the lady or themselves.
+
+The giant and his companion, making no delay, plunged in, and swam back
+towards the palace, bringing the three with them; and as soon as they
+had reached the shore, the strange warrior, addressing Finn in a fierce
+and surly manner, said--
+
+"For a long time have I sought Finn Mac Cumal, the evil-minded and
+crafty; and now, O Finn, now that thou hast been by a well-laid plan
+cast under my power, I will take good care that thou shalt not escape
+till I take revenge, even to the full, for all the injuries thou hast
+done to me and to my sister!"
+
+Finn listened to this speech with much surprise, for he could not call
+to mind that he had ever seen the hero before; and he said--
+
+"Tell me, I pray thee, who thou art; for I know thee not; neither do I
+know of any injury thou hast suffered at my hands. Thou art, indeed,
+large of body, and fierce and boastful in speech; but know that to take
+revenge on a foe who is unable to defend himself, is a deed quite
+unbecoming a hero!"
+
+The large man replied, "Do you not remember the treachery you practised
+on Mergah of the Sharp Spears, and on my sons, two fair youths, whom you
+slew by unfair means, at the battle of Knockanare?[CXLVIII.] Well indeed
+do I know thee, Finn, for I am Dryantore, and this is Ailna my sister,
+the wife of Mergah. She is left without her husband, and I without my
+sons, by your cruel wiles; for it was by fraud and foul play, and not by
+fair fighting, that you gained the battle of Knockanare, and slew Mergah
+and his host!"
+
+"I remember well," said Finn, "that they all fell on the battle-field;
+but it was not by craft or treachery. Mergah of the Sharp Spears came
+with a mighty host to conquer Erin, and lay it under tribute. But they
+were met at Knockanare, and every man of them slain in fair, open fight,
+though not without sore loss to the Fena."
+
+"You may say what you please on the matter," said Dryantore; "but it is
+quite enough for me that you have slain Ailna's husband and my two sons.
+And now, indeed, I shall take revenge--of that be sure--both on you and
+on all the Fena that come within my reach."
+
+And having so spoken, he began without more ado to bind Finn, Dara, and
+Glanlua in strong fetters; and having done so, he threw them into a
+dungeon, where he left them without food or drink or comfort of any
+kind.
+
+Meantime the Fena ceased not to search for their king. They knew, by the
+sad strain they had heard in the distance, and by the strange manner in
+which the music had shifted from place to place, that he was caught
+under some druidic spell; and they vowed they would never rest till they
+had found him and punished the enchanter, whoever he might be.
+
+Next day, Ailna visited the dungeon; and Finn addressed her--
+
+"Hast thou forgotten, Ailna, that when thou didst come to Erin after the
+death of thy husband, Mergah of the Sharp Spears, the Fena received thee
+hospitably, and, pitying thy distress, treated thee with much kindness?
+But for this thou hast indeed given us an ungrateful and unbecoming
+return; for thou hast shut us up in this dungeon, without food or drink,
+having, by guileful druidical spells, taken away our strength."
+
+"I remember very well," said Ailna, "that you treated me kindly. But you
+killed my husband; and I am well pleased that it has now come to my
+turn to avenge his death. I do not feel the least pity for you; and I
+only wish that the whole of the Fena were with you in that dungeon, to
+be dealt with by my brother."
+
+Then, casting her eyes on Glanlua, she began to upbraid her in bitter
+words for having been in the company of Finn and Dara. But Glanlua
+explained the matter, saying that she had never seen either of the
+chiefs before, and that it was only by chance she had fallen on them
+when she had lost her way in the fog.
+
+"If that be so," said Ailna, "it is not just that you should be punished
+for the evil deeds of the others."
+
+And she went and told Dryantore, who came forthwith to release the lady.
+
+Glanlua took leave of Finn and Dara, and left the prison, grieving much
+for their evil plight; for she was grateful for their kindness on the
+mountain. Ailna led her to the palace; and, having placed food before
+her, bade her eat. But Glanlua, being overcome by weakness, suddenly
+fell into a swoon, and remained for a long time without sense or motion,
+like one dead. When at last she opened her eyes, she saw Ailna standing
+near, holding in her hand a golden drinking-horn. And Ailna gave her to
+drink, and immediately the spells lost their power; and she regained her
+strength; and the bloom and beauty of her countenance returned.
+
+But now she bethought her of the two heroes; and, remembering their
+dismal plight in the dungeon, she became sorrowful, and began to sigh
+and weep. And when Ailna and Dryantore came to know the cause of her
+tears, they told her with much severity that Finn and Dara deserved
+their punishment; and that both should stay in prison till the time had
+come to put them to death.
+
+"I seek not to release them from prison or to save them from death,"
+said Glanlua; "but that they are left without food and drink--this it is
+that moves me to pity."
+
+And Dryantore said, "If only that has caused your tears, you may, if you
+so please, bring them food. Besides, I do not mean to put them to death
+immediately. I shall let them live yet awhile, that I may decoy by them
+the other Fena, who are now wandering hither and thither in quest of
+their chief. And it is my firm belief that in a little time I shall have
+them all in that dungeon."
+
+So Glanlua went to the prison, bringing food and drink, and Ailna went
+with her. They found the heroes sitting on the floor, sorrowing, their
+strength and activity all gone; for the music-spell still held them, and
+they suffered also from want of food. And when they saw the two ladies,
+they shed bitter tears. Glanlua, on her part, wept with pity when she
+looked on the wasted face of the chief. But not so Ailna; she was
+pleased at their distress, for her heart was hardened with vengeance,
+and she longed for the time when they should suffer death. Howbeit,
+Glanlua placed food and drink before them, and they ate and drank and
+were strengthened for the time.
+
+When the two ladies returned, Dryantore asked Glanlua if it were true
+what he had heard, that Dara was a favourite among the Fena; and why it
+was that they loved him so.
+
+Glanlua replied, "I only know that he is a very skilful musician; for I
+never heard melody sweeter than the strains he played yesterday, when I
+met himself and Finn in the fog."
+
+"I should like very much to hear this music," said Dryantore, "if it be
+so melodious as you say;" and as he spoke these words he went towards
+the dungeon.
+
+And when he had come to the door, he said to Dara, in a loud, harsh,
+surly voice--
+
+"I have heard that you are a skilful musician, and can play very sweet
+strains. I wish you to play for me now that I may know if this be true."
+
+To which Dara replied, "If I had the Fena around me, I could delight
+them with the melody of my timpan; but as for you, guileful and cruel as
+you are, I do not believe that you can take any pleasure in music.
+Moreover, how can you expect that I should play sweet music for you,
+seeing that I am shut up here in this dismal dungeon, and that all manly
+strength and cheerfulness of mind have left me through your foul
+spells?"
+
+"I will take off the spells if only you play for me," said Dryantore;
+"and if your strains be as delightful as I have heard reported, I will
+bring you forth from your prison, and I will keep you for ever in my
+castle, and you shall play for me whensoever I wish for music."
+
+"I shall never consent to be released, neither will I play any music for
+you, so long as my chief lies in bondage and under enchantment," said
+Dara; "for I grieve not indeed for myself, but for him."
+
+Dryantore replied, "I will lift the spells from both of you for a time;
+but as to releasing Finn, that is a matter I do not wish to talk of
+now."
+
+Whereupon Dryantore removed the spells, and the heroes regained their
+strength and courage.
+
+Dara then played a low, sweet tune; and Dryantore, who had never before
+heard such music, listened with delight and wonder. He was so charmed
+that he called Ailna and Glanlua, that they also might hear; and they
+were as much delighted as the giant. But what pleased Glanlua most was
+to see the heroes restored to their wonted cheerfulness.
+
+Now all this time the Fena were seeking among the glens and hollows of
+the mountain for Finn and Dara. After walking for some time over a stony
+and rugged way, a faint strain of music struck on their ears. They
+stopped to listen, breathless; and every man knew the sound of Dara's
+timpan; and they raised a shout of gladness, which reached Finn and Dara
+in their dungeon. At the same moment they came in view of the palace,
+and they drew their swords and put their shields and spears in
+readiness, as men do going to battle. And they went forward warily, for
+they feared foul play, and their hearts had a forecast that a foe was
+near. But, indeed, they little deemed what manner of foe they should
+meet.
+
+When Dryantore heard the shouts, he hid himself from the view of the
+Fena, and forthwith betook him to his magic arts. And again the spell
+fell on the two heroes, and their strength departed; and Dara's hand,
+losing its cunning, trembled on the strings, so that his music became
+dull and broken.
+
+And when Dara's music ceased, the Fena heard a low, hoarse murmur,
+which, growing each moment louder, sounded at last like the hollow roar
+of waves. And anon their strength and their swiftness left them, and
+they fell to the ground every man, in a deep trance as if they slept the
+sleep of death.
+
+Then Dryantore and Ailna came forth, and having bound them one by one in
+strong, hard fetters, they roused them up and led them helpless and
+faltering to the dungeon, where they shut them in with Finn and Dara.
+
+The Fena looked sadly on their king; and he, on his part, shed bitters
+tears to think that he had decoyed them--though, indeed, he had done so
+unwittingly--into the hands of their foe.
+
+In the midst of their sighs and tears they heard the loud voice of the
+giant, who, looking in on them from the open door, addressed them--
+
+"Now at last, ye Fena, you are in my safe keeping. Truly you have done
+great deeds in your time, but yet, methinks, you will not be able to
+escape from this prison till I have taken just vengeance on you for
+slaying Mergah of the Sharp Spears, and my two sons, at the battle of
+Knockanare!"
+
+And having so spoken, he shut the door and went his way.
+
+When he came to the palace, he found that Glanlua's husband, Lavaran,
+had been there. Upon which he fell into a mighty rage; for he feared to
+let any man know the secrets of the palace; and he feared also that
+Lavaran might try to aid Finn and the others. He inquired of the two
+ladies whither he had gone; but they replied they did not know. He then
+began to search through the rooms, and, raising his voice, he called
+aloud for Lavaran; and the Fena, even in their dungeon, heard the roar
+quite plainly.
+
+Lavaran, hearing him, was sore afraid, and answered from a remote part
+of the palace. And as he came forward, the giant placed him under his
+spells, and, having bound him, flung him into the dungeon with the
+others.
+
+Dryantore's fury had not in the least abated; and, entering the dungeon,
+he struck off the heads of several of the Fena with his great sword,
+saying he would visit them each day, and do in like manner till he had
+killed them all.
+
+During this time the Fena were unable to defend themselves; for, besides
+that their strength had gone out from their limbs on account of the
+spells, they found that from the time the enchanter entered the prison,
+they were all fixed firmly in their places, every man cleaving to the
+ground, in whatsoever position he chanced to be, sitting, lying, or
+standing. And Finn shed tears--even tears of blood in sight of
+all--seeing his men fall one by one, while he had to look on without
+power to help them.
+
+After Dryantore had in this manner slain several, he approached Conan
+Mail,[23] with intent to end that day's work by cutting off his head;
+and as it chanced, Conan was lying full length on the floor. Now Conan,
+though he was large-boned and strong, and very boastful in his speech,
+was a coward at heart, and more afraid of wounds and death than any man
+that ever lived.
+
+So when he saw Dryantore coming towards him with his sword in his hand
+all dripping, he shouted aloud--
+
+"Hold thy hand, Dryantore! Hold thy hand for a little while, and be not
+guilty of such treachery!"
+
+But the giant, not heeding in the least Conan's words, raised his sword
+with his two hands and rose on tiptoe for a mighty blow. Then Conan,
+terrified beyond measure, put forth all his strength to free himself,
+and bounded from the floor clear outside the range of the sword; but
+left behind him, clinging to the floor, all the skin of his back, even
+from the points of his shoulders to the calves of his legs.
+
+When he saw the giant still making towards him in a greater rage than
+ever for missing his blow, he again cried aloud--
+
+"Hold your hand this time, Dryantore! Is it not enough that you see me
+in this woful plight? For it is plain that I cannot escape death. Leave
+me, then, to die of my wounds, and slay me not thus suddenly!"
+
+Dryantore held his hand; but he told Conan that he would for a certainty
+kill him next time he came, if he did not find him already dead of his
+wounds. Then he stalked out of the dungeon, and, shutting close the
+door, left the Fena in gloom and sadness.
+
+Though Lavaran had been only a little while in the palace, he made good
+use of his time, and now approaching Finn, he whispered in his ear--
+
+"There is that in yonder palace which would free us from those accursed
+spells if we only could get at it."
+
+And when Finn asked what it was, he replied, "A magical golden
+drinking-horn of wondrous virtue. I saw it in the palace among many
+other precious jewels."
+
+And when Finn again questioned him how he knew of its secret power, he
+said--
+
+"Glanlua, my wife, told me. For she said that, being herself at the
+point of death, Ailna fetched this drinking-horn and bade her drink. And
+when she had drunk, she was immediately freed from spells and sickness.
+She told me, moreover, that it would remove the spell from the Fena, and
+bring back their strength and heal their wounds, if they could get to
+drink from it."
+
+Conan, being near, overheard this conversation; and he inwardly
+resolved that he would try to secure the drinking-horn, if perchance he
+might be able to heal his wounds by means of it.
+
+Not long after, the giant again came to the prison, sword in hand, and
+addressed Conan in these words--
+
+"Come forward now, O big, bald man, for I am about to fulfil my promise
+to you! Come forward, that I may strike off your large head; for I see
+that your wounds have not killed you!"
+
+But Conan, instead of coming forward, fell back even to the farthest
+part of the dungeon, and replied--
+
+"You must know, Dryantore, that I, of all men alive, am the most
+unwilling to die any death unworthy of a brave hero. You see my evil
+plight, all wounded and faint from loss of blood; and, being as I am a
+valiant warrior, it would surely be a shameful thing and a foul blot on
+my fame, to be slain while in this state. I ask only one favour--that
+you cure me of my wounds first. After this, you may put me to death in
+any manner that is most agreeable to you."
+
+To this Dryantore consented, seeing that Conan was secure; and he called
+to Ailna and bade her fetch him the magical golden drinking-horn. "For I
+wish," said he, "to heal the wounds of yonder big, bald man."
+
+But Ailna replied, "Of what concern are his wounds to us? Is it not
+better that he should die at once, and all the other Fena with him?"
+
+Conan spoke out from where he stood, "Lovely Ailna, I seek not to escape
+death. I ask only to be healed first and slain afterwards!"
+
+Ailna went to the palace and soon returned, bringing, not the
+drinking-horn, but a large sheepskin, covered all over with a long
+growth of wool. Dryantore took it from her, and doing as she told him,
+he fitted it on Conan's back, where it cleaved firmly, so that his
+wounds were all healed up in an instant.
+
+As long as Conan lived afterwards, this sheepskin remained on his back;
+and the wool grew upon it every year, even as wool grows on the back of
+a living sheep. And from that time forth, the other Fena were always
+mocking him and laughing at him and calling him nicknames.
+
+As soon as Conan felt his wounds healed, he again spoke to the giant--
+
+"It is my opinion, Dryantore, that it would be a very unwise thing for
+you to put me to death. I see plainly you want a servant. Now, although
+I am large of bone and strong of body, and very brave withal, still I am
+very harmless. And if you let me live, I shall be your servant for ever,
+and you will find me very useful to you."
+
+The giant saw the force and wisdom of Conan's words; and he felt that he
+wanted a servant very much, though he never perceived it till that
+moment, when Conan reminded him of it.
+
+So he said, "I believe, indeed, Conan, that your words are truth.
+Wherefore, I will not put you to death. You are now my servant, and so
+shall you be for the rest of your life."
+
+He then led Conan forth from the dungeon towards the palace; and he was
+in such good humour at having got a servant, that he forgot to kill any
+of the Fena on that occasion.
+
+He called to him Ailna and Glanlua, to tell them of what he had done.
+And he said to them--
+
+"I find that I need a servant very much. Wherefore, I have made Conan my
+servant. And I am now about to free him from the spell and give him back
+his strength by a drink from the golden drinking-horn, so that he may be
+able to wait on me and do my work."
+
+For Conan, though his wounds were healed, was still so weak from the
+spell that he was scarce able to walk.
+
+"I do not at all approve what you have done," said Ailna. "It would be,
+methinks, much better to put him straightway to death along with all the
+others. As long as he is with us as our servant, I shall never think
+myself free from danger; for the Fena are treacherous all alike."
+
+"As for the other Fena," replied Dryantore, "you need not be in any
+trouble on their account, for their time is short. As soon as I have got
+Conan free from the spell, I will go straight to the dungeon and kill
+them, every man. And when they are fairly put out of the way, it seems
+to me that we need not fear danger from this big, bald man with the
+sheepskin on his back."
+
+When Ailna heard that the death of the Fena was near at hand, she no
+longer gainsaid her brother. So Dryantore led Conan to the palace; and
+placing the magical drinking-horn in his hand, bade him drink. And Conan
+drank; and immediately his strength and his spirits returned.
+
+Now it so happened, while these things went on, that Finn asked Dara to
+play one of his sweet, sad tunes, that they might hear the music of his
+timpan before they died. And Dara took his timpan, and began to play;
+and historians say that no one either before or since ever played
+sweeter strains.
+
+At the very moment that Conan had finished drinking, he and Dryantore
+heard the music sounding faintly in the distance; and the giant opened
+the door and stood on the threshold to listen. He was so charmed that he
+quite forgot all about Conan and the drinking-horn; and finding that he
+could not hear the music plainly enough where he stood, he walked
+hastily towards the dungeon, leaving Conan behind with the drinking-horn
+in his hand.
+
+No sooner had he gone out than Conan hid the drinking-horn under his
+cloak, and went to the dungeon after him.
+
+And when the giant saw him he said, "Why have you followed me; and what
+business have you here? Are you not my servant; and why have you come
+without being bidden by me?"
+
+"I thought," replied Conan, "that you were about to put the Fena to
+death; and I came to look at them once more before they died."
+
+Then suddenly Dryantore bethought him of the drinking-horn, and he
+said, "Where is the golden drinking-horn I gave you?"
+
+"I left it," said Conan, "just where I found it in the palace."
+
+The giant ran hastily towards the palace to secure the drinking-horn;
+and no sooner was he out of sight than Conan, drawing forth the horn,
+put it to the lips of each to drink, beginning with Finn. Only Finn and
+Oscar had drunk, when they heard the heavy steps of the giant running
+towards the dungeon; and now they saw that he was indeed inflamed with
+fury. Oscar seized his great, polished spear, and sprang to the door;
+and the others raised a mighty shout of joy; while Conan went on
+releasing the heroes one by one.
+
+When Dryantore saw Oscar, he uttered a roar of rage and disappointment;
+and then called aloud to Ailna to come to him. And she came forth; and
+when she saw how matters stood, she was seized with such grief and
+terror that she dropped down and died immediately. Glanlua was standing
+near at hand, rejoicing at the release of her husband and friends; but
+when she saw Ailna fall to the ground dead, she became sad, and,
+stooping down, wept over her.
+
+All this Oscar saw from where he stood; and it was with much ado he
+checked his tears. For though my son was the bravest of the heroes, and
+the most terrible in battle, he had a gentle heart, and never saw a
+woman or a child in distress without being moved to pity.
+
+But Conan felt not the least pity. On the contrary, he was very glad to
+see Ailna dead; and he told Oscar that it was very well she was out of
+the way, for that she was a vicious woman, and had wrought the Fena much
+trouble and woe.
+
+And now Oscar, casting his eyes again on Dryantore, hardened his heart
+for battle, and addressed the giant in these words--
+
+"It has at last come to pass, O Dryantore, that you are in the power of
+the Fena; and there is no escape for you, though you are a large and
+strong giant, and a druid with powerful magical spells. But the Fena
+never yet treated an enemy ungenerously. You indeed dealt unfairly and
+treacherously with us; and meant to kill us all, after having taken away
+our strength and valour by your black, guileful magic. But even so, we
+give you your choice; and we challenge you now to single combat with any
+of our champions you may wish to choose."
+
+To which Dryantore replied, "It is very true that the Fena have
+prevailed over me; and it is a just punishment for my folly in releasing
+Conan the Bald from my spells. I desire single combat. I will fight the
+Fena one after another, till I either fall myself or slay them all; and
+I will begin with you!"
+
+Oscar then took his shield and made ready for battle. Meantime the
+giant, harbouring great wrath against Conan, approached him unawares;
+and when he had come near enough, he sprang suddenly on him, and aimed a
+blow with all his might at his head. But Conan, springing aside, barely
+escaped the edge of the sword; and, running in great fear, called to
+Oscar with great outcry to save him from the giant.
+
+Then Oscar ran between; and he and the giant fought a long and fierce
+fight, while we looked on with anxious hearts. The giant was furious and
+strong; but my son was active and watchful and fearless of heart; and
+Dryantore at length fell at the door of his own palace, pierced through
+and through by the long, smooth spear of Oscar.
+
+When the Fena saw the giant fall, they raised three mighty shouts of
+joy. And Glanlua brought the magic drinking-horn to Oscar, from which he
+drank, so that his wounds were healed, and his strength straightway
+returned to him.
+
+The Fena then went into the palace, where they found food in great
+plenty, with wine and mead in golden bowls and drinking-horns. And they
+ate and drank and made merry; after which they rested that night on soft
+beds and couches.
+
+When they awoke in the morning, all was changed. The palace and the lake
+were gone; and the heroes found themselves lying on the heathy side of
+Slieve Fuad, at the selfsame spot where they had first started the deer;
+with the morning sun shining brightly over their heads.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXLIV.] This story is told by Oisin to St. Patrick. (See the prefatory
+note to the next story, "Oisin in Tirnanoge," page 385.)
+
+[CXLV.] Slieve Fuad was the ancient name of the highest of the Fews
+mountains, near Newtown Hamilton, in Armagh; but the name is now lost.
+
+[CXLVI.] Now probably the village of Carrigans, on the river Foyle, five
+miles south-west of Londonderry.
+
+[CXLVII.] Dord-Fian, a sort of musical war-cry. (See note, page 195.)
+
+[CXLVIII.] Knockanare (the hill of slaughter), where a great battle was
+fought between the Fena under Finn, and the foreigners under Mergah of
+the Sharp Spears, in which Mergah was defeated and slain. This battle
+forms the subject of a poetical romance. It may be as well to observe
+that this hill is _not_ Knockanare in Kerry, near the mouth of the
+Shannon, as some say.
+
+
+
+
+OISIN IN TIRNANOGE;[CXLIX.]
+
+OR,
+
+THE LAST OF THE FENA.
+
+ [According to an ancient legend, Finn's son, Oisin, the hero-poet,
+ survived to the time of St. Patrick, two hundred years (the legend
+ makes it three hundred) after the other Fena. On a certain occasion,
+ when the saint asked him how he had lived to such a great age, the
+ old hero related the following story.]
+
+
+A short time after the fatal battle of Gavra,[CL.] where so many of our
+heroes fell, we were hunting on a dewy morning near the brink of Lough
+Lein,[CLI.] where the trees and hedges around us were all fragrant with
+blossoms, and the little birds sang melodious music on the branches. We
+soon roused the deer from the thickets, and as they bounded over the
+plain, our hounds followed after them in full cry.
+
+We were not long so engaged, when we saw a rider coming swiftly towards
+us from the west; and we soon perceived that it was a maiden on a white
+steed. We all ceased from the chase on seeing the lady, who reined in as
+she approached. And Finn and the Fena were greatly surprised, for they
+had never before seen so lovely a maiden. A slender golden diadem
+encircled her head; and she wore a brown robe of silk, spangled with
+stars of red gold, which was fastened in front by a golden brooch, and
+fell from her shoulders till it swept the ground. Her yellow hair flowed
+far down over her robe in bright, golden ringlets. Her blue eyes were as
+clear as the drops of dew on the grass; and while her small, white hand
+held the bridle and curbed her steed with a golden bit, she sat more
+gracefully than the swan on Lough Lein. The white steed was covered with
+a smooth, flowing mantle. He was shod with four shoes of pure yellow
+gold, and in all Erin a better or more beautiful steed could not be
+found.
+
+As she came slowly to the presence of Finn, he addressed her courteously
+in these words--
+
+"Who art thou, O lovely youthful princess? Tell us thy name and the name
+of thy country, and relate to us the cause of thy coming."
+
+She answered in a sweet and gentle voice, "Noble king of the Fena, I
+have had a long journey this day, for my country lies far off in the
+Western Sea. I am the daughter of the king of Tirnanoge, and my name is
+Niam of the Golden Hair."
+
+"And what is it that has caused thee to come so far across the sea? Has
+thy husband forsaken thee; or what other evil has befallen thee?"
+
+"My husband has not forsaken me, for I have never been married or
+betrothed to any man. But I love thy noble son, Oisin; and this is what
+has brought me to Erin. It is not without reason that I have given him
+my love, and that I have undertaken this long journey: for I have often
+heard of his bravery, his gentleness, and the nobleness of his person.
+Many princes and high chiefs have sought me in marriage; but I was quite
+indifferent to all men, and never consented to wed, till my heart was
+moved with love for thy gentle son, Oisin."
+
+When I heard these words, and when I looked on the lovely maiden with
+her glossy, golden hair, I was all over in love with her. I came near,
+and, taking her small hand in mine, I told her she was a mild star of
+brightness and beauty, and that I preferred her to all the princesses in
+the world for my wife.
+
+"Then," said she, "I place you under gesa,[12] which true heroes never
+break through, to come with me on my white steed to Tirnanoge, the land
+of never-ending youth. It is the most delightful and the most renowned
+country under the sun. There is abundance of gold and silver and jewels,
+of honey and wine; and the trees bear fruit and blossoms and green
+leaves together all the year round. You will get a hundred swords and a
+hundred robes of silk and satin, a hundred swift steeds, and a hundred
+slender, keen-scenting hounds. You will get herds of cows without
+number, and flocks of sheep with fleeces of gold; a coat of mail that
+cannot be pierced, and a sword that never missed a stroke and from
+which no one ever escaped alive. There are feasting and harmless
+pastimes each day. A hundred warriors fully armed shall always await you
+at call, and harpers shall delight you with their sweet music. You will
+wear the diadem of the king of Tirnanoge, which he never yet gave to any
+one under the sun, and which will guard you day and night, in tumult and
+battle and danger of every kind. Lapse of time shall bring neither decay
+nor death, and you shall be for ever young, and gifted with unfading
+beauty and strength. All these delights you shall enjoy, and many others
+that I do not mention; and I myself will be your wife if you come with
+me to Tirnanoge."
+
+I replied that she was my choice above all the maidens in the world, and
+that I would willingly go with her to the Land of Youth.
+
+When my father, Finn, and the Fena heard me say this, and knew that I
+was going from them, they raised three shouts of grief and lamentation.
+And Finn came up to me and took my hand in his, saying sadly--
+
+"Woe is me, my son, that you are going away from me, for I do not expect
+that you will ever return to me!"
+
+The manly beauty of his countenance became quite dimmed with sorrow; and
+though I promised to return after a little time, and fully believed that
+I should see him again, I could not check my tears, as I gently kissed
+my father's cheek.
+
+I then bade farewell to my dear companions, and mounted the white steed,
+while the lady kept her seat before me. She gave the signal, and the
+steed galloped swiftly and smoothly towards the west, till he reached
+the strand; and when his gold-shod hoofs touched the waves, he shook
+himself and neighed three times. He made no delay, but plunged forward
+at once, moving over the face of the sea with the speed of a
+cloud-shadow on a March day. The wind overtook the waves and we overtook
+the wind, so that we straightway lost sight of land; and we saw nothing
+but billows tumbling before us and billows tumbling behind us.
+
+Other shores came into view, and we saw many wonderful things on our
+journey--islands and cities, lime-white mansions, bright greenans[CLII.]
+and lofty palaces. A hornless fawn once crossed our course, bounding
+nimbly along from the crest of one wave to the crest of another; and
+close after, in full chase, a white hound with red ears. We saw also a
+lovely young maiden on a brown steed, with a golden apple in her hand;
+and as she passed swiftly by, a young warrior on a white steed plunged
+after her, wearing a long, flowing mantle of yellow silk, and holding a
+gold-hilted sword in his hand.
+
+I knew naught of these things, and, marvelling much, I asked the
+princess what they meant; but she answered--
+
+"Heed not what you see here, Oisin; for all these wonders are as
+nothing compared with what you shall see in Tirnanoge."
+
+At last we saw at a great distance, rising over the waves on the very
+verge of the sea, a palace more splendid than all the others; and, as we
+drew near, its front glittered like the morning sun. I asked the lady
+what royal house this was, and who was the prince that ruled over it.
+
+"This country is the Land of Virtues," she replied. "Its king is the
+giant, Fomor of the Blows, and its queen the daughter of the king of the
+Land of Life.[19] This Fomor brought the lady away by force from her own
+country, and keeps her in his palace; but she has put him under gesa[12]
+that he cannot break through, never to ask her to marry him till she can
+find a champion to fight him in single combat. But she still remains in
+bondage; for no hero has yet come hither who has the courage to meet the
+giant."
+
+"A blessing on you, golden-haired Niam," I replied; "I have never heard
+music sweeter than your voice; and although I feel pity for this
+princess, yet your story is pleasant to me to hear; for of a certainty I
+will go to the palace, and try whether I cannot kill this Fomor, and
+free the lady."
+
+So we came to land; and as we drew nigh to the palace, the lovely young
+queen met us and bade us welcome. She led us in and placed us on chairs
+of gold; after which choice food was placed before us, and
+drinking-horns filled with mead, and golden goblets of sweet wine.
+
+When we had eaten and drunk, the mild young princess told us her story,
+while tears streamed from her soft, blue eyes; and she ended by saying--
+
+"I shall never return to my own country and to my father's house, so
+long as this great and cruel giant is alive!"
+
+When I heard her sad words, and saw her tears falling, I was moved with
+pity; and telling her to cease from her grief, I gave her my hand as a
+pledge that I would meet the giant, and either slay him or fall myself
+in her defence.
+
+While we were yet speaking, we saw the giant coming towards the palace,
+large of body, and ugly and hateful in appearance, carrying a load of
+deerskins on his back, and holding a great iron club in his hand. He
+threw down his load when he saw us, turned a surly look on the princess,
+and, without greeting us or showing the least mark of courtesy, he
+forthwith challenged me to battle in a loud, rough voice.
+
+It was not my wont to be dismayed by a call to battle, or to be
+terrified at the sight of an enemy; and I went forth at once without the
+least fear in my heart. But though I had fought many battles in Erin
+against wild boars and enchanters and foreign invaders, never before did
+I find it so hard to preserve my life. We fought for three days and
+three nights without food or drink or sleep; for the giant did not give
+me a moment for rest, and neither did I give him. At length, when I
+looked at the two princesses weeping in great fear, and when I called to
+mind my father's deeds in battle, the fury of my valour arose; and with
+a sudden onset I felled the giant to the earth; and instantly, before he
+could recover himself, I cut off his head.
+
+When the maidens saw the monster lying on the ground dead, they uttered
+three cries of joy; and they came to me, and led me into the palace. For
+I was indeed bruised all over, and covered with gory wounds; and a
+sudden dizziness of brain and feebleness of body seized me. But the
+daughter of the king of the Land of Life applied precious balsam and
+healing herbs to my wounds; and in a short time I was healed, and my
+cheerfulness of mind returned.
+
+Then I buried the giant in a deep and wide grave; and I raised a great
+carn over him, and placed on it a stone with his name graved in Ogam.
+
+We rested that night, and at the dawn of next morning Niam said to me
+that it was time for us to resume our journey to Tirnanoge. So we took
+leave of the daughter of the king of the Land of Life; and though her
+heart was joyful after her release, she wept at our departure, and we
+were not less sorry at parting from her. When we had mounted the white
+steed, he galloped towards the strand; and as soon as his hoofs touched
+the wave, he shook himself and neighed three times. We plunged forward
+over the clear, green sea with the speed of a March wind on a hill-side;
+and soon we saw nothing but billows tumbling before us and billows
+tumbling behind us. We saw again the fawn chased by the white hound with
+red ears; and the maiden with the golden apple passed swiftly by,
+followed by the young warrior in yellow silk on his white steed. And
+again we passed many strange islands and cities and white palaces.
+
+The sky now darkened, so that the sun was hidden from our view. A storm
+arose, and the sea was lighted up with constant flashes. But though the
+wind blew from every point of the heavens, and the waves rose up and
+roared around us, the white steed kept his course straight on, moving as
+calmly and swiftly as before, through the foam and blinding spray,
+without being delayed or disturbed in the least, and without turning
+either to the right or to the left.
+
+At length the storm abated, and after a time the sun again shone
+brightly; and when I looked up, I saw a country near at hand, all green
+and full of flowers, with beautiful smooth plains, blue hills, and
+bright lakes and waterfalls. Not far from the shore stood a palace of
+surpassing beauty and splendour. It was covered all over with gold and
+with gems of every colour--blue, green, crimson, and yellow; and on each
+side were greenans shining with precious stones, built by artists the
+most skilful that could be found. I asked Niam the name of that
+delightful country, and she replied--
+
+"This is my native country, Tirnanoge; and there is nothing I have
+promised you that you will not find in it."
+
+As soon as we reached the shore, we dismounted; and now we saw advancing
+from the palace a troop of noble-looking warriors, all clad in bright
+garments, who came forward to meet and welcome us. Following these we
+saw a stately glittering host, with the king at their head wearing a
+robe of bright yellow satin covered with gems, and a crown that sparkled
+with gold and diamonds. The queen came after, attended by a hundred
+lovely young maidens; and as they advanced towards us, it seemed to me
+that this king and queen exceeded all the kings and queens of the world
+in beauty and gracefulness and majesty.
+
+After they had kissed their daughter, the king took my hand, and said
+aloud in the hearing of the host--
+
+"This is Oisin, the son of Finn, for whom my daughter, Niam, travelled
+over the sea to Erin. This is Oisin, who is to be the husband of Niam of
+the Golden Hair. We give you a hundred thousand welcomes, brave Oisin.
+You will be for ever young in this land. All kinds of delights and
+innocent pleasures are awaiting you, and my daughter, the gentle,
+golden-haired Niam, shall be your wife; for I am the king of Tirnanoge."
+
+I gave thanks to the king, and I bowed low to the queen; after which we
+went into the palace, where we found a banquet prepared. The feasting
+and rejoicing lasted for ten days, and on the last day, I was wedded to
+the gentle Niam of the Golden Hair.
+
+I lived in the Land of Youth more than three hundred years; but it
+appeared to me that only three years had passed since the day I parted
+from my friends. At the end of that time, I began to have a longing
+desire to see my father, Finn, and all my old companions, and I asked
+leave of Niam and of the king to visit Erin. The king gave permission,
+and Niam said--
+
+"I will give consent, though I feel sorrow in my heart, for I fear much
+you will never return to me."
+
+I replied that I would surely return, and that she need not feel any
+doubt or dread, for that the white steed knew the way, and would bring
+me back in safety. Then she addressed me in these words, which seemed
+very strange to me--
+
+"I will not refuse this request, though your journey afflicts me with
+great grief and fear. Erin is not now as it was when you left it. The
+great king Finn and his Fena are all gone; and you will find, instead of
+them, a holy father and hosts of priests and saints. Now, think well on
+what I say to you, and keep my words in your mind. If once you alight
+from the white steed, you will never come back to me. Again I warn you,
+if you place your feet on the green sod in Erin, you will never return
+to this lovely land. A third time, O Oisin, my beloved husband, a third
+time I say to you, if you alight from the white steed, you will never
+see me again."
+
+I promised that I would faithfully attend to her words, and that I would
+not alight from the white steed. Then, as I looked into her gentle face
+and marked her grief, my heart was weighed down with sadness, and my
+tears flowed plentifully; but even so, my mind was bent on coming back
+to Erin.
+
+When I had mounted the white steed, he galloped straight towards the
+shore. We moved as swiftly as before over the clear sea. The wind
+overtook the waves and we overtook the wind, so that we straightway left
+the Land of Youth behind; and we passed by many islands and cities, till
+at length we landed on the green shores of Erin.
+
+As I travelled on through the country, I looked closely around me; but I
+scarcely knew the old places, for everything seemed strangely altered. I
+saw no sign of Finn and his host, and I began to dread that Niam's
+saying was coming true. At length, I espied at a distance a company of
+little men and women,[CLIII.] all mounted on horses as small as
+themselves; and when I came near, they greeted me kindly and
+courteously. They looked at me with wonder and curiosity, and they
+marvelled much at my great size, and at the beauty and majesty of my
+person.
+
+I asked them about Finn and the Fena; whether they were still living, or
+if any sudden disaster had swept them away. And one replied--
+
+"We have heard of the hero Finn, who ruled the Fena of Erin in times of
+old, and who never had an equal for bravery and wisdom. The poets of the
+Gaels have written many books concerning his deeds and the deeds of the
+Fena, which we cannot now relate; but they are all gone long since, for
+they lived many ages ago. We have heard also, and we have seen it
+written in very old books, that Finn had a son named Oisin. Now this
+Oisin went with a young fairy maiden to Tirnanoge, and his father and
+his friends sorrowed greatly after him, and sought him long; but he was
+never seen again."
+
+When I heard all this, I was filled with amazement, and my heart grew
+heavy with great sorrow. I silently turned my steed away from the
+wondering people, and set forward straightway for Allen of the mighty
+deeds, on the broad, green plains of Leinster. It was a miserable
+journey to me; and though my mind, being full of sadness at all I saw
+and heard, forecasted further sorrows, I was grieved more than ever when
+I reached Allen. For there, indeed, I found the hill deserted and
+lonely, and my father's palace all in ruins and overgrown with grass and
+weeds.
+
+I turned slowly away, and afterwards fared through the land in every
+direction in search of my friends. But I met only crowds of little
+people, all strangers, who gazed on me with wonder; and none knew me. I
+visited every place throughout the country where I knew the Fena had
+lived; but I found their houses all like Allen, solitary and in ruins.
+
+At length I came to Glenasmole,[CLIV.] where many a time I had hunted
+in days of old with the Fena, and there I saw a crowd of people in the
+glen. As soon as they saw me, one of them came forward and said--
+
+"Come to us, thou mighty hero, and help us out of our strait; for thou
+art a man of vast strength."
+
+I went to them, and found a number of men trying in vain to raise a
+large, flat stone. It was half lifted from the ground; but those who
+were under it were not strong enough either to raise it further or to
+free themselves from its weight. And they were in great distress, and on
+the point of being crushed to death.
+
+I thought it a shameful thing that so many men should be unable to lift
+this stone, which Oscar, if he were alive, would take in his right hand
+and fling over the heads of the feeble crowd. After I had looked a
+little while, I stooped forward and seized the flag with one hand; and,
+putting forth my strength, I flung it seven perches from its place, and
+relieved the little men. But with the great strain the golden
+saddle-girth broke, and, bounding forward to keep myself from falling, I
+suddenly came to the ground on my two feet.
+
+The moment the white steed felt himself free, he shook himself and
+neighed. Then, starting off with the speed of a cloud-shadow on a March
+day, he left me standing helpless and sorrowful. Instantly a woeful
+change came over me: the sight of my eyes began to fade, the ruddy
+beauty of my face fled, I lost all my strength, and I fell to the earth,
+a poor, withered old man, blind and wrinkled and feeble.
+
+The white steed was never seen again. I never recovered my sight, my
+youth, or my strength; and I have lived in this manner, sorrowing
+without ceasing for my gentle, golden-haired wife, Niam, and thinking
+ever of my father, Finn, and of the lost companions of my youth.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXLIX.] Tirnanoge, the Land of Youth. (See note 19 at the end.)
+
+[CL.] Gavra, now Garristown, in the north-west of the county Dublin.
+(For an account of this battle, see note 28 at the end.)
+
+[CLI.] Lough Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+[CLII.] Greenan, a summer-house; a house in a bright, sunny spot.
+
+[CLIII.] The gigantic race of the Fena had all passed away, and Erin was
+now inhabited by people who looked very small in Oisin's eyes.
+
+[CLIV.] Glenasmole, a fine valley about seven miles south of Dublin,
+through which the river Dodder flows.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+VOYAGE OF THE SONS OF O'CORRA.[CLV.]
+
+
+A princely upright hundred-herd brugaid[CLVI.] was born one time in the
+lovely province of Connaught, namely, Conall Derg O'Corra the
+fair-haired. And thus was this brugaid (circumstanced):--he was a
+fortunate, rich, prosperous man; and his house was never found without
+three shouts in it--the shout of the brewers brewing ale, and the shout
+of the servants over the caldrons distributing (meat) to the hosts, and
+the shout of the youths over the chessboards[CLVII.] winning games from
+one another.
+
+The same house was never without three measures:--a measure of malt for
+making yeast, a measure of wheat for providing bread for the guests, and
+a measure of salt for savouring each kind of food.
+
+His wife was Cairderga[CLVIII.] the daughter of the Erenach[CLIX.] of
+Clogher.[CLX.] They felt no want of any kind except being without
+children; and it was not that they were without children (being born to
+them), but that the infants always died the moment after birth.
+
+Then this brugaid said (one day) to his wife as she reclined near him on
+the couch:--"It is a sad thing for us," said he, "that we have no
+children who would take our place and fill it worthily when we are
+gone."
+
+"What desire is in your mind in regard to that?" says the wife.
+
+"It is my desire," says the brugaid, "to make a bond with the demon to
+try if he would give us a son or a daughter who would take our place
+after us (since God has not done so)."
+
+"Let us do that," said the woman.
+
+They accordingly fasted (and prayed) to the demon; (and the demon
+hearkened unto them. And in due time) the pains and struggles, of
+childbirth came upon the lady; and she bore three sons at that great
+birth, namely, a son at the beginning of the night, and a son at the
+middle of the night, and a son at the end of the night.
+
+And they were baptised according to the baptism of the pagans (by which
+they were dedicated not to God but to the demon); and their names were
+Lochan, Enna, and Silvester. And after that, they were reared and
+carefully trained up till they were swift and active on sea and land; so
+that they were an overmatch for all the young people of their own age in
+every game and in every accomplishment. And they were in the mouths and
+on the tongues of all who saw or heard of them in their day.
+
+One day when they were resting at the railings of the house of their
+father and mother, wearied after their hurling and their martial games,
+the housefolk said that they saw no fault or defect in these handsome
+much-renowned youths, except only their being baptised in the service of
+the devil. (And the youths hearing this said):--"If it be so," said
+they, "that the devil is our lord and master, it is very wrong of us not
+to bring ruin and wrath and woe on his enemies, that is to say, (we
+ought) to slaughter the clergy, and burn and spoil their churches."
+
+Then did these three youths arise, (and collecting a band), and taking
+unto them their arms, they came to Tuam-da-Gualann,[CLXI.] and spoiled
+and burned the town. And (after that) they plundered and made dreadful
+havoc on the churches and clergy throughout the province of Connaught,
+until their wicked and bloodthirsty ravages were noised over the four
+quarters of Erin. Thus did they run their evil course without ceasing
+for a whole year, during which time they destroyed more than half the
+churches of Connaught.
+
+At the end of the year Lochan said to his brothers: "We have made one
+great mistake through forgetfulness," says he, "and our lord the devil
+will not be thankful to us on account of it." "What is that?" said the
+other two youths. "Our grandfather," says he, "that is our mother's
+father--not to have killed him and burned his church."
+
+So they set out straightway, journeying without sparing or respite (to
+Clogher), and this was how they found the erenach, namely, on the green
+of the church with a great company of his folk around him, (waiting for
+the O'Corras), in order to attend on them and to deal out to them the
+choice of every food and the best of every ale. And the intention that
+the elder had towards them, that indeed was not the intention they had
+towards him, but to murder him and to burn and spoil his church.
+
+Then the O'Corras came to the spot where the elder was standing, and
+they made up their minds not to kill him or burn the houses till night,
+when the cows and the (other) cattle of the homestead would be housed,
+all in their own proper places.
+
+The elder welcomed them and led them to the homestead; and he now became
+aware of their intention. Nevertheless he put them in a goodly pleasant
+_Greenan_,[CLXII.] and they were served with food and ale till they
+became exhilarated and cheerful: after which couches were made ready for
+them on lofty bedsteads.
+
+And now deep slumber and heavy sleep fell on them, and a wonderful
+vision was revealed in a dream to Lochan, the eldest of the sons of
+O'Corra, in which he was carried to see heaven and hell. And after this
+he awoke. The other two awoke at the same time, and they said:--"Let us
+now arise, for it is time to plunder and destroy the homestead."
+
+"Seems to me," said Lochan, "that this is not the right thing for us to
+do: for evil is the lord we have served until now, and good is the Lord
+we have plundered and outraged.
+
+"And last night I had," said he, "a fearful dream, in which I saw a
+vision of heaven and hell. And first I was taken to see hell, where were
+countless souls of men and vast crowds of demons suffering divers
+tortures, and plagues unexampled. And I saw the four rivers of hell,
+that is to say, a river of toads, a river of serpents, a river of fire,
+and a river of snow. I saw also a monstrous serpent with many heads and
+legs, at sight whereof, even though it were only a single glance, all
+the men in the world would drop dead with loathing and horror.
+
+"After this methought I was taken to see heaven; where I beheld the Lord
+Himself seated on His kingly throne, and angels in the shapes of white
+birds singing for Him. And among them was one great snow-white bird of
+dazzling brightness that excelled all the others in size and beauty and
+voice, chanting strains of surpassing sweetness. Women in travail and
+men sore wounded and sick people racked with pain would fall asleep if
+they heard the delightful harmony of his voice. And it was made known to
+me that this great bird who chanted such heavenly music to his mild Lord
+was Michael the Archangel.
+
+"And now my brothers," said Lochan, "it is my counsel to you that you
+follow God henceforward."
+
+"But," said the others, "will the Lord accept repentance from us for the
+dreadful evils we have already done?"
+
+They go to the father of their mother, namely, the erenach, and they ask
+this thing of him. "He will accept your repentance without doubt," says
+the erenach.
+
+"Well then," said Lochan, "let Mass be celebrated for us, and put us
+under instruction, and let us offer our confession to God. After that we
+will make staffs of the handles of our spears; and we will go to Finnen
+of Clonard,[CLXIII.] the tutor of the saints and of the just men of all
+Erin. He is a very holy man, and he will advise us in regard to what we
+ought to do."
+
+To this counsel they agreed; and on the morrow they set out for the
+place where Finnen was; whom they found on the green of Clonard with a
+number of his clerics.
+
+"Who are these coming towards us?" said the clerics. And one said, "They
+are the O'Corras the robbers." Hearing this they fled, like lightning,
+in a body from their master, for they felt quite sure that the O'Corras
+were coming to slay them; so that Finnen was left quite alone before the
+three brothers.
+
+"It is from us the clerics are fleeing:" says Lochan.
+
+"Of a certainty it is," said his brothers. "Let us," said Lochan, "cast
+from us our staffs, the only little remnant of our arms left with us;
+and let us throw ourselves on our knees before the cleric."
+
+And this they did. "What is your desire?" says the cleric (Finnen). "Our
+desire," said they, "is faith and piety, and to serve God, and to
+abandon the lord whom we have hitherto served, namely, the devil."
+
+"That is a good resolution," says the cleric; "and let us go now to the
+homestead yonder, the place where live our brotherhood."
+
+They go accordingly with him to the brotherhood; and after the matter
+had been considered, it was arranged to set apart a young cleric to
+teach them; and it was decreed that they should not speak to any one
+except their own master till the end of a year.
+
+So they continued for a whole year till they had read the Canons
+through, and by the time they had come to be able to read them, the
+whole brotherhood felt grateful (to God) for their piety and their
+gentleness.
+
+At the end of the year they came to Finnen; and they knelt before him,
+and said to him:--"It is time now that we should be judged and sentence
+passed on us for the great crimes we have committed.
+
+"What," said Finnen, "do ye not think it enough--the penance you have
+done already for a whole year among the brotherhood?" "It is not
+enough," said they. "What then are the greatest crimes ye have
+committed?" says Finnen. "We have burned more than half the churches of
+Connaught; and neither priest nor bishop got quarter or protection from
+us."
+
+"You cannot" replied Finnen, "give back life to the people you have
+killed; but do ye that which will be in your power, namely, to build up
+the churches ye have burned, and to repair every other damage ye have
+committed in them. And I will give to each man of you," says he, "the
+swiftness and strength of a hundred; and I will take from you all
+weariness of feet, of hands, and of body; and I will give you light and
+understanding which will have neither decay nor end."
+
+So the O'Corras departed, and went first to Tuam-da-Gualann; and after
+that, they fared through the province, obedient to rule and working hard
+each day, until it came to pass that they had restored everything they
+had previously destroyed.
+
+After that they came at the end of the year to speak with Finnen. "Have
+you been able," asks Finnen, "to repair everything ye destroyed
+belonging to the Church?" "We have," said they, "except one place alone,
+namely Kenn-Mara."[CLXIV.] "Alas for that," says Finnen; "that is the
+very first place you should have repaired; for it is the homestead of
+the oldest of all the saints of Ireland, namely, the aged Camann of
+Kenn-Mara. And now go and carefully restore everything ye have destroyed
+in that homestead. And the sentence that holy man passes on you, fulfil
+it patiently."
+
+So they went gladly to Kenn-Mara; and they repaired everything they had
+ruined there.
+
+One day when they had come forth from the homestead, they sat on the
+margin of the little bay, watching the sun as it went westward. And as
+they gazed and reflected on the course of the sun, they began to marvel
+greatly, pondering whither it went after it had gone down beneath the
+verge of the sea. "What more wonderful thing is there in the whole
+world," said they, "than that the sea does not freeze into ice, while
+ice is formed in every other water!"
+
+Thereupon they formed the resolution on the spot to bring unto them a
+certain artificer who was a fast friend of theirs, and to (get him) to
+make a three-hide curragh[CLXV.] for them. Accordingly the curragh was
+made, and a strong-sided one it was. And the reward the artificer asked
+for building it was to be let go with them.
+
+When the time had come, and they were about to embark, they saw a large
+crowd passing close by; and this crowd was a company of
+_crossans_.[CLXVI.] When the _crossans_ saw the curragh putting forth on
+the sea, they inquired:--"Who are yonder people that are launching this
+curragh on the sea?" said they.
+
+The _furshore_ (juggler) of the crossans said:--"I know them well; they
+are the sons of Conall derg O'Corra the fair-haired of Connaught, the
+destroyers and robbers, going on their pilgrimage on the sea and on the
+great ocean, to make search for their Lord." "And indeed," added the
+_furshore_, "my word for it, they do not stand more in need of seeking
+for heaven than we do."
+
+"It is a long day I fancy till you go on your pilgrimage," said the
+leader of the band. "Say not so," answered the _furshore_: "for I will
+certainly go with these people on my pilgrimage now without delay."
+
+"Upon our word," said the _crossans_, "you will not take away our
+clothes with you; for not a single article of the garments you wear
+belongs to you." "It is not so small a matter that would keep me with
+you," says he.
+
+So they stripped off all his clothes, and sent him away mother naked to
+the curragh.
+
+"Who and what in the world are you, good man?" asked the crew. "A poor
+wretch who wishes to go with you on pilgrimage," said he. "Indeed," said
+they, "you shall not by any means come with us, seeing that you are
+stark naked." "Say not so, young men," said he, "for the sake of God do
+not refuse me; for I will amuse you and keep your hearts cheerful (with
+my music and singing); and your piety will not be a whit the worse for
+it."
+
+And (inasmuch as he had asked) for the sake of God they consented to let
+him go.
+
+Now this is how it was with the crew:--each man of them had built a
+church and raised an altar to the Lord in his own district. Their number
+was nine; among whom was a bishop, and a priest, and a deacon; and they
+had one _gilla_ (attendant) who was the ninth man.
+
+"Let us go aboard our curragh now," says Lochan, "as we have finished
+our task of restoring the churches, and as we have, besides, each of us
+built a church to the Lord in our own district."
+
+It was then they put up their prayers fervently to God in the hope that
+they might have fine weather; and that the Lord would quell the fury of
+the billows, and the might of the ocean, and the rage of the terrible
+sea monsters. So they embarked in their curragh, bringing their oars;
+and they began to question among themselves what direction they should
+take. "The direction in which this wind will bring us," says the bishop.
+And having commended themselves to God, one and all, they betook them to
+their oars. A great wind now arose, which drove them out on the waste
+of waters straight to the west; and they were forty days and forty
+nights on the ocean. And God revealed to them great and unheard of
+wonders.
+
+They had not been long rowing when the _crossan_ died; and sad and
+sorrowful were they for his loss, and wept much. While they were still
+mourning, they saw a little bird alight on the deck of the curragh. And
+the little bird spoke and said to them:--"Good people, tell me now in
+God's name what is the cause of your sorrow."
+
+"A _crossan_ that we had playing music for us; and he died a little
+while ago in this curragh; and that is the cause of our sorrow."
+
+And the bird said:--"Lo, I am your little _crossan_: and now be not
+sorrowful any longer, for I am going straightway to heaven." So saying
+he bade them farewell and flew away.
+
+
+I.
+
+They row forward for a long time till there was shown to them a
+wonderful island, and in it a great grove of marvellous beauty, laden
+with apples, golden coloured and sweet scented. A sparkling rivulet of
+wine flowed through the midst of the grove; and when the wind blew
+through the trees, sweeter than any music was the rustling it made. The
+O'Corras ate some of the apples and drank from the rivulet of wine, and
+were immediately satisfied. And from that time forth they were never
+troubled by either wounds or sickness.
+
+
+II.
+
+Then they took to their oars; and after a time they came in view of
+another island, and four companies of people in it, such as had never
+been seen before. Now these people had divided the island into four
+parts: old greyheaded people were in the first division; princes in the
+second; warriors in the third; and servants in the fourth. They were all
+beautiful and glorious to behold; and they diverted themselves
+continually with games and pastimes. One of the crew went to them to ask
+news: (he was a comely, well-favoured youth, but) he seemed ugly and
+dark-visaged in presence of these glorious people. When he had got among
+them, he became in a moment beautiful like the others; and he joined in
+their games, and laughed, and made merry. Moreover he remembered nothing
+more of his companions; and he sojourned in the island after that for
+evermore. And the O'Corras were at length forced to depart, though much
+grieved for the loss of their companion.
+
+
+III.
+
+Then they set out and rowed for some time till they sighted another
+marvellous island. It stood up in the air high over the great sea; and
+it was propped up by a pillar like a single foot standing under it in
+the middle. And the crew heard great shouting and the loud conversation
+of people on the top of the island overhead; but though the O'Corras
+sailed round and round, they could not get a sight of them.
+
+
+IV.
+
+They row forward after that till they come to an island in which lived
+one lone cleric. Very lovely was that island, and glorious its history.
+Beautiful purple flowers covered all the plains, dropping honey in
+abundance; and on the trees were perched flocks of bright-coloured birds
+singing slow sweet fairy-music. The O'Corras went to ask the cleric
+about himself and about the island. And he spoke as follows:--
+
+"I am a disciple of St. Andrew the Apostle, and Dega is my name. On a
+certain night I neglected to read my Matins; and it is for this that I
+was sent on a pilgrimage on the ocean; and here I am awaiting the
+Judgment day. And yonder birds that are singing those incomparable
+strains on the trees, these are the souls of holy men."
+
+
+V.
+
+They took leave of the old man and plied their oars, till they reached
+another island, with dead people on one side of it, and living people on
+the other side: and many of the living people had feet of iron. All
+round was a burning sea, which broke over the island continually in
+mighty waves. And the living people uttered fearful cries when the fiery
+waves flowed over them, for their torments thereby were great and
+terrible.
+
+
+VI.
+
+After leaving this they rowed on till they saw an island formed of great
+flat stones for ever burning red hot. And thereon they saw whole hosts
+of people burning in great torment; and many had red fiery spits thrust
+through their bodies. And they uttered great cries of pain without
+ceasing. The crew called out from a distance to ask who they were:
+whereupon one answered:--
+
+"This is one of the flagstones of hell. We are souls who in life did not
+fulfil the penance imposed on us; and warn all men to avoid this place;
+for whosoever cometh hither shall never go hence till the Day of
+Judgment."
+
+
+VII.
+
+The next island they saw was very beautiful and glorious to look upon.
+It had a wall of copper all round it, with a network of copper hanging
+out from each corner; and in the centre stood a palace. The crew left
+their curragh on the strand and went towards the palace. And when they
+had come nigh unto the wall, the wind, as it rustled and murmured
+through the copper network, made music so soft and sweet that they fell
+into a gentle slumber, and slept for three days and three nights. When
+they awoke they saw a beautiful maiden coming towards them from the
+palace. She had sandals of _findrina_ (a sort of white metal) on her
+feet, and an inner garment of fine silk next her snow-white skin. She
+wore a beautiful gold-coloured vest, and over all a bright-tinted
+mantle, plaited fivefold on its upper border, and fastened at the neck
+with a brooch of burnished gold. In one hand she held a pitcher of
+copper, and in the other a silver goblet.
+
+When she had come near she greeted them and bade them welcome. And she
+gave them food from the copper pitcher which seemed to them like cheese;
+and she brought them water in the silver goblet from a well on the
+strand. And there was no delicious flavour that was ever tasted by man
+that they did not find in this food and drink. Then the maiden said to
+them:--"Although we are all--you and I--of one race, yet shall ye go
+hence without delay, for your resurrection is not to be here."
+
+So they bade her farewell and took to their oars once more.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+After rowing for some time they saw flocks of large birds of divers
+colours flying over the sea; and their number was great beyond counting.
+One of them alighted on the deck of the curragh.
+
+"It would be a delightful thing," said one of the clerics, "if this bird
+were a messenger from the Lord, sent to give us news."
+
+"That would be quite possible with God," said the eldest; and as he
+spoke he raised his eyes and looked at the bird. Whereupon the bird
+spoke and said:--
+
+"It is indeed to converse with you that I have come; for I am of the
+land of Erin."
+
+Now this bird was crimson red all over, except three beautiful streaks
+on her breast, which shone as bright as the sun. And after a time she
+said to the same cleric:--
+
+"I am the soul of a woman; and I am your friend. And come ye now," says
+she, "to hear yonder birds; for these are the souls that are permitted
+to come out of hell every Sunday."
+
+"It is better that we leave this place at once," said the same old
+cleric. And his companions said to him:--
+
+"We will go with thee whithersoever thou goest." So they departed from
+that place; (and the crimson red bird went with them).
+
+
+IX.
+
+And as they went, they saw three wonderful streams, namely, a stream of
+otters, a stream of eels, and a stream of black swans. Great flocks of
+birds arose from these three streams and flew past the voyagers; and the
+black swans followed close after, tearing and tormenting the birds. And
+the crimson red bird said:--
+
+"Marvel not, neither be ye sad of heart; for these bird-shapes that ye
+see are the souls of people suffering the punishment of their crimes.
+And the black swans that follow them, these are devils who are for ever
+tormenting them; and the birds scream fearfully, and are for ever trying
+to fly from the demons and to free themselves from their torment.
+
+"And now as to me," continued the bird, "I am about to depart from you.
+It is not permitted me to make known to you what is to befall you; but
+in a little time another will tell you all that you need to know."
+
+And the cleric said:--"Tell us, I beseech thee, what are those three
+beautiful streaks on thy breast."
+
+"I will tell you that," answered the bird. "When I was in the world I
+was married; but I did not yield obedience to my husband, neither did I
+fulfil my lawful homely duties as a wife. And when a grievous sickness
+came upon him I left him to die. But thrice I went in pity to him:--once
+to see him and ask after his illness; once to bring him such food as
+befitted his state; and the third time when he was dead, to watch by the
+body and see it buried. These three good deeds are the three beautiful
+streaks that you see on my breast; and I should have been bright all
+over like these streaks if I had not violated my lawful marriage
+duties."
+
+And having so spoken, the bird bade them farewell and flew away.
+
+
+X.
+
+They next discovered a very beautiful island. The grass was bright
+green, and it was all over intermingled with pretty purple-coloured
+flowers. Flocks of lovely little birds of many bright colours, and
+myriads of bees, flew among the trees and flowers, humming and singing
+harmonious music. The voyagers saw a venerable grey-headed old man with
+a harp in his hand. He played this harp on the island continually; and
+the music thereof was sweeter than any music they had ever heard. They
+saluted the old man, who saluted them in return, with a blessing. But
+immediately he bade them to depart.
+
+
+XI.
+
+So they rowed away till they came to another island, on which they saw a
+man digging in a field; and his spade was all fiery, and the handle
+thereof, which he held in his hand, was red hot. From the sea at one
+side arose at times a mighty wave all flaming red with fire, which
+flowed quite over the island and over the man. And ever when he saw the
+wave coming he cried out with fear; and when the burning torrent covered
+him, he strove to raise his head above the flames, and roared with his
+great torment. Now when one of the waves had retired they spoke to him
+and asked:--
+
+"Who art thou, O wretched man?"
+
+And he answered:--"Lo, this is my punishment for my misdeeds. For when I
+lived on earth I always worked on Sundays, digging in my garden; for
+which I am condemned to dig with this fiery spade, and to suffer the
+torments of these fiery waves. And now, for the sake of God, offer up
+your prayers for me, that my pains may be lightened."
+
+And they prayed fervently; after which they departed from the island.
+
+
+XII.
+
+Soon after leaving this they saw a horseman of vast size riding on the
+sea; and the horse he rode was made of fire flaming red. And as he rode,
+great waves of fire came after him along the sea; and when a wave began
+to roll over him, he yelled aloud with fear and pain. Then they asked
+him why he was thus tormented; and he answered:--
+
+"I am he who stole my brother's horse; and after I had gotten him I rode
+him every Sunday. For this I am now undergoing my punishment, riding on
+this horse of fire, and tormented with these great waves of fire."
+
+
+XIII.
+
+After leaving this they came in sight of another island, full of people,
+all weeping and lamenting grievously. Great numbers of jet-black birds
+with beaks of fire and red-hot fiery talons followed and fluttered round
+about them, tearing and burning them with their talons, and rending away
+pieces of flesh, the full of their fiery beaks. Then the crew said
+aloud:--
+
+"Who are ye, O miserable people?"
+
+"We are dishonest smiths and artisans; and because we cheated while we
+lived, we are punished by these hateful fiery birds. Moreover, our
+tongues are burning, being all afire in our heads; for that we reviled
+people with bitter words and foul taunts."
+
+
+XIV.
+
+Coming now to another place, they saw a giant huge in size, and of a
+sooty black colour all over. His mouth was all on fire; and from his
+throat he belched forth great flakes of fire, each flake as it came from
+his mouth larger than the skin of a three-year-old wether. He held in
+his hand an iron club larger than the shaft of a mill wheel; and on his
+back he bore an immense faggot of firewood, a good load for a team of
+horses. Now this faggot often blazed up and burned him; and he tried to
+free himself from his torment by lying down so that the sea might flow
+over him. But ever as he did so, the sea around him turned to fire, and
+rose up in mighty burning billows, covering him all over, so that he
+made the place resound with his bellowings.
+
+"Miserable wretch, who art thou?" asked the crew.
+
+And he answered:--"I will tell you truly. When I lived I used to cut
+faggots and bring them home on my back every Sunday: and lo, here is my
+punishment."
+
+
+XV.
+
+They came after that to a sea of fire full of men's heads, all black,
+and continually fighting with each other. And many great serpents rose
+up among the heads and came with fury to attack the curragh, so that at
+one time they pierced through the outer hide. And one of the crew who
+looked on cried out in great horror, and said:--
+
+"It is enough to strike one dead to behold the fearful things I see!"
+
+And the whole crew when they saw the heads and the serpents fell flat
+with fear. But the elder (the bishop) comforted them, saying:--
+
+"Be ye not afraid or troubled on account of these things; for God is
+able to protect us, even though we were in a curragh of only one hide;
+and if He wishes to save us, these monsters cannot hurt us, however
+furious they may be to slay us."
+
+And they took courage after this, and rowed out into the open sea.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+There was shown to them next another beautiful island, having in one
+place an open wood. The trees were laden with fruit, and the leaves
+dropped honey to the ground. The sides of the hills were clothed with
+purple blossomed heather, mixed with soft, green grass to its very
+centre. In the midst of the island was a pretty lake, whose waters
+tasted like sweet wine. They rested for a week on the shore of this
+lake, and cast off their weariness. And now, being about to leave the
+island, as they turned to go to the curragh, a monstrous
+reptile[CLXVII.] rose up from the lake and looked at them. And they
+trembled with fear at the sight of this terrible beast; for each man
+thought that he himself would be the first to be attacked. But after a
+little time the reptile dived again into the water, and they saw no more
+of him.
+
+
+XVII.
+
+From this they rowed away; and after a long time they came at midnight
+to an island wherein was a community of Ailbe of Emly.[CLXVIII.] On the
+beach they found two spring wells; one foul, the other bright and clear.
+The gilla wished to drink of the clear well; but the elder (the bishop)
+told him it was better to ask leave, if there was anyone living on the
+island.
+
+Then they saw a great light; and coming closer, they found the twelve
+men of the community at their prayers; and now they perceived that the
+bright light they saw came from the radiant faces of the twelve; so that
+these holy men needed no other light. One of them, an old man, comes
+towards the voyagers; and he bids them welcome and asks news of them.
+They tell him all their adventures, and ask his leave to drink from the
+well; whereupon he said to them:--"Ye may fill your pitchers from the
+clear well, if your elder (_i.e._ the bishop) gives you leave."
+
+"Who are ye?" asks the gilla.
+
+"A community of Ailbe of Emly," says he: "and we are the crew of one of
+Ailbe's curraghs. God has permitted that we live here till the Day of
+Judgment, praying for everyone who is drowned at sea. And now leave this
+land before morning," he added, "for your resurrection is not to be
+here. And if ye have not left by the dawn, so much the worse for
+yourselves; for if once ye get a view of this island in the light of
+day, bitter will be your anguish of mind for leaving it (on account of
+its surpassing loveliness). So it is better for you to go away during
+the night."
+
+And they did exactly all he told them to do.
+
+"Shall we take away some of the pebbles of the strand?" said they
+(talking among themselves).
+
+"It is better to ask leave," answered the cleric. So the gilla asked
+leave of the same old man.
+
+"Yes, if you have the permission (of your bishop)," answered he.
+"Nevertheless," he added, "those who take them will be sorry; and those
+who do not take them will be sorry also."
+
+They pick up pebbles, some bringing away one, some two, some three.
+(After which they row away in the dark night from the island.) In the
+morning they drank some of the spring water of the island from their
+pitchers; which threw them into a deep sleep from that time till next
+day. On wakening up, they examined their pebbles in the light; and some
+were found to be crystal, some silver, and some gold. Then those who
+brought some away were in sorrow that they had not brought more; and
+much greater was the sorrow of those who had brought away none. So the
+words of the old man came true.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+After leaving this they came to a lovely island on which was a church
+standing all alone: and when they drew nigh they heard the voice of a
+cleric singing the psalms with a sweet voice. They came to the door and
+struck it with the hand-wood; and straightway a beautiful
+bright-coloured bird came to speak with them. When they had told him
+who they were and what they wanted, he flew back to the cleric, who bade
+him have the door opened for the pilgrims. And when they had come in,
+they found the cleric--a very old man with white hair--who sang his
+hymns continually. And they saluted each other; and the pilgrims stayed
+there that night. And an angel came and brought them supper, and
+ministered unto them. On the morrow the old priest bade them depart,
+since that was not to be the place of their resurrection on the Judgment
+Day. But before they went he foretold all that should happen to them
+during the rest of their voyage.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+From that they came to an island in which was a disciple of Christ.
+Glorious and beautiful was that island; and on it stood a church and a
+kingly shrine. As they came near they heard some one singing the Pater
+to God in the door of the church: whereupon one of the clerics said:--
+
+"Welcome the prayer of our father and teacher, Jesus."
+
+And the priest who stood praying at the door said:--
+
+"Why say you so? Who are ye; and where have ye seen Him?"
+
+And when they had told him that they were servants of Jesus, he spoke
+again:--
+
+"I too am one of His disciples. And when I first took Him for my Lord I
+was faithful and steady; but after a time I left Him and came to sea in
+my curragh, and rowed till I came to this island. For a long time I
+lived on fruit and herbs; till at length an angel came from heaven to
+visit me. And he said to me:--
+
+"'Thou hast not done well: nevertheless thou shalt abide on this island,
+eating the same food without either decay or death till the Judgment
+Day.' And so I have lived here to this hour: and no daily meal is sent
+to me, but I eat of the herbs and fruit that grow on the island."
+
+Then they all went together into one house; and being very hungry, they
+prayed fervently for food. And presently an angel came down from heaven;
+and while they looked on he placed a supper for them on a flagstone hard
+by the strand, namely, a cake with a slice of fish for each. And while
+they ate, whatsoever taste each man separately wished for, that taste he
+found on the food. In the morning, when they were about to bid the
+cleric farewell, he foretold all that should happen to them, saying:--
+
+"Ye shall go from me now on sea till ye reach the western point of
+Spain. And as ye near the land, ye shall meet a boat with a crew of men
+fishing, who will bring you with them to land."
+
+Then turning to the bishop, he said:--"Immediately after leaving the
+curragh, as soon as thou hast reached the land, prostrate thyself three
+times to God. And the place on which thou shalt first set thy foot,
+there a great crowd shall gather round thee from every quarter. And they
+will treat thee kindly, and will give thee land on which they will
+build a church for thee; and after this thy fame shall spread over the
+whole world. And the successor of Peter (the Pope) shall bring thee
+eastwards to Rome. Yonder priest thou shalt leave as thy successor in
+the church, and the deacon thou shalt leave to be his sacristan. That
+place and that church shall be revered, and shall be preserved for ever.
+And thou shalt leave the Gilla in Britain, where he will live for the
+rest of his life."
+
+After this they bade the old man farewell and left the island. And all
+fell out just as he had foretold. And the bishop went to Rome; and he
+afterwards related these adventures to Saerbrethach bishop of West
+Munster, and to Mocolmoc, one of the holy men of Aran, as we have set
+them down here.
+
+
+Thus far the Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLV.] I translated this tale fifteen years ago (as mentioned in
+Preface, page xiii) from two Royal Irish Academy MSS., 23. N. 15 and 23.
+M. 50; and I subsequently made some modifications after I had an
+opportunity of consulting the more correct text of the Book of Fermoy.
+This last text has since been published, with literal translation, by
+Dr. Whitley Stokes, in the _Revue Celtique_ (Jan. 1893). After comparing
+my somewhat free version with Dr. Stokes's close translation, I have not
+thought it necessary to make any changes.
+
+A few of the adventures in this tale are identical with those described
+in the Voyage of Maildun: the description of these I have omitted here.
+Lochan, Enna, and Silvester, the chief characters in this extraordinary
+fiction, are historical: they were saints of the primitive Irish church,
+and lived in the sixth century.
+
+[CLVI.] _Brugaid_, a sort of local officer who maintained a large
+establishment as keeper of a house of public hospitality. See my "Short
+History of Ireland," p. 57.
+
+[CLVII.] Chess-playing was a favourite amusement among the ancient
+Irish.
+
+[CLVIII.] Cairderga: original _Caer-derg_, red berry.
+
+[CLIX.] _Erenach_, the holder or _impropriator_ of a church and its
+lands: usually a layman.
+
+[CLX.] Clogher in Tyrone where there was a monastery.
+
+[CLXI.] Tuam-da-Gualann, where was formerly a celebrated ecclesiastical
+establishment: now Tuam in Galway.
+
+[CLXII.] Greenan: original _grianan_, literally a sunny place: a
+summer-house: the most lightsome, airy, and pleasant apartment of a
+house. See this word discussed in my "Irish Names of Places," vol. i. p.
+291.
+
+[CLXIII.] For St. Finnen of Clonard in the County Meath, see my "Short
+History of Ireland," p. 175
+
+[CLXIV.] _Kenn-Mara_, now Kinvarra on Galway bay.
+
+[CLXV.] _Curragh_, see note 17 at end. Some curraghs were made with
+two--some with three--hides, one outside another, for the better
+security.
+
+[CLXVI.] _Crossans_: travelling gleemen: the clothes, musical
+instruments, &c., were the property of the company. This word is the
+origin of the Scotch and Irish family name MacCrossan, now often changed
+to Crosbie. A company of crossans had always among them a _fuirseoir_,
+i.e. a juggler or buffoon.
+
+[CLXVII.] According to very ancient legends, which are still vividly
+remembered and recounted all over the country, almost every lake in
+Ireland has a tremendous hairy reptile in its waters. Some say they are
+demons, sent by St. Patrick to reside at the bottom of the lakes to the
+Day of Judgment.
+
+[CLXVIII.] St. Ailbe, the patron of Munster, was a contemporary of St.
+Patrick. He founded his great monastery and school at Emly in the County
+Limerick.
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE SONS OF USNA.[CLXIX.]
+
+ Avenging and bright fall the swift sword of Erin
+ On him who the brave sons of Usna betrayed.
+
+ MOORE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXIX.] The translation that follows is my own, and is of course
+copyright, like all the other translations in this book. On this fine
+story is founded the epic poem of "Deirdre," by Robert Dwyer Joyce, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE FLIGHT TO ALBAN.
+
+
+Concobar mac Nessa, king of Ulaid,[CLXX.] ruled in Emain. And his chief
+story-teller, Felimid, made a feast for the king and for the knights of
+the Red Branch,[CLXXI.] who all came to partake of it in his house.
+While they were feasting right joyously, listening to the sweet music of
+the harps and the mellow voices of the bards, a messenger brought word
+that Felimid's wife had given birth to a little daughter, an infant of
+wondrous beauty. And when Caffa, the king's druid and seer, who was of
+the company, was ware of the birth of the child, he went forth to view
+the stars and the clouds, if he might thereby glean knowledge of what
+was in store for that little babe.[CLXXII.] And when he had returned to
+his place, he sat deep pondering for a time: and then standing up and
+obtaining silence, he said:--
+
+"This child shall be called Deir-dr[)e][CLXXIII.]; and fittingly is she
+so named: for much of woe will befall Ulaid and Erin in general on her
+account. There shall be jealousies, and strifes, and wars: evil deeds
+will be done: many heroes will be exiled: many will fall."
+
+When the heroes heard this, they were sorely troubled, and some said
+that the child should be killed. But the king said:--"Not so, ye Knights
+of the Red Branch; it is not meet to commit a base deed in order to
+escape evils that may never come to pass. This little maid shall be
+reared out of the reach of mischief, and when she is old enough she
+shall be my wife: thus shall I be the better able to guard against those
+evils that Caffa forecasts for us."
+
+And the Ultonians did not dare to gainsay the word of the king.
+
+Then king Concobar caused the child to be placed in a strong fortress on
+a lonely spot nigh the palace, with no opening in front, but with door
+and windows looking out at the back on a lovely garden watered by a
+clear rippling stream: and house and garden were surrounded by a wall
+that no man could surmount. And those who were put in charge of her
+were, her tutor, and her nurse, and Concobar's poetess, whose name was
+Lavarcam: and save these three, none were permitted to see her. And so
+she grew up in this solitude, year by year, till she was of marriageable
+age, when she excelled all the maidens of her time for beauty.
+
+One snowy day as she and Lavarcam looked forth from the window, they saw
+some blood on the snow, where her tutor had killed a calf for dinner;
+and a raven alighted and began to drink of it. "I should like," said
+Deirdre, "that he who is to be my husband should have these three
+colours: his hair as black as the raven: his cheeks red as the blood:
+his skin like the snow. And I saw such a youth in a dream last night;
+but I know not where he is, or whether he is living on the ridge of the
+world."
+
+"Truly," said Lavarcam, "the young hero that answers to thy words is not
+far from thee; for he is among Concobar's knights: namely, Naisi the son
+of Usna."
+
+Now Naisi and his brothers, Ainnli and Ardan, the three sons of Usna,
+were the best beloved of all the Red Branch Knights, so gracious and
+gentle were they in time of peace, so skilful and swift-footed in the
+chase, so strong and valiant in battle.
+
+And when Deirdre heard Lavarcam's words, she said:--"If it be as thou
+sayest, that this young knight is near us, I shall not be happy till I
+see him: and I beseech thee to bring him to speak to me."
+
+"Alas, child," replied Lavarcam, "thou knowest not the peril of what
+thou askest me to do: for if thy tutor come to know of it, he will
+surely tell the king; and the king's anger none can bear."
+
+Deirdre answered not: but she remained for many days sad and silent: and
+her eyes often filled with tears through memory of her dream: so that
+Lavarcam was grieved: and she pondered on the thing if it could be done,
+for she loved Deirdre very much, and had compassion on her. At last she
+contrived that these two should meet without the tutor's knowledge: and
+the end of the matter was that they loved each other: and Deirdre said
+she would never wed the king, but she would wed Naisi.
+
+Knowing well the doom that awaited them when Concobar came to hear of
+this, Naisi and his young wife and his two brothers, with thrice fifty
+fighting men, thrice fifty women, thrice fifty attendants, and thrice
+fifty hounds, fled over sea to Alban. And the king of the western part
+of Alban received them kindly, and took them into military service. Here
+they remained for a space, gaining daily in favour: but they kept
+Deirdre apart, fearing evil if the king should see her.
+
+And so matters went on, till it chanced that the king's steward, coming
+one day by Naisi's house, saw the couple as they sat on their couch: and
+going directly to his master, he said:--
+
+"O king, we have long sought in vain for a woman worthy to be thy wife,
+and now at last we have found her: for the woman, Deirdre, who is with
+Naisi, is worthy to be the wife of the king of the western world. And
+now I give thee this counsel:--Let Naisi be killed, and then take thou
+Deirdre for thy wife."
+
+The king basely agreed to do so; and forthwith he laid a plot to slay
+the sons of Usna; which matter coming betimes to the ears of the
+brothers, they fled by night with all their people. And when they had
+got to a safe distance, they took up their abode in a wild place, where
+with much ado they obtained food by hunting and fishing. And the
+brothers built them three hunting booths in the forest, a little
+distance from that part of the seashore looking towards Erin: and the
+booth in which their food was prepared, in that they did not eat; and
+the one in which they ate, in that they did not sleep. And their people
+in like manner built themselves booths and huts, which gave them but
+scant shelter from wind and weather.
+
+Now when it came to the ears of the Ultonians, that the sons of Usna and
+their people were in discomfort and danger, they were sorely grieved:
+but they kept their thoughts to themselves, for they dared not speak
+their mind to the king.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXX.] Ulaid (pronounced _Ulla_), Ulster.
+
+[CLXXI.] For Concobar and the Red Branch Knights, see note 15 farther
+on: and for much fuller information, see my "Social History of Ancient
+Ireland," vol. i, page 83; or the Smaller Soc. Hist., page 38.
+
+[CLXXII.] The druids professed to be able to foretell by observing the
+stars and clouds. See Smaller Social History, p. 98.
+
+[CLXXIII.] "Deirdre" is said to mean "alarm."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONCOBAR'S GUILEFUL MESSAGE.
+
+
+AT this same time a right joyous and very splendid feast was given by
+Concobar in Emain Macha to the nobles and the knights of his household.
+And the number of the king's household that sat them down in the great
+hall of Emain on that occasion was five and three score above six
+hundred and one thousand.[CLXXIV.] Then arose, in turn, their musicians
+to sound their melodious harpstrings, and their poets and their
+story-tellers to sing their sweet poetic strains, and to recount the
+deeds of the mighty heroes of the olden time. And the feasting and the
+enjoyment went on, and the entire assembly were gay and cheerful. At
+length Concobar arose from where he sat high up on his royal seat;
+whereupon the noise of mirth was instantly hushed. And he raised his
+kingly voice and said:--
+
+"I desire to know from you, ye Nobles and Knights of the Red Branch,
+have you ever seen in any quarter of Erin a house better than this house
+of Emain, which is my mansion: and whether you see any want in it."
+
+And they answered that they saw no better house, and that they knew of
+no want in it.
+
+And the king said: "I know of a great want: namely, that we have not
+present among us the three noble sons of Usna. And why now should they
+be in banishment on account of any woman in the world?"
+
+And the nobles replied:--"Truly it is a sad thing that the sons of Usna,
+our dear comrades, should be in exile and distress. They were a shield
+of defence to Ulaid: and now, O king, it will please us well that thou
+send for them and bring them back, lest they and their people perish by
+famine or fall by their enemies."
+
+"Let them come," replied Concobar, "and make submission to me: and their
+homes, and their lands and their places among the Knights of the Red
+Branch shall be restored to them."
+
+Now Concobar was mightily enraged at the marriage and flight of Naisi
+and Deirdre, though he hid his mind from all men; and he spoke these
+words pretending forgiveness and friendship. But there was guile in his
+heart, and he planned to allure them back to Ulaid that he might kill
+them.
+
+When the feast was ended, and the company had departed, the king called
+unto him Fergus mac Roy, and said:--"Go thou, Fergus, and bring back the
+sons of Usna and their people. I promise thee that I will receive them
+as friends should be received, and that what awaits them here is not
+enmity or injury, but welcome and friendship. Take my message of peace
+and good will, and give thyself as pledge and surety for their safety.
+But these two things I charge thee to do:--That the moment you land in
+Ulaid on your way back, you proceed straight to Barach's house which
+stands on the sea cliff high over the landing place fronting Alban: and
+that whether the time of your arrival be by day or by night, thou see
+that the sons of Usna tarry not, but let them come hither direct to
+Emain, that they may not eat food in Erin till they eat of mine."
+
+And Fergus, suspecting no evil design, promised to do as the king
+directed: for he was glad to be sent on this errand, being a fast friend
+to the sons of Usna.
+
+Fergus set out straightway, bringing with him only his two sons, Illan
+the Fair and Buinni the Red, and his shield-bearer to carry his shield.
+And as soon as he had departed, Concobar sent for Barach and said to
+him:--
+
+"Prepare a feast in thy house for Fergus: and when he visits thee
+returning with the sons of Usna, invite him to partake of it." And
+Barach thereupon departed for his home to do the bidding of the king and
+prepare the feast.
+
+Now those heroes of old, on the day they received knighthood, were wont
+to make certain pledges which were to bind them for life, some binding
+themselves to one thing, some to another. And as they made the promises
+on the faith of their knighthood, with great vows, in presence of kings
+and nobles, they dared not violate them; no, not even if it was to save
+the lives of themselves and all their friends: for whosoever broke
+through his knighthood pledge was foully dishonoured for evermore. And
+one of Fergus's obligations was never to refuse an invitation to a
+banquet: a thing which was well known to King Concobar and to Barach.
+
+As to Fergus mac Roy and his sons: they went on board their galley and
+put to sea, and made no delay till they reached the harbour nigh the
+campment of the sons of Usna. And coming ashore, Fergus gave the loud
+shout of a mighty man of chase. The sons of Usna were at that same hour
+in their booth; and Naisi and Deirdre were sitting with a polished
+chessboard between them playing a game.
+
+And when they heard the shout, Naisi said:--"That is the call of a man
+from Erin."
+
+"Not so," replied Deirdre, "it is the call of a man of Alban."
+
+And after a little time when a second shout came, Naisi said:--"That of
+a certainty is the call of a man of Erin!"
+
+But Deirdre again replied:--"No, indeed: it concerns us not: let us play
+our game."
+
+But when a third shout came sounding louder than those before, Naisi
+arose and said:--"Now I know the voice: that is the shout of Fergus!"
+And straightway he sent Ardan to the shore to meet him.
+
+Now Deirdre knew the voice of Fergus from the first: but she kept her
+thoughts to herself: for her heart misgave her that the visit boded
+evil. And when she told Naisi that she knew the first shout, he
+said:--"Why, my queen, didst thou conceal it then?"
+
+And she replied:--"Lo, I saw a vision in my sleep last night: three
+birds came to us from Emain Macha, with three drops of honey in their
+beaks, and they left us the honey and took away three drops of our
+blood."
+
+"What dost thou read from that vision, O princess?" said Naisi.
+
+"It denotes the message from Concobar to us," said Deirdre; "for sweet
+as honey is the message of peace from a false man, while he has thoughts
+of blood hidden deep in his heart."
+
+When Ardan arrived at the shore, the sight of Fergus and his two sons
+was to him like rain on the parched grass; for it was long since he had
+seen any of his dear comrades from Erin. And he cried out as he came
+near, "An affectionate welcome to you, my dear companions": and he fell
+on Fergus's neck and kissed his cheeks, and did the like to his sons.
+Then he brought them to the hunting-booth; and Naisi, Ainnli, and
+Deirdre gave them a like kind welcome; after which they asked the news
+from Erin.
+
+"The best news I have," said Fergus, "is that Concobar has sent me to
+you with kindly greetings, to bring you back to Emain and restore you to
+your lands and homes, and to your places in the Red Branch; and I am
+myself a pledge for your safety."
+
+"It is not meet for them to go," said Deirdre: "for here they are under
+no man's rule; and their sway in Alban is even as great as the sway of
+Concobar in Erin."
+
+But Fergus said: "One's mother country is better than all else, and
+gloomy is life when a man sees not his home each morning."
+
+"Far dearer to me is Erin than Alban," said Naisi, "even though my sway
+should be greater here."
+
+It was not with Deirdre's consent he spoke these words: and she still
+earnestly opposed their return to Erin.
+
+But Fergus tried to re-assure her:--"If all the men of Erin were against
+you," said he, "it would avail nought once I have passed my word for
+your safety."
+
+"We trust in thee," said Naisi, "and we will go with thee to Erin."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXIV.] That is 1665. This inverted method of enumeration was often
+used in Ireland. But they also used direct enumeration like ours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE RETURN TO EMAIN.
+
+
+Going next morning on board their galleys, Fergus and his companions put
+out on the wide sea: and oar and wind bore them on swiftly till they
+landed on the shore of Erin near the house of Barach.
+
+And Deirdre, seating herself on a cliff, looked sadly over the waters at
+the blue headlands of Alban: and she uttered this farewell:--
+
+
+I.
+
+"Dear to me is yon eastern land: Alban with its wonders. Beloved is
+Alban with its bright harbours and its pleasant hills of the green
+slopes. From that land I would never depart except to be with Naisi.
+
+
+II.
+
+"Kil-Cuan, O Kil-Cuan,[CLXXV.] whither Ainnli was wont to resort: short
+seemed the time to me while I sojourned there with Naisi on the margins
+of its streams and waterfalls.
+
+
+III.
+
+"Glen-Lee, O Glen-Lee, where I slept happy under soft coverlets: fish
+and fowl, and the flesh of red deer and badgers; these were our fare in
+Glen-Lee.
+
+
+IV.
+
+"Glen-Masan, O Glen-Masan: tall its cresses of white stalks: often were
+we rocked to sleep in our curragh in the grassy harbour of Glen-Masan.
+
+
+V.
+
+"Glen-Orchy, O Glen-Orchy: over thy straight glen rises the smooth ridge
+that oft echoed to the voices of our hounds. No man of the clan was more
+light-hearted than my Naisi when following the chase in Glen-Orchy.
+
+
+VI.
+
+"Glen-Ettive, O Glen-Ettive: there it was that my first house was raised
+for me: lovely its woods in the smile of the early morn: the sun loves
+to shine on Glen-Ettive.
+
+
+VII.
+
+"Glen-da-Roy, O Glen-da-Roy: the memory of its people is dear to me:
+sweet is the cuckoo's note from the bending bough on the peak over
+Glen-da-Roy.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+"Dear to me is Dreenagh over the resounding shore: dear to me its
+crystal waters over the speckled sand. From those sweet places I would
+never depart, but only to be with my beloved Naisi."
+
+
+After this they entered the house of Barach; and when Barach had
+welcomed them, he said to Fergus: "Here I have a three-days banquet
+ready for thee, and I invite thee to come and partake of it."
+
+When Fergus heard this, his heart sank and his face waxed all over a
+crimson red: and he said fiercely to Barach:--"Thou hast done an evil
+thing to ask me to this banquet: for well thou knowest I cannot refuse
+thee. Thou knowest, too, that I am under solemn pledge to send the Sons
+of Usna this very hour to Emain: and if I remain feasting in thy house,
+how shall I see that my promise of safety is respected?"
+
+But none the less did Barach persist; for he was one of the partners in
+Concobar's treacherous design.
+
+Then Fergus turned to Naisi and said:--"I dare not violate my knighthood
+promise: what am I to do in this strait?" But Deirdre answered for her
+husband:--"The choice is before thee, Fergus; and it is more meet for
+thee to abandon thy feast than to abandon the sons of Usna, who have
+come over on thy pledge."
+
+Then Fergus was in sore perplexity; and pondering a little he said:--"I
+will not forsake the sons of Usna: for I will send with them to Emain
+Macha my two sons, Illan the Fair and Buinni the Red, who will be their
+pledge instead of me."
+
+But Naisi said: "We need not thy sons for guard or pledge: we have ever
+been accustomed to defend ourselves!" And he moved from the place in
+great wrath: and his two brothers, and Deirdre, and the two sons of
+Fergus followed him, with the rest of the clan; while Fergus remained
+behind silent and gloomy: for his heart misgave him that mischief was
+brewing for the sons of Usna.
+
+Then Deirdre tried to persuade the sons of Usna to go to Rathlin,
+between Erin and Alban, and tarry there till Barach's feast was ended:
+but they did not consent to do so, for they deemed it would be a mark of
+cowardice: and they sped on by the shortest ways towards Emain Macha.
+
+When now they had come to Fincarn of the Watch-tower on Slieve Fuad,
+Deirdre and her attendants stayed behind the others a little: and she
+fell asleep. And when Naisi missed her, he turned back and found her
+just awakening; and he said to her:--"Why didst thou tarry, my
+princess?"
+
+And she answered:--"I fell asleep and had a dream. And this is what I
+saw in my dream:--Illan the Fair took your part: Buinni the Red did not:
+and I saw Illan without his head: but Buinni had neither wound nor
+hurt."
+
+"Alas, O beauteous princess," said Naisi, "thou utterest nought but evil
+forebodings: but the king is true and will not break his plighted
+word."
+
+So they fared on till they had come to the Ridge of the
+Willows,[CLXXVI.] an hour's journey from the palace: and Deirdre,
+looking upwards in great fear, said to Naisi:--"O Naisi, see yonder
+cloud in the sky over Emain, a fearful chilling cloud of a blood-red
+tinge: a baleful red cloud that bodes disaster! Come ye now to Dundalgan
+and abide there with the mighty hero Cuculainn till Fergus returns from
+Barach's feast; for I fear Concobar's treachery."
+
+But Naisi answered:--"We cannot follow thy advice, beloved Deirdre, for
+it would be a mark of fear: and we have no fear."
+
+And as they came nigh the palace Deirdre said to them:--"I will now give
+you a sign if Concobar meditates good or evil. If you are brought into
+his own mansion where he sits surrounded by his nobles, to eat and drink
+with him, this is a token that he means no ill; for no man will injure a
+guest that has partaken of food at his table: but if you are sent to the
+house of the Red Branch, be sure he is bent on treachery."
+
+When at last they arrived at the palace, they knocked loudly with the
+handwood: and the door-keeper swang the great door wide open. And when
+he had spoken with them, he went and told Concobar that the sons of Usna
+and Fergus's two sons had come, with their people.
+
+And Concobar called to him his stewards and attendants and asked
+them:--"How is it in the house of the Red Branch as to food and drink?"
+And they replied that if the seven battalions of Ulaid were to come to
+it, they would find enough of all good things. "If that is so," said
+Concobar, "take the sons of Usna and their people to the Red Branch."
+
+Even then Deirdre besought them not to enter the Red Branch: for she
+deemed now that of a certainty there was mischief afoot. But Illan the
+Fair said:--"Never did we show cowardice or unmanliness, and we shall
+not do so now." Then she was silent and went with them into the house.
+
+And the company, when they had come in, sat them down so that they
+filled the great hall: and alluring viands and delicious drinks were set
+before them: and they ate and drank till they became satisfied and
+cheerful: all except Deirdre and the Sons of Usna, who did not partake
+much of food or drink. And Naisi asked for the king's chessboard and
+chessmen; which were brought: and he and Deirdre began to play.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXV.] This and the other places named in Deirdre's Farewell are all
+in the west of Scotland.
+
+[CLXXVI.] Irish name, _Drum-Sailech_; the ridge on which Armagh was
+afterwards built.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TROUBLE LOOMING.
+
+
+Let us now speak of Concobar. As he sat among his nobles, the thought of
+Deirdre came into his mind, and he said:--"Who among you will go to the
+Red Branch and bring me tidings of Deirdre, whether her youthful shape
+and looks still live upon her: for if so there is not on the ridge of
+the world a woman more beautiful." And Lavarcam said she would go.
+
+Now the sons of Usna were very dear to Lavarcam: and Naisi was dearer
+than the others. And rising up she went to the Red Branch, where she
+found Naisi and Deirdre with the chessboard between them, playing. And
+she saluted them affectionately: and she embraced Deirdre, and wept over
+her, and kissed her many times with the eagerness of her love: and she
+kissed the cheeks of Naisi and of his brothers.
+
+And when her loving greeting was ended, she said:--"Beloved children,
+evil is the deed that is to be done this night in Emain: for the three
+torches of valour of the Gaels will be treacherously assailed, and
+Concobar is certainly resolved to put them to death. And now set your
+people on guard, and bolt and bar all doors, and close all windows; and
+be steadfast and valorous, and defend your dear charge manfully, if you
+may hold the assailants at bay till Fergus comes." And she departed
+weeping piteously.
+
+And when Lavarcam had returned to Concobar he asked what tidings she
+brought. "Good tidings have I," said she: "for the three sons of Usna
+have come, the three valiant champions of Ulaid: and now that they are
+with thee, O king, thou wilt hold sway in Erin without dispute. And bad
+tidings I bring also: Deirdre indeed is not as she was, for her youthful
+form and the splendour of her countenance have fled from her."
+
+And when Concobar heard this, his jealousy abated, and he joined in the
+feasting.
+
+But again the thought of Deirdre came to him, and he asked:--"Who now
+will go for me to the Red Branch, and bring me further tidings of
+Deirdre and of the sons of Usna?" for he distrusted Lavarcam. But the
+Knights of the Red Branch had misgivings of some evil design, and all
+remained silent.
+
+Then he called to him Trendorn, one of the lesser chiefs: and he
+said:--"Knowest thou, Trendorn, who slew thy father and thy three
+brothers in battle?" And Trendorn answered:--"Verily, it was Naisi, the
+son of Usna, that slew them." Then the king said:--"Go now to the Red
+Branch and bring me back tidings of Deirdre and of the sons of Usna."
+
+Trendorn went right willingly. But when he found the doors and windows
+of the Red Branch shut up, he was seized with fear, and he said:--"It is
+not safe to approach the sons of Usna, for they are surely in wrathful
+mood: nevertheless I must needs bring back tidings to the king."
+
+Whereupon, not daring to knock at the door, he climbed nimbly to a small
+window high up that had been unwittingly left open, through which he
+viewed the spacious banquet hall, and saw Naisi and Deirdre playing
+chess. Deirdre chanced to look up at that moment, and seeing the face of
+the spy with eyes intently gazing on her, she started with affright and
+grasped Naisi's arm, as he was making a move with the chessman. Naisi,
+following her gaze, and seeing the evil-looking face, flung the
+chessman with unerring aim, and broke the eye in Trendorn's head.
+
+Trendorn dropped down in pain and rage; and going straight to Concobar,
+he said:--"I have tidings for thee, O king: the three sons of Usna are
+sitting in the banquet hall, stately and proud like kings: and Deirdre
+is seated beside Naisi; and verily for beauty and queenly grace her peer
+cannot be found."
+
+When Concobar heard this, a flame of jealousy and fury blazed up in his
+heart, and he resolved that by no means should the sons of Usna escape
+the doom he planned for them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE SONS OF USNA.
+
+
+Coming forth on the lawn of Emain, King Concobar now ordered a large
+body of hireling troops to beset the Red Branch: and he bade them force
+the doors and bring forth the sons of Usna. And they uttered three
+dreadful shouts of defiance, and assailed the house on every side; but
+the strong oak stood bravely, and they were not able to break through
+doors or walls. So they heaped up great piles of wood and brambles, and
+kindled them till the red flames blazed round the house.
+
+Buinni the Red now stood up and said to the sons of Usna:--"To me be
+entrusted the task to repel this first assault: for I am your pledge in
+place of my father." And marshalling his men, and causing the great door
+to be thrown wide open, he sallied forth and scattered the assailants,
+and put out the fires: slaying thrice fifty hirelings in that onslaught.
+
+But Buinni returned not to the Red Branch: for the king sent to him with
+a secret offer of great favours and bribes: namely, his own royal
+friendship, and a fruitful tract of land; which Buinni took and basely
+abandoned the sons of Usna. But none the better luck came to him of it:
+for at that same hour a blight fell on the land, so that it became a
+moor, waste and profitless, which is at this day called Slieve Fuad.
+
+When Illan the Fair became aware of his brother's treason, he was
+grieved to the heart, and he said:--"I am the second pledge in place of
+my father for the sons of Usna, and of a certainty I will not betray
+them: while this straight sword lives in my hand I will be faithful: and
+I will now repel this second attack." For at this time the king's
+hirelings were again thundering at the doors.
+
+Forth he issued with his band: and he made three quick furious circuits
+round the Red Branch, scattering the troops as he went: after which he
+returned to the mansion and found Naisi and Deirdre still
+playing.[CLXXVII.] But as the hireling hordes returned to the attack,
+he went forth a second time and fell on them, dealing death and havoc
+whithersoever he went.
+
+Then, while the fight was still raging, Concobar called to him his son
+Ficra, and said to him:--"Thou and Illan the Fair were born on the same
+night: and as he has his father's arms, so thou take mine, namely, my
+shield which is called the Ocean, and my two spears which are called
+Dart and Slaughter, and my great sword, the Blue-green blade. And bear
+thyself manfully against him, and vanquish him, else none of my troops
+will survive."
+
+Ficra did so and went against Illan the Fair; and they made a stout,
+warlike, red-wounding attack on each other, while the others looked on
+anxious: but none dared to interfere. And it came to pass that Illan
+prevailed, so that Ficra was fain to shelter himself behind his father's
+shield the Ocean, and he was like to be slain. Whereupon, the shield
+moaned, and the Three Waves of Erin uttered their hollow melancholy
+roar.[CLXXVIII.]
+
+The hero Conall Carnagh, sitting in his dun afar off, heard the moan of
+the shield and the roar of the Wave of Tuath: and springing up from
+where he sat, he said: "Verily, the king is in danger: I will go to his
+rescue."
+
+He ran with the swiftness of the wind, and arrived on the Green of
+Emain, where the two young heroes were fighting. Thinking it was
+Concobar that crouched beneath the shield, he attacked Illan, not
+knowing him, and wounded him even unto death. And Illan looking up said,
+"Is it thou, Conall? Alas, dreadful is the deed thou hast done, not
+knowing me, and not knowing that I am fighting in defence of the sons of
+Usna, who are now in deadly peril from the treachery of Concobar."
+
+And Conall, finding he had unwittingly wounded his dear young friend
+Illan, turned in his grief and rage on the other, and swept off his
+head. And he stalked fierce and silent out of the battlefield.
+
+Illan, still faithful to his charge, called aloud to Naisi to defend
+himself bravely: then putting forth his remaining strength, he flung his
+arms, namely, his sword and his spears and his shield, into the Red
+Branch; and falling prone on the green sward, the shades of death dimmed
+his eyes, and his life departed.
+
+And now when it was the dusk of evening, another great battalion of the
+hirelings assailed the Red Branch, and kindled fagots around it:
+whereupon Ardan sallied out with his valorous band and scattered them,
+and put out the fires, and held guard for the first third of the night.
+And during the second third Ainnli kept them at bay.
+
+Then Naisi took his turn, issuing forth, and fought with them till the
+morning's dawn: and until the sands of the seashore, or the leaves of
+the forest, or the dew-drops on the grass, or the stars of heaven are
+counted, it will not be possible to number the hirelings that were slain
+in that fight by Naisi and his band of heroes.
+
+And as he was returning breathless from the rout, all grimy and terrible
+with blood and sweat, he spied Lavarcam, as she stood watching the
+battle anxiously; and he said:--"Go, Lavarcam, go and stand on the outer
+rampart, and cast thine eyes eastwards, if perchance thou shouldst see
+Fergus and his men coming."
+
+For many of Naisi's brave followers had fallen in these encounters: and
+he doubted that he and the others could sustain much longer the
+continual assaults of superior numbers. And Lavarcam went, but returned
+downcast, saying she saw nought eastwards, but the open plain with the
+peaceful herds browsing over it.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXVII.] These champions, as well as their wives, took care never to
+show any signs of fear or alarm even in the time of greatest danger: so
+Naisi and Deirdre kept playing quietly as if nothing was going on
+outside, though they heard the din of battle resounding.
+
+[CLXXVIII.] The "Three _Tonns_ or Waves of Erin" were the Wave of Tuath
+outside the mouth of the river Bann, off the coast of Derry; the Wave of
+Rury in Dundrum Bay, off the county Down; and the Wave of Cleena in
+Glandore Harbour in the south of Cork. In stormy weather, when the wind
+blows from certain directions, the sea at those places, as it tumbles
+over the sandbanks, or among the caves and fissures of the rocks, utters
+a loud and solemn roar, which in old times was believed to forebode the
+death of some king.
+
+The legends also tell that the shield belonging to a king moaned when
+the person who wore it in battle--whether the king himself or a member
+of his family--was in danger of death: the moan was heard all over
+Ireland; and the "Three Waves of Erin" roared in response. See "Irish
+Names of Places," Vol. II., Chap. XVI.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DEATH OF THE SONS OF USNA.
+
+
+Believing now that they could no longer defend the Red Branch, Naisi
+took council with his brothers; and what they resolved on was this:--To
+sally forth with all their men and fight their way to a place of
+safety. Then making a close, firm fence of shields and spears round
+Deirdre, they marched out in solid ranks and attacked the hireling
+battalions and slew three hundred in that onslaught.
+
+Concobar, seeing the rout of his men, and being now sure that it was not
+possible to subdue the sons of Usna in open fight, cast about if he
+might take them by falsehood and craft. And sending for Caffa, the
+druid, who loved them, he said:--
+
+"These sons of Usna are brave men, and it is our pleasure to receive
+them back into our service. Go now unto them, for thou art their loved
+friend; and say to them that if they lay down their arms and submit to
+me, I will restore them to favour and give them their places among the
+Red Branch Knights. And I pledge thee my kingly word and my troth as a
+true knight, that no harm shall befall them."
+
+Caffa, by no means distrusting him, went to the sons of Usna, and told
+them all the king had said. And they, suspecting neither guile nor
+treachery, joyfully threw their swords and spears aside, and went
+towards the king to make submission. But now, while they stood
+defenceless, the king caused them to be seized and bound. Then, turning
+aside, he sought for some one to put them to death; but he found no man
+of the Ultonians willing to do so.
+
+Among his followers was a foreigner named Maini of the Rough Hand, whose
+father and two brothers had fallen in battle by Naisi: and this man
+undertook to kill the sons of Usna.
+
+When they were brought forth to their doom, Ardan said:--"I am the
+youngest: let me be slain first, that I may not see the death of my
+brothers." And Ainnli earnestly pleaded for the same thing for himself,
+saying that he was born before Ardan, and should die before him.
+
+But Naisi said:--"Lo, I have a sword, the gift of Mannanan mac Lir,
+which leaves no remnant unfinished after a blow: let us be struck with
+it, all three together, and we shall die at the same moment."
+
+This was agreed to: and the sword was brought forth, and they laid their
+heads close together, and Maini swept off all three with one blow of the
+mighty sword. And when it became known that the sons of Usna were dead,
+the men of Ulaid sent forth three great cries of grief and lamentation.
+
+As for Deirdre, she cried aloud, and tore her golden hair, and became
+like one distracted. And after a time, when her calmness had a little
+returned, she uttered a lament:--
+
+
+I.
+
+"Three lions of the hill are dead, and I am left alone to weep for them.
+The generous princes who made the stranger welcome have been guilefully
+lured to their doom.
+
+
+II.
+
+"The three strong hawks of Slieve Cullinn,[CLXXIX.] a king's three sons,
+strong and gentle: willing obedience was yielded to them by heroes who
+had conquered many lands.
+
+
+III.
+
+"Three generous heroes of the Red Branch, who loved to praise the valour
+of others: three props of the battalions of Quelna: their fall is the
+cause of bitter grief.
+
+
+IV.
+
+"Ainnli and Ardan, haughty and fierce in battle, to me were ever loving
+and gentle: Naisi, Naisi, beloved spouse of my choice, thou canst not
+hear thy Deirdre lamenting thee.
+
+
+V.
+
+"When they brought down the fleet red deer in the chase, when they
+speared the salmon skilfully in the clear water, joyful and proud were
+they if I looked on.
+
+
+VI.
+
+"Often when my feeble feet grew weary wandering along the valleys, and
+climbing the hills to view the chase, often would they bear me home
+lightly on their linked shields and spears.
+
+
+VII.
+
+"It was gladness of heart to be with the sons of Usna: long and weary is
+the day without their company: short will be my span of life since they
+have left me.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+"Sorrow and tears have dimmed my eyes, looking at the grave of Naisi: a
+dark deadly sickness has seized my heart: I cannot, I cannot live after
+Naisi.
+
+
+IX.
+
+"O thou who diggest the new grave, make it deep and wide: let it be a
+grave for four; for I will sleep for ever beside my beloved."
+
+
+When she had spoken these words, she fell beside the body of Naisi and
+died immediately. And a great cairn of stones was piled over their
+grave, and their names were inscribed in Ogham, and their funeral rites
+were performed.
+
+This is the sorrowful tale of The Fate of the Sons of Usna.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXIX.] Slieve Cullinn, now Slieve Gullion mountain in Armagh.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+NOTE 1.--_The Dedannans._
+
+According to the old bardic legends, the first man who led a colony to
+Ireland after the Flood was Parthalon. Next came Nemed and his people;
+and after these the Firbolgs, who were conquered and succeeded by the
+Dedannans.
+
+The legend relates that the Dedannans, in the course of their
+wanderings, spent some time in Greece, where they learned magic and
+other curious arts. From this they migrated to Lochlann, in the north of
+Europe (see note 6), from which they came through Scotland to their
+final resting-place, Ireland.
+
+From the three queens of their three last kings, Ireland got the three
+names, Erin, F[=o]la, and Banba.
+
+After the Dedannans had held sway in Ireland for about two hundred
+years, they were in their turn conquered by the last and greatest colony
+of all, the people of Milèd or Milesius, who are commonly known by the
+name of Milesians, and who are the ancestors of the leading Gaelic
+families of Ireland. The Milesians defeated the Dedannans in two great
+battles: one fought at _Tailltenn_, now Teltown, on the river
+Blackwater, between Navan and Kells, in Meath; and the other at
+_Druim-Lighean_, now Drumleene, about three miles from Lifford, in
+Donegal.
+
+In the legendary and romantic literature of Ireland, the Dedannans are
+celebrated as magicians. By the Milesians and their descendants they
+were regarded as gods, and ultimately, in the imagination of the people,
+they became what are now in Ireland called "fairies."
+
+After their defeat by the Milesians, they seem to have retired to remote
+and lonely places; and their reputation as magicians, as well as the
+obscure and mysterious manner in which they lived, gradually impressed
+the vulgar with the belief that they were supernatural beings.
+
+The notion was that they lived in splendid palaces in the interior of
+pleasant green hills. These hills were called _sidh_ (pronounced
+_shee_); and hence the Dedannans were called _Daoine-sidhe_
+(_Deena-shee_), or people of the fairy hills; _Marcra-sidhe_
+(_Markra-shee_), fairy cavalcade; and _Sluagh-sidhe_ (_Sloo-shee_),
+fairy host.
+
+Of this mysterious race, the following are the principal characters
+mentioned in these tales.
+
+Mannanan Mac Lir, the Gaelic sea-god. In "Cormac's Glossary" (written
+A.D. 900), we are told that he was a famous merchant who resided in, and
+gave name to, _Inis-Manann_, or the Isle of Man; that he was the best
+merchant in Western Europe; and that he used to know, by examining the
+heavens, the length of time the fair and the foul weather would last.
+
+The Dagda, whose name some interpret to mean "the great good fire," so
+called from his military ardour, who reigned as king of Ireland from
+A.M. 3370 to 3450.
+
+Angus or Angus Oge, the son of the Dagda, who lived at _Brugh_ or Bruga,
+on the north shore of the Boyne, a little below the village of Slane.
+Angus is spoken of as the wisest and the most skilled in magic of all
+the Dedannan race.
+
+Nuada of the Silver Hand. (See note 4.)
+
+Lir of Shee Finnaha, the father of the four "Children of Lir," and Bove
+Derg of Shee Bove, of whom we know little more than what is told of them
+in the "Fate of the Children of Lir." Shee Finnaha is supposed to have
+been situated near Newtown Hamilton, in Armagh; and Shee Bove was on the
+shore of Lough Derg, on the Shannon.
+
+Luga of the Long Arms, who imposed the eric-fine on the three sons of
+Turenn for slaying his father Kian. (See note 7 for a further account of
+this Luga.)
+
+Dianket, the great physician, of whose powers of cure extraordinary
+stories are told. He had a son Midac, and a daughter Armedda, more
+skilful than himself. The old legend relates that Midac took off the
+silver arm which his father Dianket had put on Nuada (see note 4), and,
+having procured the bones of the real arm, he clothed them with flesh
+and skin, and fixed the arm in its place as well as ever "in three
+moments." Dianket was so enraged at being outdone by his son that he
+slew him. After Midac had been buried for some time, three hundred and
+sixty-five healing herbs grew up from his grave, one from every joint
+and sinew of his body--each herb to cure disease in that part of the
+human body from which it grew--all which were gathered by his sister
+Armedda, and placed carefully in her cloak in their proper order. But
+before she had time to study their several virtues fully, her father
+Dianket mixed them all up in utter confusion. (O'Curry, _Atlantis_, vii.
+and viii. 158.) Were it not for this churlish proceeding, Armedda would
+have found out, and we should now know, the exact herb to cure each
+particular disease of the human frame.
+
+
+NOTE 2.--_The Feast of Age._
+
+This was also called the Feast of Gobnenn the Dedannan smith. It was
+instituted by Mannanan Mac Lir, and whoever was present at it, and
+partook of the food and drink, was free ever after from sickness, decay,
+and old age.
+
+
+NOTE 3.--_The Druids._
+
+The ancient Irish druids do not appear to have been _priests_ in any
+sense of the word. They were, in popular estimation, men of knowledge
+and power--"Men of science," as they were often designated; they knew
+the arts of healing and divination; and they were skilled above all in
+magic. In fact, the Irish druids were magicians, neither more nor less;
+and hence the Gaelic word for "druidical" is almost always applied where
+we should use the term "magical"--to spells, incantations,
+metamorphoses, etc. (See O'Curry, "Lectures on the Manners and Customs
+of the Ancient Irish," Lecture ix.)
+
+
+NOTE 4.--_Nuada of the Silver Hand._
+
+Nuada of the Silver Hand was king of Ireland, according to the
+chronology of the Four Masters, from A.M. 3311 to 3330. He commanded the
+Dedannans in the first battle of Moytura (see note 11), where his arm
+was cut off with a sword-blow by Sreng, the great Firbolg champion.
+Afterwards Credne the artificer made him a silver arm with a hand, which
+was fixed on by Dianket, the physician (see note 1). Nuada was slain in
+the second battle of Moytura, by Balor of the Mighty Blows (see note
+11).
+
+
+NOTE 5.--_The Fomorians._
+
+"Fomor," the simple form of this word, means, according to the old
+etymologists, a sea-robber, from _fo_, on or along, and _muir_, the sea.
+The word is also used to denote a giant, or a gigantic champion.
+
+The Fomorians of Irish history were sea-robbers, who infested the
+coasts, and indeed the interior, of Ireland, for a long series of years,
+and at one time fortified themselves in Tory Island. They are stated to
+have come to Ireland from Lochlann, in the north of Europe (for which
+see next note); but they were originally from Africa, being, according
+to the legend, the descendants of Ham the son of Noah.
+
+
+NOTE 6.--_Lochlann: The Lochlanns._
+
+Lochlann was the Gaelic designation of the country from which came the
+people who are known in European history as Danes, _i.e._ the country
+round the southern shores of the Baltic, including the south part of
+Sweden. The Lochlanns, or Lochlannachs, or Danes, it need hardly be
+said, make a very conspicuous figure in our early history, and in our
+mediæval romantic literature.
+
+In the Gaelic tales, the chief city of Lochlann is always Berva; but
+whether this represents a real name, or is merely an invention of the
+old story-tellers, I cannot tell.
+
+
+NOTE 7.--_Luga of the Long Arms: The Ildana._
+
+Luga of the Long Arms was the son of Ethlenn, daughter of the Fomorian
+king, Balor of the Mighty Blows (see note 9). His father, Kian (who was
+slain by the three sons of Turenn), was a Dedannan; so that Luga was
+half Fomorian and half Dedannan. But he always took the side of the
+Dedannans against the Fomorians.
+
+Luga is often called The Ildana, the Man of many sciences, to signify
+his accomplishments as a warrior and a man of general knowledge.
+
+It had been foretold that Balor would be slain by his own grandson.
+Accordingly, when Luga was born, Balor sent him off to be drowned. But
+Luga escaped, and lived to revenge the unnatural conduct of his
+grandfather, whom he slew in the second battle of Moytura (see note 11),
+after Balor had slain the Dedannan king, Nuada of the Silver Hand. Luga
+succeeded Nuada as king of Ireland, and reigned, according to the
+chronology of the Four Masters, from A.M. 3330 to 3370.
+
+It was by Luga that the celebrated yearly assembly of Tailltenn was
+instituted, in honour of his foster mother _Taillte_, after whom the
+place was called. (See note page 93, _supra._)
+
+
+NOTE 8.--_The Land of Promise: Fairyland._
+
+In ancient Gaelic romantic tales, mention is often made of _Tir
+Tairrngire_, the Land of Promise, Fairyland, as being one of the chief
+dwelling-places of the Dedannans or fairy host. In many passages this
+Land of Promise is identified with _Inis-Manann_, or the Isle of Man,
+which was ruled over by Mannanan Mac Lir, the sea-god, and named from
+him.
+
+
+NOTE 9.--_Balor of the Mighty Blows._
+
+Balor was king of the Fomorians from Lochlann in the north; his wife was
+Kethlenda; and his son, Bres. Balor is often called Balor of the Mighty
+Blows; and also Balor of the Evil Eye, for he had one eye which would
+strike people dead or turn them into stone, so that he kept it covered,
+except when he wished to use it against his enemies. Balor is remembered
+very vividly in tradition by the peasantry of Ireland, especially in
+Donegal and in Tory Island, where a very high, tower-like rock is called
+to this day Balor's Castle.
+
+
+NOTE 10.--_Eric._
+
+The eric was a fine paid as compensation for murder or homicide. The
+friends of the murdered person might accept an eric, or they might
+refuse it and seek instead the death of the murderer. An eric was often
+paid for other crimes or injuries against the individual, as well as for
+homicide.
+
+
+NOTE 11.--_Battle of Moytura._
+
+There were two great battles, each called the battle of Moytura.
+
+_First Battle of Moytura._ When the Dedannans came to invade Erin, they
+found the country occupied by the Firbolgs, who were by no means
+inclined to give up quiet possession to the newcomers. After some
+parleying and manoeuvring, a great battle was fought between them,
+A.M. 3303, at Moytura, near Cong, in Mayo, lasting for four days, in
+which the Firbolgs were defeated with great slaughter, and their king
+slain; after which the Dedannans took possession of the country, leaving
+Connaught, however, to a powerful remnant of the Firbolgs who survived
+the battle. This is called the First Battle of Moytura, or the Battle of
+the Southern Moytura. On the plain where it was fought, there are still
+great numbers of mounds, cromlechs, and other sepulchral monuments. (See
+Sir William Wilde's "Lough Corrib," page 210.)
+
+_Second Battle of Moytura._ King Nuada, who led the Dedannans in the
+first battle of Moytura, had his arm cut off by Sreng, one of the
+Firbolg champions. He was under cure for seven years; during which time
+Bres, the son of Elatha, who was a Fomorian by his father and a Dedannan
+by his mother, ruled Ireland as regent. But at the end of the seven
+years, Bres had to retire in favour of Nuada. Whereupon he repaired in
+anger to his father in Lochlann; and at his instigation an army of
+Fomorians was raised, after some years, for the invasion of Ireland, and
+placed under the command of Balor of the Mighty Blows.
+
+Luga of the Long Arms seems to have foreseen this invasion. He knew that
+Bres would have to abdicate whenever Nuada's arm came to be healed, and
+he conjectured truly that he would not resign the sovereignty without a
+struggle. But the old tales would lead to the inference that Luga had
+some preternatural foreknowledge of the battle. Anyhow, the legend says
+that for many years he made preparations for the coming struggle; and it
+was with this intention that he imposed the celebrated eric-fine on the
+sons of Turenn.
+
+The Fomorians landed, and were met by the Dedannan army at the Northern
+Moytura, or, as it is often called, Moytura of the Fomorians, situated
+in the parish of Kilmactranny, barony of Tirerrill, county Sligo. The
+battle was fought on the eve of Samin, _i.e._ on the last day of
+October, A.M. 3330; and the Fomorians were defeated with the slaughter
+of their principal men and the best part of their army. In the course of
+the battle, Nuada of the Silver Hand, the Dedannan king, was slain by
+Balor; but soon after, Balor himself was killed by his grandson, Luga.
+Luga, we are told, flung a stone at him from a crann-tavall or sling
+(see note, page 240), and struck him in the evil eye with so much force
+that the stone went clean through his head and out at the back.
+
+The site of this battle, like that of the Southern Moytura, abounds to
+this day in sepulchral monuments.
+
+These two battles of Moytura form the subjects of two historic tales,
+which are still in existence, though they have never been published.
+
+
+NOTE 12.--_Gesa._
+
+"Gesa" (pronounced _gessa_, the _g_ hard, as in _get_) is plural:
+singular _geis_, plural _geasa_ or _gesa_. Gesa means solemn vows,
+conjurations, injunctions, prohibitions. "I put you under gesa" means, I
+adjure you solemnly, so solemnly that you dare not disobey. It would
+appear that individuals were often under gesa or solemn vows to observe,
+or to refrain from, certain lines of conduct--the vows being either
+taken on themselves voluntarily, or imposed on them, with their consent,
+by others. Thus Dermat O'Dyna was under gesa never to pass through a
+wicket gate when entering or leaving a palace (page 282); Finn was under
+gesa not to sleep at Allen more than nine nights in succession (page
+337); Dermat put Oisin under gesa not to loose any one whom he bound
+(page 312). It would appear, also, that if one person went through the
+form of putting another under gesa to grant any reasonable request, the
+abjured person could not refuse without loss of honour and reputation.
+Thus Midac places Finn under gesa to come to the banquet in the Fairy
+Palace of the Quicken Trees (page 189); and the witch-lady places gesa
+on Finn to search for the ring in the lake (page 354). And sometimes, on
+very solemn or urgent occasions, the gesa seem to have been imposed with
+spells, so as to draw down ill luck as well as loss of honour on the
+person who disregarded the injunction (page 281).
+
+Geis or gesa also means a charm or spell.
+
+
+NOTE 13.--_Tir-fa-tonn._
+
+The Gaelic tales abound in allusions to a beautiful country situated
+under the sea--an enchanted land sunk at some remote time, and still
+held under spell. In some romantic writings it is called _Tir-fa-tonn_,
+the land beneath the wave; and occasionally one or more of the heroes
+find their way to it, and meet with many strange adventures (page 253).
+Sometimes it is _O'Brasil_, that dim land which appears over the water
+once every seven years--"on the verge of the azure sea"--and which would
+be freed from the spell, and would remain permanently over water, if any
+one could succeed in throwing fire on it. (See Gerald Griffin's
+beautiful ballad, "O'Brasil, the Isle of the Blest.") The Island of
+Fincara (page 87), and the beautiful country seen beneath the waves by
+Maildun (page 147), are remnants of the same superstition.
+
+This very old Celtic tradition is obviously the same as the legend of
+the continent of Atlantis, mentioned by Plato, which at some remote time
+was overwhelmed and sunk under the Atlantic Ocean. And it would seem
+that they have the same shadowy tradition in the East; for in "Lalla
+Rookh" Moore makes the Peri say, in her soliloquy:
+
+ "I know where the Isles of Perfume are,
+ Many a fathom down in the sea,
+ To the south of sun-bright Araby."
+
+
+NOTE 14.--_The Enchanted Well._
+
+Res autem sic revera evenit. Cum Angus magus equum giganteum Eochaidio
+et popularibus traderet, monebat homines nec stabulandi neque omnino
+requiescendi copiam equo faciendam; ne forte quiescendo urinam
+demitteret, quod si fieret exitio omnibus fore. Postea vero quam at
+Planitiem Silvulæ Cinereæ pervenissent, intenti adeo sarcinis ingentis
+equi dorso detrahendis incumbebant, ut monitorum Angi obliviscerentur;
+restitit autem equus, et subinde urinam demisit. Extemplo hinc fons
+ortus; qui cum scaturiisset, submersit omnes, sicuti in historiâ
+narratur.
+
+
+NOTE 15.--_Conal Carna of the Red Branch._
+
+The Red Branch Knights of Ulster, a sort of militia in the service of
+the monarch, much like the Fena of later date (see note 23), flourished
+in the first century of the Christian era. Their home was the palace of
+Emania, near the city of Armagh; and they received their name from one
+of the houses of the palace in which they resided, which was called
+_Craebh-ruadh_, or Red Branch. They attained their greatest glory in the
+reign of Conor Mac Nessa, king of Ulster in the first century; and Conal
+Carna, mentioned in the story of "Liban the Mermaid," was one of their
+most illustrious champions.
+
+
+NOTE 16.--_Ecca the Son of Marid: Comgall of Bangor._
+
+This Marid was king of Munster about the beginning of the second century
+of the Christian era. St. Comgall, one of the greatest saints of the
+early Irish Church, flourished in the sixth century, and was the founder
+of the celebrated monastery of Bangor in the county of Down.
+
+
+NOTE 17.--_Curragh._
+
+It would appear that in Ireland, and indeed in England and Scotland as
+well, navigation was carried on in ancient times chiefly by means of
+curraghs. The curragh was a boat or canoe, consisting of a light
+framework of wood, covered over with the skins of animals. Curraghs are
+still used on many parts of the western coast of Ireland; but they are
+now covered with tarred canvas instead of skins.
+
+
+NOTE 18.--_Conn the Hundred-fighter._
+
+Conn Ced-cathach or Conn the Fighter of a Hundred (not Conn of the
+Hundred Battles, as the name is generally translated), was king of
+Ireland from A.D. 123 to 158.
+
+
+NOTE 19.--_Land of the Living: Land of Life, etc._
+
+The ancient Irish had a sort of dim, vague belief that there was a land
+where people were always youthful, and free from care and trouble,
+suffered no disease, and lived for ever. This country they called by
+various names:--_Tir-na-mbeo_, the land of the [ever-]living;
+_Tir-na-nóg_, the land of the [ever-]youthful; _Moy-Mell_, the plain of
+pleasure, etc. It had its own inhabitants--fairies; but mortals were
+sometimes brought there; and while they lived in it, were gifted with
+the everlasting youth and beauty of the fairy people themselves, and
+partook of their pleasures. As to the exact place where Tirnanoge was
+situated, the references are shadowy and variable, but they often place
+it far out in the Atlantic Ocean, as far as the eye can reach from the
+high cliffs of the western coast. And here it is identical with
+O'Brasil, of which mention has been made in note 13.
+
+I have already remarked (see note 1) that the fairies were also supposed
+to live in palaces in the interior of pleasant green hills, and that
+they were hence called Aes-shee or Deena-shee, i.e. people of the _shee_
+or fairy hills; and hence also the word "banshee" _i.e._ a woman
+(_bean_) of the fairy hills. Tirnanoge was often regarded as identical
+with these bright, subterranean palaces. In my boyhood days, the
+peasantry believed that the great limestone cavern near Mitchelstown, in
+the county Cork, was one of the entrances to Tirnanoge.
+
+
+NOTE 20.--_St. Brendan of Birra._
+
+I have already, in the preface (page xiii.), spoken of the celebrated
+voyage of St. Brendan of Birra (Birr, in King's County), undertaken in
+the sixth century. He set out from near Brandon Mountain, in Kerry,
+sailing westwards into the Atlantic Ocean, and, according to the belief
+of some, landed on the shore of America. He had many imitators, who
+ventured out on the great ocean in their curraghs as pilgrims; but none
+were so enterprising as himself, or met with such a variety of strange
+lands, if we except Maildun and the three sons of O'Corra, whose
+adventures are quite as surprising as those of Brendan.
+
+
+NOTE 21.--_Brendan's Satchel._
+
+The ancient Irish saints, when on their missionary journeys through the
+country, kept their precious books, as well as the portable sacred
+utensils, in leather satchels, which they brought with them from place
+to place. These satchels were often highly ornamented, and, like other
+relics, were held in extraordinary veneration after the death of the
+owners. The Gaelic term for this kind of satchel is _polaire_. (See
+Petrie, "Round Towers," page 336.)
+
+
+NOTE 22.--_Cormac Mac Art._
+
+Cormac Mac Art, the most illustrious of the Irish kings, who began his
+reign A.D. 254, was the son of Art the Lonely, who was son of Conn the
+Hundred-fighter. During his reign flourished the Fena or militia, spoken
+of in the next note; and the old chroniclers never tire of dwelling on
+the magnificence of his court at Tara, and the prosperity of the country
+during his reign. He was renowned for learning and wisdom, and he wrote
+a book called _Tegusc-righ_, or instruction for kings, copies of which
+are extant in the Books of Leinster and Ballymote. He also caused the
+records of the kingdom to be collected and written down in one great
+book called the Psalter of Tara, but no portion of this book is now
+known to exist; and he established three schools at Tara--one for
+military science, one for law, and one for history and chronology. He
+spent the last years of his life in retirement and study at Cletty on
+the Boyne, and died A.D. 277, forty years after he had ascended the
+throne.
+
+
+NOTE 23.--_Finn and the Fena._
+
+The Fena or "Fena of Erin" were a sort of militia or standing army,
+permanently maintained by the monarch for the support of the throne, and
+regularly trained to military service. They attained their greatest
+glory in the reign of Cormac Mac Art (see previous note). Each province
+had its own militia under its own captain, but all were under the
+command of one general-in-chief. Their most renowned commander was Finn
+the son of Cumal, who of all the heroes of ancient Ireland is most
+vividly remembered in popular tradition. Finn had his palace on the top
+of the Hill of Allen, a remarkable flat-topped hill, lying about four
+miles to the right of the railway as you pass Newbridge and approach
+Kildare, rendered more conspicuous of late years by a tall pillar
+erected on the top, on the very site of Finn's palace. Before the
+erection of the pillar, there were considerable remains of the old fort
+on the hill, but at present nearly every vestige is obliterated, cleared
+away partly to make room for the foundation of the pillar, and partly by
+cultivation; for the land has been tilled and cropped to the very
+summit. The whole neighbourhood, however, teems with living traditions
+of Finn and the Fena.
+
+The Fena were divided into distinct tribes or clanns, belonging to the
+several provinces, each under its own commander. Of these, the Clann
+Baskin of Leinster, under the immediate command of Finn; and the Clann
+Morna of Connaught, commanded by Gaul Mac Morna, were rival tribes, and,
+for reasons stated in note 27, regarded each other with hatred and
+distrust.
+
+The following are some of the principal characters celebrated in the
+romantic literature of the Fena.
+
+Finn the son of Cumal, commander-in-chief of the Fena under king Cormac
+Mac Art (see note 22); brave, wise, and far-seeing, a man of supreme
+military ability. His foresight seemed so extraordinary, that the people
+believed it was a preternatural gift of divination, and the shanachies
+invented a legend to account for it (see note 25). Like many great
+commanders, he had a little of the tyrant in his character, and was
+unforgiving to those who injured him. But in the story of Dermat and
+Grania, he is drawn in too unfavourable a light. In his old age he was
+killed by a fisherman at a place called Athbrea on the Boyne, A.D. 284,
+as recorded in the Annals of Tighernach, of the Four Masters, and of
+Innisfallen.
+
+Oisin or Ossian, Finn's son, the renowned hero-poet, to whom the bards
+attribute many poems still extant.
+
+Oscar, the son of Oisin, youthful and handsome, kind-hearted, and one of
+the most valiant of the Fena.
+
+Dermat O'Dyna, noble-minded, generous, of untarnished honour, and the
+bravest of the brave. He was as handsome as he was valiant, whence he is
+often styled Dermat of the Bright Face, Dermat of the White Teeth, etc.
+He was the idol of the ladies of Ireland, and hence he is often called
+Dermat-na-man, or Dermat of the Women (page 210). The Munster
+traditions represent him as a native of Kerry; but he was in reality a
+Leinsterman, though his descendants migrated to Munster at a very early
+period. Mr. O'Grady, in his edition of the story of Dermat and Grania
+(page 294), has given an ancient poetical genealogy of Dermat. This hero
+is equally celebrated in popular story in the Highlands of Scotland.
+According to Highland tradition, the great and illustrious Clann
+Campbell, represented by the Duke of Argyll, descend from him; and their
+crest is a boar's head, in memory of the manner of Dermat's
+death.[CLXXX.] Dermat O'Dyna is, on the whole, the finest type of hero
+among the Fena--as fine indeed as can be found in any literature; and
+his noble character is very well maintained throughout the Ossianic
+tales.
+
+Kylta Mac Ronan, Finn's nephew, renowned for his fleetness of foot.
+
+Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, who was not only a brave warrior, but
+also "a man of knowledge," gifted with some insight into futurity.
+
+Ligan Lumina, also celebrated for swiftness of foot.
+
+Fergus Finnvel, poet, warrior, and frequent adviser of the Fena.
+
+Gaul Mac Morna, the leader of the Clann Morna or Connaught Fena, one of
+the mightiest of all the heroes. He served under Finn, but the two
+chiefs bore no love to each other, for Gaul had slain Finn's father,
+Cumal, in the battle of Knocka (see note 27).
+
+Conan Mail or Conan the Bald, the best-marked and best-sustained
+character in the Ossianic romances; large-bodied, a great boaster, a
+great coward, and a great glutton. He had a venomous tongue, and hardly
+ever spoke a good word of any one. He belonged to the Clann Morna, and
+was always reviling the Clann Baskin. He was the butt for the gibes and
+mockery of the Fena, but they dreaded his foul tongue. The story-tellers
+never lose an opportunity of having a fling at Conan, and of turning him
+into ridicule for his cowardice, his big talk, and his gluttony.
+
+
+NOTE 24.--_Cooking-Places._
+
+The Fena, as related in the beginning of the story of the Gilla Dacker,
+were quartered on the principal householders during the winter
+half-year; and maintained themselves chiefly by the chase during the
+summer months. When they were on their hunting expeditions, we are told
+that they ate only one meal a day; and for this meal they cooked the
+flesh of the animals brought down in the chase, in the following manner.
+They first dug a deep pit in the earth near their camping-place, and,
+having lighted a great fire beside it, they heated a number of round
+stones. They next covered the bottom of the pit with the hot stones, on
+which they placed the meat, bound up with sedge and grass ropes, and on
+this again they put another layer of heated stones; and, having closely
+covered up the whole with branches, they let it stand till the meat was
+sufficiently cooked. The remains of these old earth-ovens are still to
+be seen, and are called by the peasantry _fulachta-na-bhfiann_, the
+cooking-places of the Fena.
+
+
+NOTE 25.--_Finn's Tooth of Knowledge._
+
+It had been prophesied of old that a man named Finn would be the first
+to eat of the salmon of knowledge, which swam in the pool of Linn-Fec,
+in the Boyne (near the present village of Slane); and that he would
+thereby obtain the gifts of knowledge and of divination. A certain old
+poet named Finn, knowing this, hoped that he might be the lucky man; so
+he took up his abode on the shore of Linn-Fec; and he fished in the pool
+every day from morn till night, in the hope of catching the salmon of
+knowledge. At this time, Finn the son of Cumal was a boy, fleeing from
+place to place from his hereditary enemies, the Clann Morna, disguised,
+and bearing the assumed name of Demna; and, happening to come to
+Linn-Fec, the old poet took him as his servant.
+
+After long watching and waiting, Finn the poet hooked the salmon at
+last, and gave it to Demna to broil, warning him very strictly not to
+eat or even taste of it. Demna proceeded to broil the fish; and soon the
+heat of the fire raised a great blister from its side, which the boy
+pressed with his thumb to keep it down, thereby scalding himself so
+severely that he unthinkingly thrust his thumb into his mouth.
+
+When the salmon was cooked, the poet asked Demna had he eaten of it.
+"No," replied the boy; "but I scalded my thumb on the fish, and put it
+into my mouth." "Thy name is not Demna, but Finn," exclaimed the poet:
+"in thee has the prophecy been fulfilled; and thou art now a diviner and
+a man of knowledge!"
+
+In this manner Finn obtained the gift of divination, so that ever after,
+when he wished to look into futurity, he put his thumb under his tooth
+of knowledge, as he did when cooking the salmon of Linn-Fec, and the
+whole future was revealed to him. There appears to have been some sort
+of ceremony used, however (see page 339, _supra_); and it would seem
+that the process was attended with pain (page 194), so that it was only
+on very solemn and trying occasions he put his thumb under his tooth of
+knowledge.[CLXXXI.]
+
+
+NOTE 26.--_The Game of Chess._
+
+Chess-playing was one of the favourite amusements of the ancient Irish
+chiefs. The game is constantly mentioned in the very oldest Gaelic
+tales; as, for instance, in the "Cattle-Spoil of Cooley," in "The Book
+of the Dun Cow" (A.D. 1100). (See O'Donovan's "Introduction to the Book
+of Rights," page lxi.)
+
+
+NOTE 27.--_Battle of Knocka._
+
+The battle of Knocka or _Cnucha_ (now Castleknock, near Dublin) was
+fought in the reign of Conn the Hundred-fighter (see note 18). The
+contending parties were, on the one side, Conn with his royal forces,
+and the renowned hero, Gaul Mac Morna, with his Connaught Fena, the
+Clann Morna; and on the other side, Cumal, the father of Finn, with the
+Clann Baskin and the Leinster forces in general, aided by Owen More,
+heir to the throne of Munster, with a large army of Munstermen. The
+Leinster and Munster armies were defeated, chiefly through the valour of
+Gaul, who slew Cumal with his own hand. This was the cause of the
+irreconcilable enmity that existed ever after between the Clann Baskin
+and the Clann Morna.
+
+When Finn the son of Cumal grew up to man's estate, he succeeded to the
+position held by his father as leader of the Fena. But though he made
+peace with Gaul Mac Morna, and though Gaul submitted to his command,
+there was always a feeling of ill-concealed hatred and distrust between
+them.
+
+
+NOTE 28.--_Battle of Gavra._
+
+When Carbri of the Liffey, son of Cormac Mac Art, ascended the throne of
+Ireland, one of his first acts was to disband and outlaw the Clann
+Baskin; and he took into his service in their place their rivals and
+deadly enemies, the Clann Morna from Connaught. Whereupon the Clann
+Baskin marched southwards, and entered the service of Fercorb, king of
+Munster, Finn's grandson, in direct disobedience to king Carbri's
+commands. This led to the bloody battle of Gavra, celebrated in Ossianic
+literature, which was fought A.D. 284, at Garristown, in the north-west
+of the county Dublin, where the rival clanns slaughtered each other
+almost to annihilation. In the heat of the battle, Carbri and Oscar met
+in single combat; and, after a long and terrible fight, the heroic Oscar
+fell pierced by Carbri's spear, and died on the evening of the same day.
+But Carbri himself was dreadfully wounded; and, while retiring from the
+field, his own kinsman, Semeon, whom he had previously banished from
+Tara, fell on him, and despatched him with a single blow.
+
+This battle is the subject of a poem which the bards ascribe to Oisin,
+and which has been published, with translation, in the first volume of
+the Ossianic Transactions. In this poem there is an affecting
+description of the death of Oscar, surrounded by his few surviving
+companions, and in presence of his father Oisin.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXX.] For a full account of the Highland traditions regarding Dermat,
+and of the Highland monuments that commemorate his name, see "Loch Etive
+and the Sons of Uisnach" (p. 255), a very valuable and interesting book,
+recently published, which came into my hands after I had written the
+above.
+
+[CLXXXI.] The above legend is taken from "The Boyish Exploits of Finn
+Mac Cumal," published, with translation, by John O'Donovan, LL.D., in
+the fourth volume of the Ossianic Society's Transactions, from a MS.
+_transcribed_ in 1453, now lying in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. But
+the internal evidence of the language shows that the piece is far more
+ancient than the fifteenth century. The legend of Finn and the Salmon of
+Knowledge is still current among the peasantry; and a modern popular
+version of it may be seen in the _Dublin Penny Journal_, Vol. I. page
+110.
+
+As to the process of putting his thumb under his tooth of knowledge,
+even the English-speaking peasantry of the south still retain a
+tradition that it was painful; for they say that Finn "chewed his thumb
+from the skin to the flesh, from the flesh to the bone, from the bone to
+the marrow, and from the marrow to the _smoosagh_."
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF PROPER NAMES.
+
+ALPHABETICAL LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL PROPER NAMES OCCURRING IN THIS
+VOLUME, WITH THEIR ORIGINAL GAELIC FORMS, AND, IN MANY CASES, THEIR
+MEANINGS.
+
+
+Every writer who attempts to popularise the Gaelic literature of Ireland
+and Scotland, finds the proper names a serious difficulty. If they are
+given in their original Gaelic forms, they are not unfrequently
+unpronounceable and repulsive to the English reader; if they are written
+phonetically, they are often strange and barbarous looking. In this
+book, I have not followed any general principle in reducing the names to
+forms suitable to readers of English. I have dealt with each, as it
+were, on its own merits. Sometimes--very often, indeed--I have given the
+original spelling; sometimes I have given the names phonetically; and
+frequently I have mixed the two modes. But all through I have avoided
+any great departure from the original forms, as will be seen by a glance
+at the following list.
+
+In all cases the names occurring through the book may be pronounced just
+as the letters would indicate to the English reader.
+
+
+
+
+ Aed, _Aedh_, a flame of fire.
+
+ Ahaclee, _Ath-cliath_, hurdle-ford.
+
+ Ailna, _Ailne_, beauty, joy.
+
+ Aina, _Aine_.
+
+ Allil, _Ailioll_, _Ailell_, or _Oilioll_.
+
+ Allil Ocar Aga, _Ailell Ochair Aga_.
+
+ Alva, _Ailbhe_.
+
+
+ Balor, _Balar_.
+
+ Baskin, _Baoiscne_.
+
+ Begallta, _Beagalltach_, little fury.
+
+ Ben-Damis, _Beann-Damhuis_.
+
+ Beoc, _Beóc_, _Dabheóc_, and _Beoán_.
+
+ Berva, _Berbhe_.
+
+ Borba, _Borb_, proud.
+
+ Bran, _Bran_, a raven.
+
+ Bres, _Breas_.
+
+ Brian, _Brian_.
+
+ Brickna, _Briccne_.
+
+ Bruga of the _Brugh-na-Boinne_.
+ Boyne,
+
+
+ Canta, _Cainte_.
+
+ Carn-Arenn, _Carnn-Airenn_.
+
+ Carricknarone, _Carraic-na-rón_, the rock of the seals.
+
+ Clann Navin, _Clann-Neamhuinn_.
+
+ Cloghan Kincat, _Clochan-chinn-chait_, the stepping-stones of
+ the cat's head.
+
+ Coil Croda, _Cael-crodha_, the slender valiant [man].
+
+ Colga, _Colga_.
+
+ Colman, _Colman_, little dove.
+
+ Comgall, _Comhghall_.
+
+ Conal Carna, _Conall Cernach_.
+
+ Conan Mail, _Conan Mael_, Conan the Bald.
+
+ Conang, _Conaing_.
+
+ Conn, the Hundred-fighter (not Conn of the Hundred
+ Battles, as it is usually translated),
+ _Conn-Cédcathach_.
+
+ Connla, _Connla_.
+
+ Coran, _Coran_.
+
+ Cormac Mac Art, _Cormac Mac Airt_.
+
+ Corr the _Coir Cos-luath_.
+ Swift-footed,
+
+ Cuan, _Cuan_ or _Cuadhan_.
+
+ Culand, _Culand_.
+
+ Curnan the _Curnan Onmit_.
+ Simpleton,
+
+ Curoi Mac Dara, _Curoi Mac Dáire_.
+
+
+ Dagda, _Dagda_.
+
+ Dara Donn, _Dáire Donn_.
+
+ Darvra, Lake, _Loch Dairbhreach_, the lake of oaks.
+
+ Dathkeen, _Dathchaoin_, bright-complexioned.
+
+ Decca, _Deoch_.
+
+ Dedannans, _Tuatha De Danann_.
+
+ Derdri of the _Deirdre Duibhshleibhe_.
+ Black Mountain,
+
+ Dering, _Diorraing_.
+
+ Dermat O'Dyna, _Diarmait O'Duibhne_.
+
+ Dianket, _Diancecht_.
+
+ Diuran Lekerd, _Diuran Lecerd_.
+
+ Dobar O'Baskin, _Dobhar O'Baoiscne_.
+
+ Dooclone, _Dubhchluain_, dark-coloured meadow.
+
+ Dord-Fian, _Dord-Fiann_.
+
+ Dryantore, _Draoigheantóir_.
+
+ Ducoss, _Dubhchosach_, black-foot.
+
+
+ Eas-Dara, _Eas-Dara_.
+
+ Ebb, _Eab_.
+
+ Ebliu, _Ebliu_.
+
+ Ebric, _Aibhric_.
+
+ Ecca, _Eochaidh_, a horseman.
+
+ Enbarr, _Aenbharr_, splendid mane.
+
+ Encoss, _Aenchos_, one foot.
+
+ Ethnea, _Eithne_, sweet nut-kernel.
+
+ Etta, _Eitche_.
+
+ Eva, _Aeife_.
+
+ Eve, _Aebh_.
+
+
+ Failinis, _Failinis_.
+
+ Fatha Conan, _Fatha Chonain_.
+
+ Femin, _Feimeann_.
+
+ Fena, _Fianna_.
+
+ Ferdana, _Feardána_.
+
+ Fergor, _Fearghoir_, manly or strong voice.
+
+ Fergus, _Fearghus_, manly strength.
+
+ Fiaca Findamnas, _Fiacha Findamnais_.
+
+ Ficna, _Fiachna_, little raven.
+
+ Ficra, _Fiachra_.
+
+ Fincara, _Fianchaire_.
+
+ Fincoss, _Finnchosach_, white-foot.
+
+ Finn, _Finn_ or _Fionn_, fair-haired.
+
+ Finnin, _Finghín_, fair offspring.
+
+ Finola, _Fionnghuala_, white shoulder.
+
+ Flidas, _Flidas_.
+
+ Foltlebar, _Folt-leabhar_, long hair.
+
+ Frevan, _Freamhainn_.
+
+
+ Ga-boi, _Ga-buidhe_, yellow javelin.
+
+ Ga-derg, _Ga-dearg_, red javelin.
+
+ Gael Glas, _Gaodhal-Glas_.
+
+ Garva, _Garbh_, rough.
+
+ Gaul Mac Morna, _Goll Mac Morna_.
+
+ Germane, _Germane_.
+
+ Gilla Dacker, _Giolla Deacair_, lazy fellow.
+
+ Glanlua, _Glanluadh_, pure-spoken.
+
+ Glas Mac Encarda, _Glas Mac Aeinchearda_.
+
+ Glore, _Glór_, a voice.
+
+
+ Ilbrec, _Ilbhreach_.
+
+ Ildana, _Ioldhanach_.
+
+ Inis Glora, _Inis Gluaire_.
+
+ Innia, _Innia_.
+
+ Innsa, _Inse_.
+
+ Inver-tre-Kenand, _Inbher-Tre-Cenand_.
+
+ Iraun, _Irann_.
+
+ Iroda, _Ioruaidhe_.
+
+ Irros Domnann, _Iorrus Domnann_.
+
+ Island of the _Inis Tuile_.
+ Torrent,
+
+
+ Kemoc, _Caemhoc_ or _Mochoemhoc_.
+
+ Kenn-Avrat, _Ceann-Abhrat_.
+
+ Kenri, _Caenraighe_.
+
+ Kethen, _Cethen_.
+
+ Kethlenda, _Ceithleann_ or _Ceithleand_.
+
+ Kian, _Cian_.
+
+ Kylta Mac Ronan, _Caeilte Mac Ronain_.
+
+
+ Largnen, _Lairgnen_.
+
+ Lavaran, _Lobharan_.
+
+ Liban, _Liban_.
+
+ Lidas, _Liadhas_.
+
+ Ligan Lumina, _Liagan Luaimneach_, Ligan the Bounding.
+
+ Lir, _Lir_.
+
+ Lobas, _Lobais_.
+
+ Lochlann, _Lochlann_.
+
+ Loskenn of the _Loiscinn Lomghlúineach_.
+ Bare Knees,
+
+ Luath, _Luaith_, swift.
+
+ Luga of the Long _Lugh Lamh-fada_.
+ Arms,
+
+
+ Mac-an-Lona, _Mac-an-Luin_.
+
+ Mac Luga, _Mac Luigheach_.
+
+ Mac-na-Corra, _Mac-na-Corra_.
+
+ Maildun, _Mail Duin_, chief of the fort.
+
+ Manissa, _Maighneis_.
+
+ Mannanan Mac Lir, _Manannan Mac Lir_.
+
+ Marid Mac Carido, _Mairid Mac Cairedo_.
+
+ Mergah, _Meargach_.
+
+ Micorta, _Miodhchuarta_.
+
+ Midac, _Miodhach_ or _Mioch_.
+
+ Midir, _Midhir_.
+
+ Midkena, _Miodhchaoin_.
+
+ Milucra, _Miluchradh_.
+
+ Modan, _Muadhan_.
+
+ Morallta, _Moralltach_, great fury.
+
+ Moyle, _Mael_, a bare hill.
+
+ Moy-Mell, _Magh-Mell_, plain of pleasures.
+
+ Moytura, _Magh-tuireadh_, plain of towers.
+
+ Muman, _Mumha_, gen. _Mumhan_.
+
+ Muridach, _Muridach_.
+
+ Murthemna, _Muirthemhne_.
+
+
+ Niam, _Niamh_, beauty.
+
+ Nuada of the _Nuadha Airgeatlaimh_.
+ Silver Hand,
+
+ Nuca, _Nuca_.
+
+
+ Oisin, _Oisin_ (pronounced _Isheen_ in Munster, and
+ _Osh'in_ in Ulster and in Scotland).
+
+ Oscar, _Oscar_.
+
+ Owenaght, _Eoghanacht_, descendants of Owen.
+
+
+ Pezar, _Pisear_.
+
+
+ Racad, _Rachadh_.
+
+ Rib, _Rib_.
+
+
+ Sencab, _Seanchab_, old mouth.
+
+ Sharvan, _Searbhan_, a surly person.
+
+ Shee Finnaha, _Sidh-Fionnachaidh_.
+
+ Skeabrac, _Sciath-bhreac_, speckled shield.
+
+ Skolan, _Sceolaing_.
+
+ Slana, _Slánach_, healthy.
+
+ Sorca, _Sorcha_.
+
+ Sotal of the Large _Sotal Sálmhór_.
+ Heels,
+
+
+ Taillkenn, _Tailcenn_.
+
+ Tinna the Mighty, _Tinne Mór_.
+
+ Tir-fa-tonn, _Tir-fa-thuinn_, country beneath the wave.
+
+ Tirnanoge, _Tir na n-óg_, land of youths.
+
+ Trencoss, _Treunchosach_, strongfoot.
+
+ Trenmore O'Baskin, _Treunmór O'Baoiscne_.
+
+ Triscadal, _Triscadal_.
+
+ Tuis, _Tuis_.
+
+ Turenn, _Tuireann_.
+
+
+ Ur, _Uar_.
+
+ Urcar, _Urchar_.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ Footnotes formatted in Roman.
+ Endnotes formatted in Arabic.
+ Italics shown as _Italics_.
+ Ligatures: [=o] o macron, [)e] e breve.
+ Inconsistent and archaic spelling retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 38041-8.txt or 38041-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/4/38041/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/38041-8.zip b/38041-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2a2370d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/38041-h.zip b/38041-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0e6c7d4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/38041-h/38041-h.htm b/38041-h/38041-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c6e449f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041-h/38041-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,18538 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ Old Celtic Romances, by P.W. Joyce -- a Project Gutenberg eBook
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ font-family: "Century Schoolbook", "Book Antiqua", Palatino, serif;
+}
+
+ h1,h2,h3,h4 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ margin: 1em 0 1em 0;
+}
+
+ h1,h2 {margin: 4em 0 2em 0;}
+
+p {
+ text-align: justify;
+ text-indent: 1em;
+ margin: 0 0 0 0;
+}
+
+.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
+.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
+.p6 {margin-top: 6em;}
+.b1 {margin-bottom: 1em;}
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+hr.chap {width: 15%}
+
+table {
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+}
+
+.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+.center {text-align: center;
+ text-indent: 0;}
+
+.right {text-align: right;
+ text-indent: 0;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.small {font-size: smaller;
+ font-weight:normal;}
+
+/* Images */
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+/* Footnotes */
+.footnotes {border: dashed 1px;
+ background-color: #EEE;
+ padding: 0em 1em 1em 1em;
+}
+
+.footnote {margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 5%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+
+.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 77%; text-align: right;}
+
+.note {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+
+.note .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+
+.fnanchor {
+ vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration:
+ none;
+}
+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem {
+ margin-left:10%;
+ margin-right:10%;
+ text-align: left;
+}
+
+.poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+
+.poem span.i0 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 0em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i1 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 1em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i2 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 2em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i3 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 3em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i4 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 4em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i5 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 5em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+.poem span.i6 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 6em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+/* Transcriber's notes */
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ color: black;
+ font-size:smaller;
+ padding: 1em;
+ margin-bottom:5em;
+ font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Celtic Romances
+
+Author: Unknown
+
+Translator: P. W. Joyce
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38041]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="616" alt="Cover" title="Cover" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a href="#PREFACE">Preface</a></h3>
+<h3><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents</a></h3>
+
+<h1 style="margin: 5em 0 5em 0;">OLD CELTIC ROMANCES</h1>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
+
+<h1>OLD
+CELTIC ROMANCES</h1>
+
+<p class="center">translated from the gaelic</p>
+
+<p class="center p2">BY</p>
+
+<h3>P.W. JOYCE, M.A., LL.D., T.C.D.<br />
+M.R.I.A.</h3>
+
+<p class="center"><i>One of the Commissioners for the Publication of<br />
+the Ancient Laws of Ireland<br />
+President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries, Ireland</i></p>
+
+<p class="center p2">Author of</p>
+
+<p class="center p2">"A SOCIAL HISTORY OF ANCIENT IRELAND"<br />
+"THE STORY OF ANCIENT IRISH CIVILISATION"<br />
+"A SHORT HISTORY OF IRELAND"<br />
+"A CHILD'S HISTORY OF IRELAND"<br />
+"IRISH NAMES OF PLACES"<br />
+"ANCIENT IRISH MUSIC"<br />
+AND OTHER WORKS RELATING TO IRELAND</p>
+
+<p class="center p6">"I shall tell you a pretty tale"<br />
+&mdash;Coriolanus.</p>
+
+<div style="float:left; width:50%;">
+<p class="center p4">DUBLIN<br />
+THE EDUCATIONAL CO.
+OF IRELAND, LIMITED<br />
+89 TALBOT STREET</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="float:left; width:50%;">
+<p class="center p4">LONDON<br />
+LONGMANS, GREEN, AND
+COMPANY<br />
+39 PATERNOSTER ROW</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center" style="clear:both;">1920
+</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Among the Celtic people of Ireland and the north-west
+of Scotland, story-telling has always been a
+favourite amusement. In the olden time, they had
+professional story-tellers, variously designated according
+to rank&mdash;ollaves, shanachies, filès, bards, etc.&mdash;whose
+duty it was to know by heart a number of
+old tales, poems, and historical pieces, and to recite
+them at festive gatherings, for the entertainment of
+the chiefs and their guests. These story-tellers were
+always well received at the houses of princes and
+chiefs, and treated with much consideration; and on
+occasions when they acquitted themselves well, so as
+to draw down the applause of the audience, they
+were often rewarded with costly presents.</p>
+
+<p>To meet the demand for this sort of entertainment,
+ingenious "men of learning," taking legends or historical
+events as themes, composed stories from time
+to time; of which those that struck the popular fancy
+were caught up and remembered, and handed down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span>
+from one generation of story-tellers to another. In
+course of time, a body of romantic literature grew up,
+consisting chiefly of prose tales, which were classified,
+according to subject, into Battles, Voyages, Tragedies,
+Military Expeditions, Cattle-Raids, Courtships, Pursuits,
+Adventures, Visions, etc.<a name="FNanchor_I._29" id="FNanchor_I._29"></a><a href="#Footnote_I._29" class="fnanchor">[I.]</a></p>
+
+<p>Some of these tales were historical, <i>i.e.</i> founded
+on historical events, and corresponded closely with
+what is now called the historical romance; while
+others were altogether fictitious&mdash;pure creations of the
+imagination. But it is to be observed that even in
+the fictitious tales, the main characters are always
+historical, or such as were considered so. The old
+ollaves wove their fictions round Conor Mac Nessa
+and his Red Branch Knights, or Finn and his Fena,
+or Luga of the Long Arms and his Dedannans, or Conn
+the Hundred-fighter, or Cormac Mac Art; like the
+Welsh legends of Arthur and his Round Table, or the
+Arabian romances of Haroun-al-Raschid and his Court.</p>
+
+<p>The greater number of the tales were, as I have
+said, in prose. But some were in poetry; and in
+many of the prose tales the leading characters are
+often made to express themselves in verse, or some
+striking incident of the story is repeated in a poetical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span>
+form. Not unfrequently the fragments of verse
+introduced into a prose tale are quotations from an
+older poetical version of the same tale; and hence it
+often happens that while the prose may be plain
+enough, the poetry is often archaic and obscure.</p>
+
+<p>At some very early period in Ireland&mdash;how early
+we have now no means of determining with certainty&mdash;Celtic
+thought began to be committed to writing;
+and as everything seems to have been written down
+that was considered worth preserving, manuscripts
+accumulated in course of time, which were kept either
+in monasteries, or in the houses of the hereditary
+professors of learning. But in the dark time of the
+Danish ravages, and during the troubled centuries
+that followed the Anglo-Norman invasion, the manuscript
+collections were gradually dispersed, and a
+large proportion lost or destroyed. Yet we have
+remaining&mdash;rescued by good fortune from the general
+wreck&mdash;a great body of manuscript literature. Our
+two most important collections are those in Trinity
+College and in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin;
+where we have manuscripts of various ages, from the
+year 1100 down to the present century, on every
+conceivable subject&mdash;Annals, History, Biography,
+Theology, Romance, Legend, Science, etc. These
+manuscripts, which, it should be remarked, are nearly
+all copies from older books, contain a vast collection
+of romantic literature: it may, indeed, be said that
+there is scarcely one important event in our early
+history, or one important native personage or native<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>
+legend, that has not been made the subject of some
+fanciful story.</p>
+
+<p>The volume I now offer to the notice of the public
+contains eleven tales, selected and translated from
+the manuscripts of Trinity College and of the Royal
+Irish Academy. Some have been already published,
+with original text and <i>literal</i> translation, and are
+to be found in the Transactions of various literary
+societies, where, however, they are inaccessible to
+the general run of readers; and even if they were
+accessible, they are almost unreadable, the translations
+having been executed, not for literary, but for
+linguistic purposes. Others have never been translated
+or given to the public in any shape or form
+till now.</p>
+
+<p>Of the whole collection of eleven tales, therefore,
+it may be said that they are quite new to the
+general mass of the reading public. And furthermore,
+this is the first collection of the old Gaelic prose
+romances that has ever been published in fair English
+translation.</p>
+
+<p>Scraps and fragments of some of these tales have
+been given to the world in popular publications, by
+writers who, not being able to read the originals,
+took their information from printed books in the
+English language. But I am forced to say that many
+of these specimens have been presented in a very
+unfavourable and unjust light&mdash;distorted to make
+them look <i>funny</i>, and their characters debased to the
+mere modern conventional stage Irishman. There is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span>
+none of this silly and odious vulgarity in the originals
+of these fine old tales, which are high and dignified
+in tone and feeling&mdash;quite as much so as the old
+romantic tales of Greece and Rome.<a name="FNanchor_II._30" id="FNanchor_II._30"></a><a href="#Footnote_II._30" class="fnanchor">[II.]</a></p>
+
+<p>A translation may either follow the very words, or
+reproduce the life and spirit, of the original; but no
+translation can do both. If you render word for word,
+you lose the spirit; if you wish to give the spirit and
+manner, you must depart from the exact words, and
+frame your own phrases. I have chosen this latter
+course. My translation follows the original closely
+enough in narrative and incident; but so far as mere
+phraseology is concerned, I have used the English
+language freely, not allowing myself to be trammelled
+by too close an adherence to the very words of the
+text. The originals are in general simple in style;
+and I have done my best to render them into simple,
+plain, homely English. In short, I have tried to tell
+the stories as I conceive the old shanachies themselves
+would have told them, if they had used English
+instead of Gaelic.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
+<p>In the originals, the stories run on without break
+or subdivision;<a name="FNanchor_III._31" id="FNanchor_III._31"></a><a href="#Footnote_III._31" class="fnanchor">[III.]</a> but I have thought it better to
+divide the longer ones into chapters, with appropriate
+headings.</p>
+
+<p>In almost all cases I had at my command several
+copies of the same story, some of them differing in
+phraseology and in minor points of detail, though
+agreeing, in the main, in narrative and incident. I
+found this a considerable advantage, as it gave me
+more freedom in the choice of expression.</p>
+
+<p>I have made full use of the literal translations of
+those tales that have been already published in the
+Transactions of the Ossianic Society, in the <i>Atlantis</i>,
+in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, and
+in the Journal of the Royal Historical and Archæological
+Association of Ireland. But, in order to secure
+the advantage of various readings, I compared, in every
+case, the published text with at least one copy of the
+story, in the Royal Irish Academy, in Trinity College,
+or in my own private manuscript collection.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">The ancient institution of professional story-telling
+held its ground both in Ireland and in Scotland down
+to a very recent period; and it is questionable if it
+be even yet quite extinct. Within my own memory,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span>
+this sort of entertainment was quite usual among the
+farming classes of the south of Ireland. The family
+and workmen, and any neighbours that chose to drop
+in, would sit round the kitchen fire after the day's
+work&mdash;or perhaps gather in a barn on a summer or
+autumn evening&mdash;to listen to some local shanachie reciting
+one of his innumerable Gaelic tales. The story-teller
+never chose his own words&mdash;he always had the
+story by heart, and recited the words from memory,
+often gliding into a sort of recitative in poetical
+passages, or when he came to some favourite grandiose
+description abounding in high-sounding alliterative
+adjectives. And very interesting it was to mark the
+rapt attention of the audience, and to hear their
+excited exclamations when the speaker came to relate
+some mighty combat, some great exploit of the hero,
+or some other striking incident. Three years ago, I
+met a man in Kilkee, who had a great number of these
+stories by heart, and who actually repeated for me,
+without the slightest hitch or hesitation, more than
+half&mdash;and if I had not stopped him would have given
+me the whole&mdash;of "Cúirt an Mheadhon-Oidhche"
+("The Midnight Court"), a poem about six times as
+long as Gray's "Elegy."</p>
+
+<p>I will now proceed to give a few particulars concerning
+these tales, including a short account of the
+manuscript or manuscripts from which each has been
+translated.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE THREE TRAGIC STORIES OF ERIN.</p>
+
+<p>Among the ancient Gaelic tales, three were known as "the three
+most sorrowful (tales) of story-telling," or "The Three Tragic
+Stories of Erin;" viz., "The Fate of the Children of Usna," "The
+Fate of the Children of Lir," and "The Fate of the Children of
+Turenn." I have not included the first in this volume, but a
+poetical version of it has been written and published by my
+brother.<a name="FNanchor_IV._32" id="FNanchor_IV._32"></a><a href="#Footnote_IV._32" class="fnanchor">[IV.]</a></p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR.</p>
+
+<p>Two translations of this tale have been published: one literal,
+with the Gaelic text, by Professor O'Curry, in the <i>Atlantis</i> (Nos.
+vii. and viii.); and another, less literal, by Gerald Griffin, in his
+"Tales of a Jury-Room."</p>
+
+<p>The oldest known copies of the tale are, one in the Catholic
+University, Dublin, made by Andrew Mac Curtin, a well-known
+Gaelic scholar and scribe of the county Clare, who lived between
+1680 and 1740; one in Trinity College, Dublin, made by Hugh
+O'Daly, in 1758; and one in the British Museum, made by Richard
+Tipper of Dublin, in 1718.<a name="FNanchor_V._33" id="FNanchor_V._33"></a><a href="#Footnote_V._33" class="fnanchor">[V.]</a> There is also a very good copy in the
+Royal Irish Academy (23. C. 26), of which I made considerable use,
+written in or about 1782, by Peter O'Connell, a good Gaelic
+scholar of the county Clare. From a comparison of several of
+these versions, O'Curry made his copy of the text as published in
+the <i>Atlantis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>There may be, and there probably are, older copies, in Trinity
+College, in the British Museum, or elsewhere, if we knew only
+where to find them. And this observation applies to several of the
+tales that follow, of which we have at hand only modern copies.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN.</p>
+
+<p>In the Book of Lecan (folio 28), which was compiled by the Mac
+Firbises, about <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1416, is a short account, partly in prose and
+partly in verse, of the celebrated eric-fine imposed on the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span>
+sons of Turenn, by Luga of the Long Arms, for killing his father
+Kian; but this old book does not give the story of the quest for
+the fine. The full tale, text and literal translation, has been published
+by O'Curry in the <i>Atlantis</i>. There are several good copies
+in the Royal Irish Academy: one in 23. G. 10, transcribed by
+Patrick Brown of the county Clare, in 1805; another in 23. E. 16,
+written out by Michael Oge O'Longan, in 1797; and a third
+(imperfect) in 23. M. 47, copied by Andrew Mac Curtin, in 1734.</p>
+
+<p>There are references to these three sons of Turenn, and to the
+manner of their death, in two very old authorities, viz., Cormac's
+"Glossary" (about <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 900); and a poem by Flann of Monaster-boice
+(who died <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1056), a copy of which is in the Book of
+Leinster, written about <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1130.</p>
+
+<p>In the older references to the sons of Turenn, they are called
+Brian, Iuchar, Iucharba; but in some comparatively modern copies
+of the tale the names are a little different&mdash;for instance, Peter
+O'Connell calls them Uar, Iuchar, and Iucharba; and they vary
+still further in other copies. I have taken advantage of this
+variety to give the names in a more pronounceable form in my
+translation.</p>
+
+<p>In the original, this tale is introduced by an anecdote of Nuada
+of the Silver Hand and the two great Dedannan leeches, Midac and
+Armedda (<a href="#Page_92">see page 92, <i>infra</i></a>), which has nothing whatever to do
+with the story, and which I have omitted.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH.</p>
+
+<p>"Leabhar na h-Uidhre," or "The Book of the Dun Cow," from
+which this and the two following tales are taken, is the oldest
+manuscript of miscellaneous Gaelic literature we possess. It was
+transcribed from older books by Maelmuire Mac Ceilechair, who
+died <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1106; and it is now deposited in the Royal Irish
+Academy, Dublin&mdash;or rather, I should say, a large fragment of it,
+for the book has suffered much mutilation. This venerable book
+may now be said to be in the hands of the public, as it has been
+lately reproduced in lithograph fac-simile, and published by the
+Council of the Royal Irish Academy, at the Government expense.</p>
+
+<p>The story of "The Overflowing of Lough Neagh" (called in
+the original "The Destruction of Eocho Mac Mairedo") has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span>
+published, with text and literal translation, by the late J. O'Beirne
+Crowe, in the Kilkenny Archæological Journal volume for
+1870-1.</p>
+
+<p>In this story I have been obliged to make a few transpositions
+in the mere order of the incidents, for the narrative in the original
+is in some places very ill arranged.</p>
+
+<p>It is now nearly eight hundred years since this story was <i>transcribed</i>
+from some old authority into "The Book of the Dun Cow;"
+and it is singular that the tradition of the formation of Lough
+Neagh, by the overflow of an enchanted well which was neglected
+by the woman in charge of it, still maintains a vivid existence
+among the peasantry. (See on this subject the author's "Origin
+and History of Irish Names of Places," Series I. 4th edition, page
+176.)</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR, AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.</p>
+
+<p>This tale (called in the original "Echtra Condla Cain," "The
+Adventures of Connla the Comely") is taken from "The Book of
+the Dun Cow." It has been published, with text and literal translation,
+by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe, in the Kilkenny Archæological
+Journal (volume 1874-5, page 128).</p>
+
+<p>This is one of the many tales that illustrate the ancient and
+widespread superstition that fairies sometimes take away mortals
+to their palaces in the fairy forts and pleasant green hills;<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> of which
+the last story in this book&mdash;"Oisin in Tirnanoge"&mdash;is another
+example. This superstition prevailed in Ireland and the Scottish
+Highlands as far back as either history or tradition reaches; it
+flourished in full vigour within my own memory; and it is scarcely
+quite extinct&mdash;in Ireland at least&mdash;at the present day.<a name="FNanchor_VI._34" id="FNanchor_VI._34"></a><a href="#Footnote_VI._34" class="fnanchor">[VI.]</a> In connection
+with the antiquity of this superstition, it must be borne in
+mind that the present story was transcribed into "The Book of the
+Dun Cow" in or about the year 1100, from some older book; and
+that it relates to the time of Conn the Hundred-fighter, king of
+Ireland, who reigned in the second century of the Christian era.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.</p>
+
+<p>Of this tale (which is now given to the public for the first time)
+the oldest copy is in "The Book of the Dun Cow" (about the year
+1100); but it is imperfect at both beginning and end&mdash;a portion
+having been torn away when the book was mutilated at some
+former time. There is a perfect copy in the Yellow Book of Lecan,
+in Trinity College, Dublin, and another in the British Museum
+(MS. Harl. 5280).</p>
+
+<p>After I had made a rough translation of the greater part of this
+piece, I discovered a good literal translation in manuscript in the
+Royal Irish Academy, made by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe,
+which was of great use to me, as it helped to explain some strange
+terms, and to clear up some obscure passages.</p>
+
+<p>This voyage would appear from internal evidence to have been
+made in the beginning of the eighth century (O'Curry says about
+the year 700); for I think it likely that Maildun did actually go
+on a voyage, which was afterwards made the framework of the
+story. On my translation of this tale, Lord Tennyson founded his
+poem "The Voyage of Maeldune."</p>
+
+<p>Of the <i>Imrama</i> or voluntary sea expeditions (to which the
+present story belongs) there are, according to O'Curry (Lect. MS.
+Mat. 289), only four remaining, all very ancient. Of these the
+best known is the "Voyage of St. Brendan," undertaken in the sixth
+century, which was at one time celebrated all over Europe, and
+which has been lately made the theme of a fine poem by Denis
+Florence M<sup>c</sup>Carthy.</p>
+
+<p>Another of these <i>Imrama</i> is the "Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra,"
+which has been described at some length by Professor O'Curry
+(Lect. MS. Mat. 289). Of this I have a copy which I made from
+the MS. 23. M. 50, Royal Irish Academy (and which I afterwards
+carefully compared with another copy lent me by my friend, Mr. W.
+M. Hennessy). I made a translation of this story, intending to
+print it in the present volume; but as there is a much older and
+better copy in the ancient "Book of Fermoy," which I had not
+time to consult in detail, I have thought it better to hold back for
+the present the strange adventures of the sons of O'Corra. A
+beautiful poetical translation of the whole tale has been made by
+Mr. T.D. Sullivan of Dublin, and published in his volume of Poems.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.</p>
+
+<p>The "Bruighean Caerthainn," or "The Fairy Palace of the
+Quicken Trees," which is now translated for the first time, is one of
+the most popular of the Gaelic romances. I had three of the Royal
+Irish Academy MSS. before me when translating it&mdash;viz., 23. C. 30,
+transcribed in 1733, by the Irish writer and lexicographer, Andrew
+Mac Curtin of the county Clare; 24. B. 15, written in 1841; and
+23. L. 24, copied in 1766, by Dermot O'Mulqueen of the county
+Clare.</p>
+
+<p>This is one of a type of stories very common in Gaelic romantic
+literature:&mdash;One or more of the heroes are entrapped by some
+enchanter and held under a spell in a castle, or a cave, or a
+dungeon; till, after a series of adventures, they are released by the
+bravery or mother-wit of some of their companions. "The Chase
+of Slieve Fuad" and "The Chase of Slieve Cullinn" are two other
+examples of this class of Gaelic tales.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.</p>
+
+<p>This is a humorous story of a trick&mdash;a very serious practical
+joke&mdash;played by Avarta, a Dedannan enchanter, on sixteen of the
+Fena, whom he carried off to "The Land of Promise;" and of the
+adventures of Finn, Dermat O'Dyna, and the others, in their pursuit
+of Avarta (who had taken the shape of the Gilla Dacker) to recover
+their companions. It may be regarded as belonging to the same
+class as the last story.</p>
+
+<p>O'Curry described the opening of this tale in his Lectures
+(MS. Mat. 316); and he was the first, so far as I know, to draw
+attention to it. I think it strange that such a story should not
+have been noticed before by writers on Gaelic literature; for as a
+work of imagination, it seems to me a marvellous and very beautiful
+creation.</p>
+
+<p>The battles fought by the king of Sorca, aided by Finn and his
+Fena, against the King of the World, are described at much length
+in the original; but I have cut them down to a very short compass;
+and I have omitted altogether a long episode towards the end,
+which travels away from the main story.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This tale has never been translated till now. I translated it
+chiefly from the Royal Irish Academy MS., 24. B. 28, a well-written
+manuscript, which was copied out by Edmond Terry, in
+1728: but I kept another good copy beside me for comparison,
+viz., that contained in the Royal Irish Academy MS., 23. G. 21,
+written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan of Cork, father of Mr.
+Joseph O'Longan, now the Irish scribe in the Royal Irish Academy,
+and the transcriber in fac-simile of "Leabhar na h-Uidhre,"
+"Leabhar Breac," and "Leabhar Laighneach."</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.</p>
+
+<p>This tale is one of those mentioned in the list contained in the
+Book of Leinster, which was written about <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1130 (<a href="#Footnote_I._29">see note,
+page iv.</a>); but though this proves the tale to be an ancient one,
+I have never come across a copy older than the last century.</p>
+
+<p>"The Pursuit of Dermat and Grania" has been published, with
+text and a very racy idiomatic literal translation, by Mr. Standish
+Hayes O'Grady, in the Transactions of the Ossianic Society for
+1855, from a comparison of two manuscripts, one of 1780 and the
+other of 1842. In addition to Mr. O'Grady's published text, I made
+use of another good copy (MS. Royal Irish Academy, 23. G. 21)
+written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan, already spoken of.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot help believing that this fine story originally ended with
+the death of Dermat; though in all the current versions (including
+Mr. O'Grady's printed text) there is an additional part recounting
+the further proceedings of Grania and her sons, after the death of
+the hero. But this part is in every respect inferior to the rest&mdash;in
+language, in feeling, and in play of imagination. It seems to me
+very clear that it was patched on to the original story by some
+unskilful hand; and I have accordingly omitted it, and ended the
+story with the death of Dermat. I have also omitted two short
+episodes&mdash;that of the <i>cnumh</i> or reptile of Corca Divna, as a mere
+excrescence; and Finn's expedition to Scotland for aid against
+Dermat. And, for the sake of clearness, I have slightly changed
+the place of that part of the tale which recounts the origin of
+the Fairy Quicken Tree of Dooros. There are one or two other
+trifling but very necessary modifications, which need not be
+mentioned here.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN: THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD: OISIN IN TIRNANOGE.</p>
+
+<p>In the original Gaelic these are three poetical tales. All three
+have been printed, with Gaelic text and literal translation, in the
+Transactions of the Ossianic Society: the two first by the late
+John O'Daly, and "Oisin in Tirnanoge" by Professor O'Looney.
+There are many good copies of these tales in the manuscripts of
+the Royal Irish Academy; though of not one of them have I seen
+a copy older than the last century.</p>
+
+<p>"The Chase of Slieve Cullinn" (commonly known as "The
+Poem of the Chase") has been translated into English verse by
+Miss Brooke; and there is another metrical translation in the <i>Irish
+Penny Journal</i> (page 93). And of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," Mr. T.D.
+Sullivan has given a graceful poetical rendering in his volume of
+Poems, already mentioned.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2 b1">PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.</p>
+
+<p>In this edition there is an additional tale, "The
+Fate of the Sons of Usna," a notice of which will
+be found at <a href="#Page_x">page x</a>, above.</p>
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 50%;"><p class="center p2 b1"><span class="smcap">Lyre-na-Grena, Leinster Road,
+Rathmines, 1907.</span></p>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="table of contents">
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_LIR"><span class="smcap">The Fate of the Children of Lir; or, The Four White Swans.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left">CHAPTER</td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">Bove Derg chosen King of the Dedannans,</td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">The Children of Lir,</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">The Four Children of Lir are turned into Four White Swans by their Stepmother,</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">The Four White Swans on Lake Darvra,</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">The Four White Swans on the Sea of Moyle,</td><td align="right">18</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">The Four White Swans on the Western Sea,</td><td align="right">26</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ACHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">The Children of Lir regain their Human Shape and die,</td><td align="right">32</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_TURENN"><span class="smcap">The Fate of the Children of Turenn; or, The Quest for the Eric-Fine.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">The Lochlanns invade Erin,</td><td align="right">37</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">The Murder of Kian,</td><td align="right">42</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">Defeat and Flight of the Lochlanns,</td><td align="right">47</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">The Eric-Fine on the Sons of Turenn for the Slaying of Kian,</td><td align="right">51</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">The Sons of Turenn obtain Mannanan's Canoe, the Wave-Sweeper,</td><td align="right">60</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">The Apples of the Garden of Hisberna,</td><td align="right">63</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">The Gifted Skin of the Pig,</td><td align="right">67</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Blazing Spear of the King of Persia,</td><td align="right">71</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td align="left">The Chariot and Steeds of the King of Sigar,</td><td align="right">74<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td align="left">The Seven Pigs of the King of the Golden Pillars,</td><td align="right">78</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td><td align="left">The Hound-Whelp of the King of Iroda,</td><td align="right">81</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td><td align="left">Return of the Sons of Turenn, with part of the Eric-Fine,</td><td align="right">84</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Cooking-Spit of the Women of Fincara,</td><td align="right">87</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td><td align="left">The Three Shouts on Midkena's Hill,</td><td align="right">89</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#BCHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td><td align="left">Return and Death of the Sons of Turenn,</td><td align="right">91</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_OVERFLOWING_OF_LOUGH_NEAGH_AND_THE_STORY_OF_LIBAN_THE_MERMAID"><span class="smcap">The Overflowing of Lough Neagh, and the Story of Liban the Mermaid.</span></a></td><td align="right">97</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#CONNLA_OF_THE_GOLDEN_HAIR_AND_THE_FAIRY_MAIDEN"><span class="smcap">Connla of the Golden Hair and the Fairy Maiden.</span></a></td><td align="right">106</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_VOYAGE_OF_MAILDUN"><span class="smcap">The Voyage of Maildun.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">Maildun's Childhood and Youth. He begins his Voyage in Quest of the Plunderers who slew his Father,</td><td align="right">112</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">The First Island. Tidings of the Plunderers,</td><td align="right">117</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">The Island of the Monstrous Ants,</td><td align="right">119</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">The Terraced Isle of Birds,</td><td align="right">120</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">A Monster,</td><td align="right">121</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">The Demon Horse-Race,</td><td align="right">122</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">The Palace of Solitude,</td><td align="right">124</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Island of the Wonderful Apple Tree,</td><td align="right">125</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td align="left">The Island of Bloodthirsty Quadrupeds,</td><td align="right">126</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td align="left">An Extraordinary Monster,</td><td align="right">127</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of Red-Hot Animals,</td><td align="right">129</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td><td align="left">The Palace of the Little Cat,</td><td align="right">131</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td><td align="left">An Island that dyed Black and White,</td><td align="right">133</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td><td align="left">The Island of the Burning River,</td><td align="right">135</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td><td align="left">The Miller of Hell,</td><td align="right">136</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of Weeping,</td><td align="right">137</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of the Four Precious Walls,</td><td align="right">139</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Palace of the Crystal Bridge,</td><td align="right">139</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of Speaking Birds,</td><td align="right">143</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XX">XX.</a></td><td align="left">The Aged Hermit and the Human Souls,</td><td align="right">143</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXI">XXI.</a></td><td align="left">The Island of the Big Blacksmiths,</td><td align="right">145</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXII">XXII.</a></td><td align="left">The Crystal Sea,</td><td align="right">147</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII.</a></td><td align="left">A Lovely Country beneath the Waves,</td><td align="right">147<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[xix]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXIV">XXIV.</a></td><td align="left">An Island guarded by a Wall of Water,</td><td align="right">148</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXV">XXV.</a></td><td align="left">A Water-Arch in the Air,</td><td align="right">149</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXVI">XXVI.</a></td><td align="left">The Silver Pillar of the Sea,</td><td align="right">150</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXVII">XXVII.</a></td><td align="left">An Island standing on One Pillar,</td><td align="right">151</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXVIII">XXVIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Island Queen detains them with her Magic Thread-Clew,</td><td align="right">152</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXIX">XXIX.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of Intoxicating Wine-Fruits,</td><td align="right">156</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXX">XXX.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of the Mystic Lake,</td><td align="right">157</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXXI">XXXI.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of Laughing,</td><td align="right">163</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXXII">XXXII.</a></td><td align="left">The Isle of the Blest,</td><td align="right">164</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXXIII">XXXIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Hermit of the Sea-Rock,</td><td align="right">164</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXXIV">XXXIV.</a></td><td align="left">Signs of Home,</td><td align="right">174</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#CCHAPTER_XXXV">XXXV.</a></td><td align="left">Maildun meets his Enemy, and arrives Home,</td><td align="right">175</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_FAIRY_PALACE_OF_THE_QUICKEN_TREES"><span class="smcap">The Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">Colga, King of Lochlann, invades Erin, and is slain,</td><td align="right">177</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">Midac, the Son of Colga, meditates Revenge,</td><td align="right">181</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">Finn is entrapped by Midac, and held by Enchantment in the Palace of the Quicken Trees,</td><td align="right">189</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">Innsa, Finn's Foster Son, defends the Ford leading to the Palace of the Quicken Trees,</td><td align="right">196</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">Ficna, the Son of Finn, defends the Ford,</td><td align="right">203</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">Dermat O'Dyna slays the Three Kings of the Island of the Torrent, breaks the Spell with their Blood, and frees Finn,</td><td align="right">213</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#DCHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">The Fight at the Ford with the Foreign Army,</td><td align="right">219</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_PURSUIT_OF_THE_GILLA_DACKER"><span class="smcap">The Pursuit of the Gilla Dacker and his Horse.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">Arrival of the Gilla Dacker and his Horse,</td><td align="right">223</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">Conan and Fifteen of the Fena are carried off by the Gilla Dacker's Horse,</td><td align="right">235</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">Pursuit,</td><td align="right">239</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">Dermat O'Dyna, in Quest of the Gilla Dacker, encounters the Wizard-Champion at the Well,</td><td align="right">245</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">Dermat O'Dyna in Tir-fa-tonn,</td><td align="right">253</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">Finn, in Quest of Dermat, fights many Battles,</td><td align="right">259</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">Finn and Dermat meet,</td><td align="right">265</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ECHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align="left">Conan and his Companions found and rescued,</td><td align="right">267<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[xx]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_PURSUIT_OF_DERMAT_AND_GRANIA"><span class="smcap">The Pursuit of Dermat and Grania.</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td align="left">Finn, the Son of Cumal, seeks the Princess Grania to Wife,</td><td align="right">274</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td align="left">Dermat O'Dyna secretly espouses the Princess Grania,</td><td align="right">277</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td align="left">Flight and Pursuit,</td><td align="right">285</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td align="left">The Fastness of the Seven Narrow Doors,</td><td align="right">289</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td align="left">The Three Sea-Champions and their Three Venomous Hounds on the Track of Dermat and Grania,</td><td align="right">296</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td align="left">What Befell the Three Sea-Champions and their Three Venomous Hounds,</td><td align="right">305</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td align="left">Sharvan, the Surly Giant, and the Fairy Quicken Tree of Dooros,</td><td align="right">313</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td align="left">The Attack of the Witch-Hag,</td><td align="right">330</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td align="left">Peace and Rest at Last,</td><td align="right">332</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#FCHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td align="left">The Death of Dermat,</td><td align="right">334</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_CULLINN"><span class="smcap">The Chase of Slieve Cullinn,</span></a></td><td align="right">351</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_FUAD"><span class="smcap">The Chase of Slieve Fuad,</span></a></td><td align="right">362</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#OISIN_IN_TIRNANOGECXLIX"><span class="smcap">Oisin in Tirnanoge; or, The Last of the Fena,</span></a></td><td align="right">385</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_VOYAGE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_OCORRACLV"><span class="smcap">The Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra,</span></a></td><td align="right">400</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#THE_FATE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_USNACLXIX"><span class="smcap">The Fate of the Sons of Usna,</span></a></td><td align="right">427</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#NOTES"><span class="smcap">Notes,</span></a></td><td align="right">455</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#LIST_OF_PROPER_NAMES"><span class="smcap">List of Proper Names,</span></a></td><td align="right">471</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right"></td><td align="left"><a href="#FOOTNOTES"><span class="smcap">Footnotes,</span></a></td><td align="right"></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_LIR" id="THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_LIR"></a>THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR;<br />
+
+<span class="small">OR,</span><br />
+
+<i>THE FOUR WHITE SWANS.</i></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Silent, O Moyle, be the roar of thy water;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Break not, ye breezes, your chain of repose;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While murmuring mournfully, Lir's lonely daughter<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Tells to the night-star her tale of woes.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza right">
+<span class="smcap">Moore.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_I" id="ACHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">BOVE DERG CHOSEN KING OF THE DEDANNANS.</p>
+
+
+<p>After the battle of Tailltenn,<a name="FNanchor_VII._35" id="FNanchor_VII._35"></a><a href="#Footnote_VII._35" class="fnanchor">[VII.]</a> the Dedannans<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><a name="FNanchor_VIII._36" id="FNanchor_VIII._36"></a><a href="#Footnote_VIII._36" class="fnanchor">[VIII.]</a> of
+the five provinces of Erin assembled in one place of
+meeting, to consider on their state, and to choose
+a king. For their chiefs said it was better for them
+to have one king over all, than to be divided, as
+they were, serving sundry lords and princes.</p>
+
+<p>Now of those who expected the sovereignty for
+themselves, the following chiefs were the noblest,
+namely:&mdash;Bove Derg,<a name="FNanchor_IX._37" id="FNanchor_IX._37"></a><a href="#Footnote_IX._37" class="fnanchor">[IX.]</a> son of the Dagda; his brother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+Angus, of Bruga on the Boyne, who, however, had no
+earnest wish to become king, preferring to remain as
+he was; Ilbrec of Assaroe; Lir of Shee Finnaha; and
+Midir the Haughty of Bri-Leth.<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then the chief people went into council, all except
+the five above named; and the decision they came to
+was to elect Bove Derg, son of the Dagda, king over
+the whole of the Dedannan race. When the election
+was made known, none of those who were disappointed
+took the matter to heart except Lir of Shee Finnaha
+alone. And when Lir found that the chiefs had
+chosen Bove Derg, he was greatly offended, and
+straightway left the assembly in anger, without
+taking leave of any one, and without showing any
+mark of respect or obedience to the new king.</p>
+
+<p>When the chiefs heard this, they were wroth; and
+they said they would follow him to Shee Finnaha,<a name="FNanchor_X._38" id="FNanchor_X._38"></a><a href="#Footnote_X._38" class="fnanchor">[X.]</a>
+and slay him with spear and sword, and burn his
+house, because he did not yield obedience to the king
+they had elected in lawful council.</p>
+
+<p>But Bove Derg would not permit them to do so.
+"This man," he said, "will defend his territory, and
+many will be slain; and I am none the less your king,
+although he has not submitted to me."</p>
+
+<p>Matters remained so for a long time. But at last
+a great misfortune happened to Lir, for his wife died
+after an illness of three days. This weighed heavily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+on him, and his heart was weary with sorrow after
+her. Her death, moreover, was a great event at that
+time, and was much spoken of throughout Erin.</p>
+
+<p>When the tidings reached the mansion of Bove
+Derg, where the chief men of the Dedannans were
+then assembled, the king said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"As Lir's wife is now dead, my friendship would
+be of service to him, if he were willing to accept it.
+For I have in my house three maidens, the most
+beautiful and the best instructed in all Erin, namely,
+Eve, Eva, and Alva, my own foster children, and
+daughters of Allil of Ara."<a name="FNanchor_XI._39" id="FNanchor_XI._39"></a><a href="#Footnote_XI._39" class="fnanchor">[XI.]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Dedannans agreed to this, and said that their
+king had spoken wisely and truly.</p>
+
+<p>Messengers were accordingly sent to Lir, and they
+were told to say to him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If thou art willing to submit to the king, he will
+give thee for a wife one of his three foster children;
+and thou shalt have his friendship for ever."</p>
+
+<p>It was pleasing to Lir to make this alliance; and
+accordingly he set out next day from Shee Finnaha
+with a company of fifty chariots; and they never
+halted or turned aside till they reached the palace of
+Bove Derg, on the shore of the Great Lake.<a name="FNanchor_XII._40" id="FNanchor_XII._40"></a><a href="#Footnote_XII._40" class="fnanchor">[XII.]</a> Their
+arrival gave much joy and happiness to the king and
+his household; for although Lir did not submit at first
+to Bove Derg, he was a good man, and was greatly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+beloved by the king himself and by all his subjects.
+So Lir and his followers got a kindly welcome;
+and they were supplied with everything necessary,
+and were well attended to that night.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, the three daughters of Allil of Ara sat
+on the same couch with the queen their foster mother;
+and the king said to Lir&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Take thy choice of the three maidens, and whichever
+thou choosest, she shall be thy wife."</p>
+
+<p>"They are all beautiful," said Lir, "and I cannot
+tell which of them is best; but I will take the eldest,
+for she must be the noblest of the three."</p>
+
+<p>Then the king said, "Eve is the eldest, and she
+shall be given to thee if it be thy wish."</p>
+
+<p>So Lir chose Eve for his wife, and they were
+wedded that day.</p>
+
+<p>Lir remained a fortnight in the king's palace, and
+then departed with his wife to his own house, Shee
+Finnaha, where he celebrated his marriage by a great
+royal wedding feast.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_II" id="ACHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE CHILDREN OF LIR.</p>
+
+
+<p>In course of time, Lir's wife bore him two children
+at a birth, a daughter and a son, whose names were
+Finola and Aed. A second time she brought forth
+twins, two sons, who were named Ficra and Conn:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+and she died in giving them birth. This was a cause
+of great anguish to Lir; and he would almost have
+died of grief, only that his mind was turned from his
+sorrow by his great love for his four little children.</p>
+
+<p>When the news of Eve's death reached the
+mansion of Bove Derg, the king was in deep grief,
+and the people of his household raised three great
+cries of lamentation for her. And when their mourning
+was ended, the king said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We grieve for our foster child, both on her own
+account, and for the sake of the good man to whom
+we gave her; for we are thankful for his alliance
+and his friendship. But our acquaintance shall not
+be ended, and our alliance shall not be broken; for
+I will give him her sister to wife, my second foster
+child, Eva."</p>
+
+<p>Messengers were sent to Lir to Shee Finnaha, to tell
+him of this; and he consented. So after some time he
+came to the king's house to espouse her, and they
+were united; and he brought her home with him to
+his own house.</p>
+
+<p>The four children grew up under Eva's care. She
+nursed them with great tenderness, and her love for
+them increased every day. They slept near their
+father; and he would often rise from his own bed at
+the dawn of morning, and go to their beds, to talk
+with them and to fondle them.</p>
+
+<p>The king, Bove Derg, loved them almost as well as
+did their father. He went many times every year to
+Shee Finnaha to see them; and he used to bring them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+often to his palace, where he kept them as long as he
+could on each occasion, and he always felt sad when
+he sent them home.</p>
+
+<p>At this time, too, the Dedannans used to celebrate
+the Feast of Age<a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> at the houses of their chiefs by
+turns; and whenever it happened that the festival
+was held at Shee Finnaha, these children were the
+delight and joy of the Dedannans. For nowhere
+could four lovelier children be found; so that those
+who saw them were always delighted with their beauty
+and their gentleness, and could not help loving them
+with their whole heart.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_III" id="ACHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FOUR CHILDREN OF LIR ARE TURNED INTO FOUR
+WHITE SWANS BY THEIR STEPMOTHER.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now when Eva saw that the children of Lir
+received such attention and affection from their
+father, and from all others that came to his house, she
+fancied she was neglected on their account; and a
+poisonous dart of jealousy entered her heart, which
+turned her love to hatred; and she began to have
+feelings of bitter enmity for her sister's children.</p>
+
+<p>Her jealousy so preyed on her that she feigned
+illness, and lay in bed for nearly a year, filled with
+gall and brooding mischief; and at the end of that
+time she committed a foul and cruel deed of treachery
+on the children of Lir.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One day she ordered her horses to be yoked to
+her chariot, and she set out for the palace of Bove
+Derg, bringing the four children with her.</p>
+
+<p>Finola did not wish to go, for it was revealed to
+her darkly in a dream that Eva was bent on some
+dreadful deed of fratricide;<a name="FNanchor_XIII._41" id="FNanchor_XIII._41"></a><a href="#Footnote_XIII._41" class="fnanchor">[XIII.]</a> and she knew well that
+her stepmother intended to kill her and her brothers
+that day, or in some other way to bring ruin on them.
+But she was not able to avoid the fate that awaited
+her.</p>
+
+<p>When they had gone some distance from Shee
+Finnaha on their way to the palace, Eva tried to
+persuade her attendants to kill the children. "Kill
+them, and you shall be rewarded with all the worldly
+wealth you may desire; for their father loves me no
+longer, and has neglected and forsaken me on account
+of his great love for these children."</p>
+
+<p>But they heard her with horror, and refused,
+saying, "We will not kill them. Fearful is the deed
+thou hast contemplated, O Eva; and evil will surely
+befall thee for having even thought of killing them."</p>
+
+<p>Then she took the sword to slay them herself; but
+her woman's weakness prevented her, and she was not
+able to strike them.</p>
+
+<p>So they set out once more, and fared on till they
+came to the shore of Lake Darvra,<a name="FNanchor_XIV._42" id="FNanchor_XIV._42"></a><a href="#Footnote_XIV._42" class="fnanchor">[XIV.]</a> where they
+alighted, and the horses were unyoked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p><p>She led the children to the edge of the lake, and
+told them to go to bathe; and as soon as they had
+got into the clear water, she struck them one by one
+with a druidical<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> fairy wand, and turned them into
+four beautiful snow-white swans. And she addressed
+them in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Out to your home, ye swans, on Darvra's wave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With clamorous birds begin your life of gloom:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your friends shall weep your fate, but none can save;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For I've pronounced the dreadful words of doom.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After this, the four children of Lir turned their
+faces to their stepmother; and Finola spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Evil is the deed thou hast done, O Eva; thy
+friendship to us has been a friendship of treachery;
+and thou hast ruined us without cause. But the deed
+will be avenged; for the power of thy witchcraft is
+not greater than the druidical power of our friends to
+punish thee; and the doom that awaits thee shall be
+worse than ours."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our stepmother loved us long ago;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our stepmother now has wrought us woe:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With magical wand and fearful words,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She changed us to beautiful snow-white birds;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we live on the waters for evermore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By tempests driven from shore to shore.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Finola again spoke and said, "Tell us now how
+long we shall be in the shape of swans, so that we
+may know when our miseries shall come to an end."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be better for you if you had not put
+that question," said Eva; "but I shall declare the
+truth to you, as you have asked me. Three hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+years on smooth Lake Darvra; three hundred years on
+the Sea of Moyle, between Erin and Alban;<a name="FNanchor_XV._43" id="FNanchor_XV._43"></a><a href="#Footnote_XV._43" class="fnanchor">[XV.]</a> three
+hundred years at Irros Domnann and Inis Glora<a name="FNanchor_XVI._44" id="FNanchor_XVI._44"></a><a href="#Footnote_XVI._44" class="fnanchor">[XVI.]</a> on
+the Western Sea. Until the union of Largnen, the
+prince from the north, with Decca, the princess from
+the south; until the Taillkenn<a name="FNanchor_XVII._45" id="FNanchor_XVII._45"></a><a href="#Footnote_XVII._45" class="fnanchor">[XVII.]</a> shall come to Erin,
+bringing the light of a pure faith; and until ye hear
+the voice of the Christian bell. And neither by your
+own power, nor by mine, nor by the power of your
+friends, can ye be freed till the time comes."</p>
+
+<p>Then Eva repented what she had done; and she
+said, "Since I cannot afford you any other relief,
+I will allow you to keep your own Gaelic speech; and
+ye shall be able to sing sweet, plaintive, fairy music,
+which shall excel all the music of the world, and
+which shall lull to sleep all that listen to it. Moreover,
+ye shall retain your human reason; and ye shall
+not be in grief on account of being in the shape of
+swans."</p>
+
+<p>And she chanted this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Depart from me, ye graceful swans;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The waters are now your home:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your palace shall be the pearly cave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your couch the crest of the crystal wave,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">And your mantle the milk-white foam!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Depart from me, ye snow-white swans<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With your music and Gaelic speech:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The crystal Darvra, the wintry Moyle,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The billowy margin of Glora's isle;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Three hundred years on each!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Victorious Lir, your hapless sire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His lov'd ones in vain shall call;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His weary heart is a husk of gore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His home is joyless for evermore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And his anger on me shall fall!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Through circling ages of gloom and fear<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Your anguish no tongue can tell;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till Faith shall shed her heavenly rays,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till ye hear the Taillkenn's anthem of praise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And the voice of the Christian bell!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Then ordering her steeds to be yoked to her chariot
+she departed westwards, leaving the four white swans
+swimming on the lake.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our father shall watch and weep in vain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He never shall see us return again.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Four pretty children, happy at home;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Four white swans on the feathery foam;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we live on the waters for evermore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By tempests driven from shore to shore.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_IV" id="ACHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON LAKE DARVRA.</p>
+
+
+<p>When Eva arrived at the house of Bove Derg, the
+chiefs bade her welcome; and the king asked her why
+she had not brought the Children of Lir to him.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Because," she replied, "Lir no longer loves thee;
+and he does not wish to intrust his children to thee,
+lest thou shouldst harm them."</p>
+
+<p>The king was greatly astonished and troubled at
+this, and he said, "How can that be? For I love
+those children better than I love my own."</p>
+
+<p>But he thought in his own mind that Eva had
+played some treachery on them. And he sent messengers
+with all speed northwards to Shee Finnaha,
+to inquire for the children, and to ask that they might
+be sent to him.</p>
+
+<p>When the messengers had told their errand, Lir
+was startled; and he asked, "Have the children not
+reached the palace with Eva?"</p>
+
+<p>They answered, "Eva arrived alone, and she told
+the king that you refused to let the children come."</p>
+
+<p>A sad and sorrowful heart had Lir when he heard
+this; and he now felt sure that Eva had destroyed his
+four lovely children. So, early next morning, his
+chariot was yoked for him, and he set out with
+his attendants for the king's palace; and they travelled
+with all speed till they arrived at the shore of Lake
+Darvra.</p>
+
+<p>The children of Lir saw the cavalcade approaching;
+and Finola spoke these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I see a mystic warrior band<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From yonder brow approach the strand;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see them winding down the vale,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Their bending chariots slow advancing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see their shields and gilded mail,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">Their spears and helmets brightly glancing.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ah! well I know that proud array;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I know too well their thoughts to-day:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Dannan host and royal Lir;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Four rosy children they are seeking:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Too soon, alas! they find us here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Four snowy swans like children speaking!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come, brothers dear, approach the coast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To welcome Lir's mysterious host.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh, woful welcome! woful day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That never brings a bright to-morrow!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Unhappy father, doomed for aye<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To mourn our fate in hopeless sorrow!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When Lir came to the shore, he heard the birds
+speaking, and, wondering greatly, he asked them how
+it came to pass that they had human voices.</p>
+
+<p>"Know, O Lir," said Finola, "that we are thy four
+children, who have been changed into swans and
+ruined by the witchcraft of our stepmother, our own
+mother's sister, Eva, through her baleful jealousy."</p>
+
+<p>When Lir and his people heard this, they uttered
+three long mournful cries of grief and lamentation.</p>
+
+<p>After a time, their father asked them, "Is it possible
+to restore you to your own shapes?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not possible," replied Finola; "no man has
+the power to release us until Largnen from the north
+and Decca from the south are united. Three hundred
+years we shall be on Lake Darvra; three hundred
+years on the sea-stream of Moyle; three hundred
+years on the Sea of Glora in the west. And we shall
+not regain our human shape till the Taillkenn come
+with his pure faith into Erin, and until we hear the
+voice of the Christian bell."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And again the people raised three great cries of
+sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>"As you have your speech and your reason," said
+Lir, "come now to land, and ye shall live at home,
+conversing with me and my people."</p>
+
+<p>"We are not permitted to leave the waters of the
+lake, and we cannot live with our people any more.
+But the wicked Eva has allowed us to retain our
+human reason, and our own Gaelic speech; and we have
+also the power to chant plaintive, fairy music, so sweet
+that those who listen to us would never desire any
+other happiness. Remain with us to-night, and we
+will chant our music for you."</p>
+
+<p>Lir and his people remained on the shore of the
+lake; and the swans sang their slow, fairy music,
+which was so sweet and sad, that the people, as they
+listened, fell into a calm, gentle sleep.</p>
+
+<p>At the glimmer of dawn next morning, Lir arose,
+and he bade farewell to his children for a while, to
+seek out Eva.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The time has come for me to part:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No more, alas! my children dear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Your rosy smiles shall glad my heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or light the gloomy home of Lir.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Dark was the day when first I brought<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This Eva in my home to dwell!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hard was the woman's heart that wrought<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This cruel and malignant spell!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I lay me down to rest in vain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For, through the livelong, sleepless night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My little lov'd ones, pictured plain,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">Stand ever there before my sight.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Finola, once my pride and joy;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Dark Aed, adventurous and bold;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bright Ficra, gentle, playful boy;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And little Conn, with curls of gold;&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Struck down on Darvra's reedy shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By wicked Eva's magic power:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh, children, children, never more<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My heart shall know one peaceful hour!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lir then departed, and travelled south-west till he
+arrived at the king's palace, where he was welcomed;
+and Bove Derg began to reproach him, in presence of
+Eva, for not bringing the children.</p>
+
+<p>"Alas!" said Lir; "it was not by me that the
+children were prevented from coming. But Eva,
+your own foster child, the sister of their mother, has
+played treachery on them; and has changed them by
+her sorcery into four white swans on Lake Darvra."</p>
+
+<p>The king was confounded and grieved at this
+news; and when he looked at Eva, he knew by her
+countenance that what Lir had told him was true;
+and he began to upbraid her in a fierce and angry
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"The wicked deed thou hast committed," said he,
+"will be worse for thee than for the children of Lir;
+for their suffering shall come to an end, and they shall
+be happy at last."</p>
+
+<p>Again he spoke to her more fiercely than before;
+and he asked her what shape of all others, on the
+earth, or above the earth, or beneath the earth, she
+most abhorred, and into which she most dreaded to be
+transformed.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And she, being forced to answer truly, said, "A
+demon of the air."<a name="FNanchor_XVIII._46" id="FNanchor_XVIII._46"></a><a href="#Footnote_XVIII._46" class="fnanchor">[XVIII.]</a></p>
+
+<p>"That is the form you shall take," said Bove Derg;
+and as he spoke he struck her with a druidical magic
+wand, and turned her into a demon of the air.
+She opened her wings, and flew with a scream upwards
+and away through the clouds; and she is still
+a demon of the air, and she shall be a demon of the
+air till the end of time.</p>
+
+<p>Then Bove Derg and the Dedannans assembled on
+the shore of the lake, and encamped there; for they
+wished to remain with the birds, and to listen to their
+music. The Milesian people<a name="FNanchor_XIX._47" id="FNanchor_XIX._47"></a><a href="#Footnote_XIX._47" class="fnanchor">[XIX.]</a> came and formed an
+encampment there in like manner; for historians say
+that no music that was ever heard in Erin could be
+compared with the singing of these swans.</p>
+
+<p>And so the swans passed their time. During the
+day they conversed with the men of Erin, both
+Dedannans and Milesians, and discoursed lovingly
+with their friends and fellow nurselings; and at night
+they chanted their slow, sweet, fairy music, the most
+delightful that was ever heard by men; so that all
+who listened to it, even those who were in grief, or
+sickness, or pain, forgot their sorrows and their sufferings,
+and fell into a gentle, sweet sleep, from which
+they awoke bright and happy.</p>
+
+<p>So they continued, the Dedannans and the Milesians,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+in their encampments, and the swans on the
+lake, for three hundred years.<a name="FNanchor_XX._48" id="FNanchor_XX._48"></a><a href="#Footnote_XX._48" class="fnanchor">[XX.]</a> And at the end of that
+time, Finola said to her brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, my dear brothers, that we have
+come to the end of our time here; and that we have
+only this one night to spend on Lake Darvra?"</p>
+
+<p>When the three sons of Lir heard this, they were
+in great distress and sorrow; for they were almost as
+happy on Lake Darvra, surrounded by their friends,
+and conversing with them day by day, as if they had
+been in their father's house in their own natural
+shapes; whereas they should now live on the gloomy
+and tempestuous Sea of Moyle, far away from all
+human society.</p>
+
+<p>Early next morning, they came to the margin of
+the lake, to speak to their Father and their friends
+for the last time, and to bid them farewell; and
+Finola chanted this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">I.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Farewell, farewell, our father dear!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The last sad hour has come:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Farewell, Bove Derg! farewell to all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Till the dreadful day of doom!<a name="FNanchor_XXI._49" id="FNanchor_XXI._49"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXI._49" class="fnanchor">[XXI.]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We go from friends and scenes beloved,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To a home of grief and pain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And that day of woe<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Shall come and go,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">Before we meet again!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">II.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We live for ages on stormy Moyle,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In loneliness and fear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The kindly words of loving friends<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We never more shall hear.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Four joyous children long ago;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Four snow-white swans to-day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And on Moyle's wild sea<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Our robe shall be<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The cold and briny spray.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">III.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Far down on the misty stream of time,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When three hundred years are o'er,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three hundred more in storm and cold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By Glora's desolate shore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till Decca fair is Largnen's spouse;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Till north and south unite;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Till the hymns are sung,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And the bells are rung,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">At the dawn of the pure faith's light.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">IV.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Arise, my brothers, from Darvra's wave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On the wings of the southern wind;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We leave our father and friends to-day<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In measureless grief behind.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ah! sad the parting, and sad our flight<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To Moyle's tempestuous main;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For the day of woe<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Shall come and go,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Before we meet again!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The four swans then spread their wings, and rose
+from the surface of the water in sight of all their
+friends, till they reached a great height in the air,
+then resting, and looking downwards for a moment,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+they flew straight to the north, till they alighted on
+the Sea of Moyle between Erin and Alban.</p>
+
+<p>The men of Erin were grieved at their departure,
+and they made a law, and proclaimed it throughout the
+land, that no one should kill a swan in Erin from that
+time forth.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_V" id="ACHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE SEA OF MOYLE.</p>
+
+
+<p>As to the children of Lir, miserable was their abode
+and evil their plight on the Sea of Moyle. Their
+hearts were wrung with sorrow for their father and
+their friends; and when they looked towards the
+steep, rocky, far-stretching coasts, and saw the great,
+dark wild sea around them, they were overwhelmed
+with fear and despair. They began also to suffer
+from cold and hunger, so that all the hardships they
+had endured on Lake Darvra appeared as nothing
+compared with their suffering on the sea-current of
+Moyle.</p>
+
+<p>And so they lived, till one night a great tempest
+fell upon the sea. Finola, when she saw the sky filled
+with black, threatening clouds, thus addressed her
+brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Beloved brothers, we have made a bad preparation
+for this night; for it is certain that the coming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+storm will separate us; and now let us appoint a
+place of meeting, or it may happen that we shall never
+see each other again."</p>
+
+<p>And they answered, "Dear sister, you speak truly
+and wisely; and let us fix on Carricknarone, for that
+is a rock that we are all very well acquainted with."</p>
+
+<p>And they appointed Carricknarone as their place
+of meeting.</p>
+
+<p>Midnight came, and with it came the beginning of
+the storm. A wild, rough wind swept over the dark
+sea, the lightnings flashed, and the great waves rose,
+and increased their violence and their thunder.</p>
+
+<p>The swans were soon scattered over the waters, so
+that not one of them knew in what direction the others
+had been driven. During all that night they were
+tossed about by the roaring winds and waves, and it
+was with much difficulty they preserved their lives.</p>
+
+<p>Towards morning the storm abated, and the sea
+became again calm and smooth; and Finola swam
+to Carricknarone. But she found none of her brothers
+there, neither could she see any trace of them when
+she looked all round from the summit of the rock over
+the wide face of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Then she became terrified, for she thought she
+should never see them again; and she began to lament
+them plaintively in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The heart-breaking anguish and woe of this life<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I am able no longer to bear:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My wings are benumbed with this pitiless frost;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My three little brothers are scattered and lost;<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i2">And I am left here to despair.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">My three little brothers I never shall see<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Till the dead shall arise from the tomb:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How I sheltered them oft with my wings and my breast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And I soothed their sorrows and lulled them to rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">As the night fell around us in gloom!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ah, where are my brothers, and why have I lived,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">This last worst affliction to know?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What now is there left but a life of despair?&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For alas! I am able no longer to bear<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">This heart-breaking anguish and woe.<a name="FNanchor_XXII._50" id="FNanchor_XXII._50"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXII._50" class="fnanchor">[XXII.]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Soon after this she looked again over the sea, and
+she saw Conn coming towards the rock, with his head
+drooping, and his feathers all drenched with the salt
+spray; and she welcomed him with joyful heart.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after, Ficra appeared, but he was so faint
+with wet and cold and hardship, that he was scarce
+able to reach the place where Finola and Conn were
+standing; and when they spoke to him he could not
+speak one word in return. So Finola placed the two
+under her wings, and she said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If Aed were here now, all would be happy with
+us."</p>
+
+<p>In a little time they saw Aed coming towards
+them, with head erect and feathers all dry and radiant
+and Finola gave him a joyful welcome. She then
+placed him under the feathers of her breast, while
+Conn and Ficra remained under her wings; and she
+said to them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My dear brothers, though ye may think this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+night very bad, we shall have many like it from this
+time forth."</p>
+
+<p>So they continued for a long time on the Sea of
+Moyle, suffering hardships of every kind, till one
+winter night came upon them, of great wind and of
+snow and frost so severe, that nothing they ever before
+suffered could be compared to the misery of that night.
+And Finola uttered these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our life is a life of woe;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">No shelter or rest we find:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How bitterly drives the snow;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">How cold is this wintry wind!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">From the icy spray of the sea,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From the wind of the bleak north east,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I shelter my brothers three,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Under my wings and breast.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our stepmother sent us here,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And misery well we know:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In cold and hunger and fear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our life is a life of woe!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another year passed away on the Sea of Moyle;
+and one night in January, a dreadful frost came down
+on the earth and sea, so that the waters were frozen
+into a solid floor of ice all round them. The swans
+remained on Carricknarone all night, and their feet
+and their wings were frozen to the icy surface, so
+that they had to strive hard to move from their
+places in the morning; and they left the skin of their
+feet, the quills of their wings, and the feathers of
+their breasts clinging to the rock.</p>
+
+<p>"Sad is our condition this night, my beloved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+brothers," said Finola, "for we are forbidden to leave
+the Sea of Moyle; and yet we cannot bear the salt
+water, for when it enters our wounds, I fear we shall
+die of pain."</p>
+
+<p>And she spoke this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our fate is mournful here to-day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our bodies bare and chill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Drenched by the bitter, briny spray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And torn on this rocky hill!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Cruel our stepmother's jealous heart<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That banished us from home;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Transformed to swans by magic art,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To swim the ocean foam.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">This bleak and snowy winter day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our bath is the ocean wide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In thirsty summer's burning ray,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our drink the briny tide.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And here 'mid rugged rocks we dwell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In this tempestuous bay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Four children bound by magic spell;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our fate is sad to-day!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>They were, however, forced to swim out on the
+stream of Moyle, all wounded and torn as they were;
+for though the brine was sharp and bitter, they were
+not able to avoid it. They stayed as near the coast
+as they could, till after a long time the feathers of
+their breasts and wings grew again, and their wounds
+were healed.</p>
+
+<p>After this they lived on for a great number of
+years, sometimes visiting the shores of Erin, and sometimes
+the headlands of Alban. But they always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+returned to the sea-stream of Moyle, for it was destined
+to be their home till the end of three hundred years.</p>
+
+<p>One day they came to the mouth of the Bann,
+on the north coast of Erin, and looking inland, they
+saw a stately troop of horsemen approaching directly
+from the south-west. They were mounted on white
+steeds, and clad in bright-coloured garments, and as
+they wound towards the shore their arms glittered
+in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>"Do ye know yonder cavalcade?" said Finola to
+her brothers.</p>
+
+<p>"We know them not," they replied; "but it is
+likely they are a party of the Milesians, or perchance
+a troop of our own people, the Dedannans."</p>
+
+<p>They swam towards the shore, to find out who
+the strangers were; and the cavalcade on their part,
+when they saw the swans, knew them at once, and
+moved towards them till they were within speaking
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>Now these were a party of the Dedannans; and
+the chiefs who commanded them were the two sons of
+Bove Derg, the Dedannan king, namely, Aed the Keen-witted,
+and Fergus the Chess-player, with a third part
+of the Fairy Host.<a name="FNanchor_XXIII._51" id="FNanchor_XXIII._51"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXIII._51" class="fnanchor">[XXIII.]</a> They had been for a long time
+searching for the children of Lir along the northern
+shores of Erin, and now that they had found them,
+they were joyful; and they and the swans greeted
+each other with tender expressions of friendship and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+love. The children of Lir inquired after the Dedannans,
+and particularly after their father Lir, and
+Bove Derg, and all the rest of their friends and
+acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>"They are all well," replied the chiefs; "and they
+and the Dedannans in general are now gathered
+together in the house of your father, at Shee Finnaha,
+celebrating the Feast of Age,<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> pleasantly and agreeably.
+Their happiness would indeed be complete, only that
+you are not with them, and that they know not where
+you have been since you left Lake Darvra."</p>
+
+<p>"Miserable has been our life since that day," said
+Finola; "and no tongue can tell the suffering and
+sorrow we have endured on the Sea of Moyle."</p>
+
+<p>And she chanted these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ah, happy is Lir's bright home to-day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With mead and music and poet's lay:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But gloomy and cold his children's home,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For ever tossed on the briny foam.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our wreathèd feathers are thin and light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the wind blows keen through the wintry night:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet oft we were robed, long, long ago,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In purple mantles and furs of snow.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">On Moyle's bleak current our food and wine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are sandy sea-weed and bitter brine:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet oft we feasted in days of old,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hazel-mead drank from cups of gold.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our beds are rocks in the dripping caves;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our lullaby song the roar of the waves:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But soft rich couches once we pressed,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i0">And harpers lulled us each night to rest.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Lonely we swim on the billowy main,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through frost and snow, through storm and rain:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alas for the days when round us moved<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The chiefs and princes and friends we loved!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">My little twin brothers beneath my wings<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lie close when the north wind bitterly stings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Aed close nestles before my breast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thus side by side through the night we rest.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Our father's fond kisses, Bove Derg's embrace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The light of Mannanan's<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> godlike face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The love of Angus<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>&mdash;all, all are o'er;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And we live on the billows for evermore!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After this they bade each other farewell, for it was
+not permitted to the children of Lir to remain away
+from the stream of Moyle. As soon as they had
+parted, the Fairy Cavalcade returned to Shee Finnaha,
+where they related to the Dedannan chiefs all that
+had passed, and described the condition of the children
+of Lir. And the chiefs answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is not in our power to help them; but we are
+glad that they are living; and we know that in the
+end the enchantment will be broken, and that they
+will be freed from their sufferings."</p>
+
+<p>As to the children of Lir, they returned to their
+home on the Sea of Moyle, and there they remained
+till they had fulfilled their term of years.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_VI" id="ACHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE WESTERN SEA.</p>
+
+
+<p>And when their three hundred years were ended,
+Finola said to her brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is time for us to leave this place, for our period
+here has come to an end."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The hour has come; the hour has come;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Three hundred years have passed:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We leave this bleak and gloomy home,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And we fly to the west at last!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">We leave for ever the stream of Moyle;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On the clear, cold wind we go;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three hundred years round Glora's isle,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where wintry tempests blow!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">No sheltered home, no place of rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From the tempest's angry blast:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fly, brothers, fly, to the distant west,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For the hour has come at last!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>So the swans left the Sea of Moyle, and flew westward,
+till they reached Irros Domnann and the sea
+round the isle of Glora. There they remained for
+a long time, suffering much from storm and cold, and
+in nothing better off than they were on the Sea of
+Moyle.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced that a young man named Ebric, of
+good family, the owner of a tract of land lying along
+the shore, observed the birds and heard their singing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+He took great delight in listening to their plaintive
+music, and he walked down to the shore almost every
+day, to see them and to converse with them; so that
+he came to love them very much, and they also loved
+him. This young man told his neighbours about the
+speaking swans, so that the matter became noised
+abroad; and it was he who arranged the story, after
+hearing it from themselves, and related it as it is
+related here.</p>
+
+<p>Again their hardships were renewed, and to describe
+what they suffered on the great open Western
+Sea would be only to tell over again the story of their
+life on the Moyle. But one particular night came, of
+frost so hard that the whole face of the sea, from Irros
+Domnann to Achill, was frozen into a thick floor of
+ice; and the snow was driven by a north-west wind.
+On that night it seemed to the three brothers that
+they could not bear their sufferings any longer, and
+they began to utter loud and pitiful complaints.
+Finola tried to console them, but she was not able
+to do so, for they only lamented the more; and then
+she herself began to lament with the others.</p>
+
+<p>After a time, Finola spoke to them and said,
+"My dear brothers, believe in the great and splendid
+God of truth, who made the earth with its fruits, and
+the sea with its wonders; put your trust in Him, and
+He will send you help and comfort."</p>
+
+<p>"We believe in Him," said they.</p>
+
+<p>"And I also," said Finola, "believe in God, who is
+perfect in everything, and who knows all things."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And at the destined hour they all believed, and
+the Lord of heaven sent them help and protection;
+so that neither cold nor tempest molested them from
+that time forth, as long as they abode on the
+Western Sea.</p>
+
+<p>So they continued at the point of Irros Domnann,
+till they had fulfilled their appointed time there. And
+Finola addressed the sons of Lir&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My dear brothers, the end of our time here has
+come; we shall now go to visit our father and our
+people."</p>
+
+<p>And her brothers were glad when they heard this.</p>
+
+<p>Then they rose lightly from the face of the sea,
+and flew eastward with joyful hopes, till they reached
+Shee Finnaha. But when they alighted they found
+the place deserted and solitary, its halls all ruined and
+overgrown with rank grass and forests of nettles;
+no houses, no fire, no mark of human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>Then the four swans drew close together, and they
+uttered three loud mournful cries of sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>And Finola chanted this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">What meaneth this sad, this fearful change,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">That withers my heart with woe?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The house of my father all joyless and lone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its halls and its gardens with weeds overgrown,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">A dreadful and strange overthrow!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">No conquering heroes, no hounds for the chase,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">No shields in array on its walls,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No bright silver goblets, no gay cavalcades,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No youthful assemblies or high-born maids,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i3">To brighten its desolate halls!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">An omen of sadness&mdash;the home of our youth<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">All ruined, deserted, and bare.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alas for the chieftain, the gentle and brave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His glories and sorrows are stilled in the grave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">And we left to live in despair!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">From ocean to ocean, from age unto age,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">We have lived to the fulness of time;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through a life such as men never heard of we've passed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In suffering and sorrow our doom has been cast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">By our stepmother's pitiless crime!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The children of Lir remained that night in the
+ruins of the palace&mdash;the home of their forefathers,
+where they themselves had been nursed; and several
+times during the night they chanted their sad, sweet,
+fairy music.</p>
+
+<p>Early next morning they left Shee Finnaha, and
+flew west to Inis Glora, where they alighted on a
+small lake. There they began to sing so sweetly that
+all the birds of the district gathered in flocks round
+them on the lake, and on its shore, to listen to them;
+so that the little lake came to be called the Lake of
+the Bird-flocks.</p>
+
+<p>During the day the birds used to fly to distant
+points of the coast to feed, now to Iniskea of the
+lonely crane,<a name="FNanchor_XXIV._52" id="FNanchor_XXIV._52"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXIV._52" class="fnanchor">[XXIV.]</a> now to Achill, and sometimes southwards
+to Donn's Sea Rocks,<a name="FNanchor_XXV._53" id="FNanchor_XXV._53"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXV._53" class="fnanchor">[XXV.]</a> and to many other islands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+and headlands along the shore of the Western Sea, but
+they returned to Inis Glora every night.</p>
+
+<p>They lived in this manner till holy Patrick came
+to Erin with the pure faith; and until Saint Kemoc
+came to Inis Glora.</p>
+
+<p>The first night Kemoc came to the island, the
+children of Lir heard his bell at early matin time,
+ringing faintly in the distance. And they trembled
+greatly, and started, and ran wildly about; for the
+sound of the bell was strange and dreadful to them,
+and its tones filled them with great fear. The three
+brothers were more affrighted than Finola, so that she
+was left quite alone; but after a time they came to
+her, and she asked them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, my brothers, what sound is this?"</p>
+
+<p>And they answered, "We have heard a faint,
+fearful voice, but we know not what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"This is the voice of the Christian bell," said
+Finola; "and now the end of our suffering is near;
+for this bell is the signal that we shall soon be freed
+from our spell, and released from our life of suffering;
+for God has willed it."</p>
+
+<p>And she chanted this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Listen, ye swans, to the voice of the bell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The sweet bell we've dreamed of for many a year;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its tones floating by on the night breezes, tell<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">That the end of our long life of sorrow is near!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Listen, ye swans, to the heavenly strain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">'Tis the anchoret tolling his soft matin bell:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He has come to release us from sorrow, from pain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">From the cold and tempestuous shores where we dwell!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Trust in the glorious Lord of the sky;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He will free us from Eva's druidical spell:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Be thankful and glad, for our freedom is nigh,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And listen with joy to the voice of the bell!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Then her brothers became calm; and the four
+swans remained listening to the music of the bell, till
+the cleric had finished his matins.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us sing our music now," said Finola.</p>
+
+<p>And they chanted a low, sweet, plaintive strain of
+fairy music, to praise and thank the great high King
+of heaven and earth.</p>
+
+<p>Kemoc heard the music from where he stood; and
+he listened with great astonishment. But after a
+time it was revealed to him that it was the children
+of Lir who sang that music; and he was glad, for it
+was to seek them he had come.</p>
+
+<p>When morning dawned he came to the shore of
+the lake, and he saw the four white swans swimming
+on the water. He spoke to them, and asked them
+were they the children of Lir.</p>
+
+<p>They replied, "We are indeed the children of
+Lir, who were changed long ago into swans by our
+wicked stepmother."</p>
+
+<p>"I give God thanks that I have found you," said
+Kemoc; "for it is on your account I have come to this
+little island in preference to all the other islands of
+Erin. Come ye now to land, and trust in me; for it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+in this place that you are destined to be freed from
+your enchantment."</p>
+
+<p>So they, filled with joy on hearing the words of
+the cleric, came to the shore, and placed themselves
+under his care. He brought them to his own house,
+and, sending for a skilful workman, he caused him to
+make two bright, slender chains of silver; and he put
+a chain between Finola and Aed, and the other chain
+he put between Ficra and Conn.</p>
+
+<p>So they lived with him, listening to his instructions
+day by day, and joining in his devotions. They
+were the delight and joy of the cleric, and he loved
+them with his whole heart; and the swans were so
+happy that the memory of all the misery they had
+suffered during their long life on the waters caused
+them neither distress nor sorrow now.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ACHAPTER_VII" id="ACHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE CHILDREN OF LIR REGAIN THEIR HUMAN SHAPE
+AND DIE.</p>
+
+
+<p>The king who ruled over Connaught at this time was
+Largnen, the son of Colman; and his queen was
+Decca, the daughter of Finnin,<a name="FNanchor_XXVI._54" id="FNanchor_XXVI._54"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXVI._54" class="fnanchor">[XXVI.]</a> king of Munster,&mdash;the
+same king and queen whom Eva had spoken of in her
+prophecy long ages before.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+<p>Now word was brought to queen Decca regarding
+these wonderful speaking swans, and their whole
+history was related to her; so that even before she
+saw them, she could not help loving them, and she
+was seized with a strong desire to have them herself.
+So she went to the king, and besought him that he
+would go to Kemoc and get her the swans. But
+Largnen said that he did not wish to ask them from
+Kemoc. Whereupon Decca grew indignant; and she
+declared that she would not sleep another night in the
+palace till he had obtained the swans for her. So
+she left the palace that very hour, and fled southwards
+towards her father's home.</p>
+
+<p>Largnen, when he found she had gone, sent in
+haste after her, with word that he would try to procure
+the swans; but the messengers did not overtake
+her till she had reached Killaloe. However, she returned
+with them to the palace; and as soon as she
+had arrived, the king sent to Kemoc to request that
+he would send the birds to the queen; but Kemoc
+refused to give them.</p>
+
+<p>Largnen became very angry at this; and he set out
+at once for the cleric's house. As soon as he had
+come, he asked the cleric whether it was true that
+he had refused to give the swans to the queen. And
+when Kemoc answered that it was quite true, the
+king, being very wroth, went up to where the swans
+stood, and seizing the two silver chains, one in each
+hand, he drew the birds from the altar, and turned
+towards the door of the church, intending to bring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+them by force to the queen; while Kemoc followed
+him, much alarmed lest they should be injured.</p>
+
+<p>The king had proceeded only a little way, when
+suddenly the white feathery robes faded and disappeared;
+and the swans regained their human shape,
+Finola being transformed into an extremely old woman,
+and the three sons into three feeble old men, white-haired
+and bony and wrinkled.</p>
+
+<p>When the king saw this, he started with affright,
+and instantly left the place without speaking one
+word; while Kemoc reproached and denounced him
+very bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>As to the children of Lir, they turned towards
+Kemoc; and Finola spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come, holy cleric, and baptise us without delay,
+for our death is near. You will grieve after us, O
+Kemoc; but in truth you are not more sorrowful at
+parting from us than we are at parting from you.
+Make our grave here and bury us together; and as I
+often sheltered my brothers when we were swans, so
+let us be placed in the grave&mdash;Conn standing near me
+at my right side, Ficra at my left, and Aed before my
+face."<a name="FNanchor_XXVII._55" id="FNanchor_XXVII._55"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXVII._55" class="fnanchor">[XXVII.]</a></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come, holy priest, with book and prayer;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Baptise and shrive us here:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Haste, cleric, haste, for the hour has come,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i1">And death at last is near!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Dig our grave&mdash;a deep, deep grave,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Near the church we loved so well;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This little church, where first we heard<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The voice of the Christian bell.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">As oft in life my brothers dear<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Were sooth'd by me to rest&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ficra and Conn beneath my wings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And Aed before my breast;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">So place the two on either hand&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Close, like the love that bound me;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Place Aed as close before my face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And twine their arms around me.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thus shall we rest for evermore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My brothers dear and I:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Haste, cleric, haste, baptise and shrive,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For death at last is nigh!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Then the children of Lir were baptised, and they
+died immediately. And when they died, Kemoc
+looked up; and lo, he saw a vision of four lovely
+children, with light, silvery wings, and faces all radiant
+with joy. They gazed on him for a moment; but
+even as they gazed, they vanished upwards, and he
+saw them no more. And he was filled with gladness,
+for he knew they had gone to heaven; but when he
+looked down on the four bodies lying before him, he
+became sad and wept.</p>
+
+<p>And Kemoc caused a wide grave to be dug near
+the little church; and the children of Lir were buried
+together, as Finola had directed&mdash;Conn at her right
+hand, Ficra at her left, and Aed standing before her
+face. And he raised a grave-mound over them, placing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+a tombstone on it, with their names graved in Ogam;<a name="FNanchor_XXVIII._56" id="FNanchor_XXVIII._56"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXVIII._56" class="fnanchor">[XXVIII.]</a>
+after which he uttered a lament for them, and their
+funeral rites were performed.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">So far we have related the sorrowful story of the
+Fate of the Children of Lir.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_TURENN" id="THE_FATE_OF_THE_CHILDREN_OF_TURENN"></a>THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN;<br />
+
+<span class="small">OR,</span><br />
+
+<i>THE QUEST FOR THE ERIC-FINE.</i></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i5">For the blood that we spilled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">For the hero we killed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Toil and woe, toil and woe, till the doom is fulfilled!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_I" id="BCHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE LOCHLANNS INVADE ERIN.</p>
+
+
+<p>When the Dedannans<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> held sway in Erin, a prosperous
+free-born king ruled over them, whose name was
+Nuada of the Silver Hand.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>In the time of this king, the Fomorians,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> from
+Lochlann,<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> in the north, oppressed the Dedannans, and
+forced them to pay heavy tributes; namely, a tax on
+kneading-troughs, a tax on querns, and a tax on
+baking flags; and besides all this, an ounce of gold
+for each man of the Dedannans. These tributes had
+to be paid every year at the Hill of Usna;<a name="FNanchor_XXIX._57" id="FNanchor_XXIX._57"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXIX._57" class="fnanchor">[XXIX.]</a> and if
+any one refused or neglected to pay his part, his nose
+was cut off by the Fomorian tyrants.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
+<p>At this time a great fair-meeting was held by the
+king of Ireland, Nuada of the Silver Hand, on the
+Hill of Usna. Not long had the people been assembled,
+when they saw a stately band of warriors, all
+mounted on white steeds, coming towards them from
+the east; and at their head, high in command over all,
+rode a young champion, tall and comely, with a countenance
+as bright and glorious as the setting sun.</p>
+
+<p>This young warrior was Luga of the Long Arms.<a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
+He was accompanied by his foster brothers, namely,
+the sons of Mannanan Mac Lir; and the troop he led
+was the Fairy Host from the Land of Promise.<a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now in this manner was he arrayed. He rode the
+steed of Mannanan Mac Lir,<a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> namely, Enbarr of the
+Flowing Mane: no warrior was ever killed on the
+back of this steed, for she was as swift as the clear,
+cold wind of spring, and she travelled with equal ease
+on land and on sea. He wore Mannanan's coat of
+mail: no one could be wounded through it, or above
+it, or below it. He had on his breast Mannanan's
+breast-plate, which no weapon could pierce. His
+helmet had two glittering precious stones set in front,
+and one behind; and whenever he took it off, his face
+shone like the sun on a dry day in summer. Mannanan's
+sword, The Answerer, hung at his left side:
+no one ever recovered from its wound; and those who
+were opposed to it in the battle-field were so terrified
+by looking at it, that their strength left them till they
+became weaker than a woman in deadly sickness.</p>
+
+<p>This troop came forward to where the king of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+Erin sat surrounded by the Dedannans, and both
+parties exchanged friendly greetings.</p>
+
+<p>A short time after this they saw another company
+approaching, quite unlike the first, for they were grim
+and fierce and surly looking; namely, the tax-gatherers
+of the Fomorians, to the number of nine nines, who
+were coming to demand their yearly tribute from the
+men of Erin. When they reached the place where the
+king sat, the entire assembly&mdash;the king himself among
+the rest&mdash;rose up before them. For the whole Dedannan
+race stood in great dread of these Fomorian
+tax-collectors; so much so that no man dared even
+to chastise his own son without first seeking their
+consent.</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga of the Long Arms spoke to the king
+and said, "Why have ye stood up before this hateful-looking
+company, when ye did not stand up for us?"</p>
+
+<p>"We durst not do otherwise," replied the king;
+"for if even an infant of a month old remained seated
+before them, they would deem it cause enough for
+killing us all."</p>
+
+<p>When Luga heard this he brooded in silence for a
+little while, and then he said, "Of a truth, I feel a
+great desire to kill all these men!"</p>
+
+<p>Then he mused again, and after a time, said, "I
+am strongly urged to kill these men!"</p>
+
+<p>"That deed would doubtless bring great evil on
+us," said the king, "for then the Fomorians would be
+sure to send an army to destroy us all."</p>
+
+<p>But Luga, after another pause, started up, exclaiming,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+"Long have ye been oppressed in this manner!"
+and so saying, he attacked the Fomorians, dealing red
+slaughter among them. Neither did he hold his hand
+till he had slain them all except nine. These he
+spared, because they ran with all speed and sat nigh
+the king, that he might protect them from Luga's
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga put his sword back into its scabbard,
+and said, "I would slay you also, only that I wish you
+to go and tell your king, and the foreigners in general,
+what you have seen."</p>
+
+<p>These nine men accordingly returned to their own
+country, and they told their tale to the Fomorian
+people from beginning to end&mdash;how the strange, noble-faced
+youth had slain all the tax-collectors except
+nine, whom he spared that they might bring home the
+story.</p>
+
+<p>When they had ended speaking, the king, Balor<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> of
+the Mighty Blows and of the Evil Eye, asked the
+chiefs, "Do ye know who this youth is?"</p>
+
+<p>And when they answered, "No," Kethlenda,<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
+Balor's queen, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I know well who the youth is: he is the
+Ildana,<a name="FNanchor_XXX._58" id="FNanchor_XXX._58"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXX._58" class="fnanchor">[XXX.]</a> Luga of the Long Arms, the son of your
+daughter and mine; and it has been long foretold that
+when he should appear in Erin, our sway over the
+Dedannans should come to an end."</p>
+
+<p>Then the chief people of the Fomorians held<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+council; namely, Balor of the Mighty Blows, and his
+twelve sons, and his queen Kethlenda of the Crooked
+Teeth; Ebb and Sencab, the grandsons of Neid; Sotal
+of the Large Heels; Luath the Long-bodied; Luath the
+Story-teller; Tinna the Mighty, of Triscadal; Loskenn
+of the Bare Knees; Lobas, the druid; besides the nine
+prophetic poets and philosophers of the Fomorians.</p>
+
+<p>After they had debated the matter for some time,
+Bres, the son of Balor, arose and said, "I will go to
+Erin with seven great battalions of the Fomorian
+army, and I will give battle to the Ildana, and I will
+bring his head to you to our palace of Berva."<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Fomorian chiefs thought well of this proposal,
+and it was agreed to.</p>
+
+<p>So the ships were got ready for Bres; abundant
+food and drink and war stores were put into them,
+their seams were calked with pitch, and they were
+filled with sweet-smelling frankincense. Meantime
+the two Luaths, that is to say, Luath the Story-teller
+and Luath of the Long Body, were sent all over Lochlann
+to summon the army. And when all the fighting
+men were gathered together, they arrayed themselves
+in their battle-dresses, prepared their arms, and set
+out for Erin.</p>
+
+<p>Balor went with them to the harbour where they
+were to embark, and when they were about to go on
+board, he said to them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Give battle to the Ildana, and cut off his head.
+And after ye have overcome him and his people, put
+your cables round this island of Erin, which gives us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+so much trouble, and tie it at the sterns of your ships:
+then sail home, bringing the island with you, and
+place it on the north side of Lochlann, whither none
+of the Dedannans will ever follow it."</p>
+
+<p>Then, having hoisted their many-coloured sails and
+loosed their moorings, they sailed forth from the
+harbour into the great sea, and never slackened speed
+or turned aside from their course till they reached the
+harbour of Eas-Dara.<a name="FNanchor_XXXI._59" id="FNanchor_XXXI._59"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXI._59" class="fnanchor">[XXXI.]</a> And as soon as they landed,
+they sent forth an army through West Connaught,
+which wasted and spoiled the whole province.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_II" id="BCHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE MURDER OF KIAN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now the king of Connaught at that time was Bove
+Derg, the son of the Dagda,<a name="FNanchor_XXXII._60" id="FNanchor_XXXII._60"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXII._60" class="fnanchor">[XXXII.]</a> a friend to Luga of the
+Long Arms. It chanced that Luga was then at Tara,<a name="FNanchor_XXXIII._61" id="FNanchor_XXXIII._61"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXIII._61" class="fnanchor">[XXXIII.]</a>
+and news was brought to him that the Fomorians
+had landed at Eas-Dara, and were spoiling and wasting
+the province. He immediately got ready his steed,
+Enbarr of the Flowing Mane; and early in the morning,
+when the point of night met the day, he went to the
+king and told him that the foreigners had landed, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+that they had wasted and plundered the province of
+Bove Derg.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall give them battle," said Luga; "and I wish
+to get from thee some help of men and arms."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give no help," said the king; "for I do not
+wish to avenge a deed that has not been done against
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>When Luga heard this reply he was wroth, and
+departing straightway from Tara, he rode westward.
+He had not travelled long when he saw at a distance
+three warriors, fully armed, riding towards him. Now
+these were three brothers, the sons of Canta; namely,
+Kian and Cu and Kethen; and Kian was Luga's
+father. And they saluted each other, and conversed
+together for a time.</p>
+
+<p>"Why art thou abroad so early?" said they.</p>
+
+<p>"Cause enough have I," replied Luga; "for the
+Fomorians have landed in Erin, and have wasted the
+province of Bove Derg, the son of the Dagda. It is
+well indeed that I have met you, for I am about
+to give them battle, and I wish now to know what aid
+I shall get from you."</p>
+
+<p>"We will go into the battle with you," said they;
+"and each of us will ward off from you a hundred of
+the Fomorian warriors."</p>
+
+<p>"That, indeed, is good help," said Luga; "but, for
+the present, I wish you to go to the several places
+throughout Erin where the Fairy Host<a name="FNanchor_XXXIV._62" id="FNanchor_XXXIV._62"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXIV._62" class="fnanchor">[XXXIV.]</a> are abiding,
+and summon them all to me."</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+<p>The three brothers accordingly separated, Cu and
+Kethen going south, while Luga's father, Kian, turned
+his face northwards, and rode on till he came to Moy
+Murthemna.<a name="FNanchor_XXXV._63" id="FNanchor_XXXV._63"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXV._63" class="fnanchor">[XXXV.]</a> He had not been long travelling over
+the plain when he saw three warriors, clad in armour
+and fully armed, coming towards him. These were
+three Dedannan chiefs, the sons of Turenn, and their
+names were Brian, Ur, and Urcar. Now these three and
+the three sons of Canta were at deadly feud with
+each other, on account of an old quarrel, and whenever
+they met there was sure to be a fight for life or death.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Kian saw these three, he said, "If my
+two brothers were now with me, we should have a
+brave fight; but as they are not, and as I am only one
+against three, it is better to avoid the combat." So
+saying, he looked round, and seeing near him a herd
+of swine he struck himself with a golden druidical<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+wand, and changed himself into a pig; and he quickly
+joined the herd.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had he done so than Brian, the eldest
+of the sons of Turenn, said to his brothers, "Tell me,
+my brothers, do you know what has become of the
+warrior that we saw just now approaching us on the
+plain?"</p>
+
+<p>"We saw him," said they, "but we know not
+whither he has gone."</p>
+
+<p>"You deserve great blame," said he, "that you are
+not more watchful while traversing the country during
+this time of war. Now I know what has happened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+to this warrior; he has changed himself, by a druidical
+spell, into a pig; and he is now among yonder herd.
+And whoever he may be, of this be sure&mdash;he is no
+friend of ours."</p>
+
+<p>"This is an unlucky matter," said they; "for as
+these pigs belong to one of the Dedannans, it would be
+wrong for us to kill them; and even if we should do
+so, the enchanted pig might escape after all."</p>
+
+<p>"But," answered Brian, "I think I can manage to
+distinguish any druidical beast from a natural one;
+and if you had attended well to your learning, you
+would be able to do the same."</p>
+
+<p>Saying this, he struck his brothers one after the
+other with his golden druidical wand, and turned them
+into two fleet, slender, sharp-nosed hounds. The
+moment he had done so they put their noses to the
+earth, and, yelping eagerly, set off towards the herd on
+the trail of their enemy. When they had come near,
+the druidical pig fell out from the herd, and made
+towards a thick grove that grew hard by; but Brian
+was there before him, and drove his spear through his
+chest.</p>
+
+<p>The pig screamed and said, "You have done an ill
+deed to cast your spear at me, for you know well who
+I am."</p>
+
+<p>"Your voice, methinks, is the voice of a man," said
+Brian; "but I know not who you are."</p>
+
+<p>And the pig answered, "I am Kian, the son of
+Canta; and now I ask you to give me quarter."</p>
+
+<p>Ur and Urcar, who had regained their shape and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+come up, said, "We will give you quarter indeed, and
+we are sorry for what has happened to you."</p>
+
+<p>But Brian, on the other hand, said, "I swear by the
+gods of the air, that if your life returned to you seven
+times, I would take it from you seven times."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said Kian, "as you will not grant me
+quarter, allow me first to return to my own shape."</p>
+
+<p>"That we will grant you," said Brian; "for I often
+feel it easier to kill a man than to kill a pig."</p>
+
+<p>Kian accordingly took his own shape; and then he
+said, "You indeed, ye sons of Turenn, are now about
+to slay me; but even so, I have outwitted you. For
+if you had slain me in the shape of a pig, you would
+have to pay only the eric-fine<a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> for a pig; whereas,
+now that I am in my own shape, you shall pay the
+full fine for a man. And there never yet was killed,
+and there never shall be killed, a man for whom a
+greater fine shall be paid, than you will have to pay
+for me. The weapons with which I am slain shall
+tell the deed to my son; and he will exact the fine
+from you."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall not be slain with the weapons of a
+warrior," said Brian; and so saying, he and his
+brothers laid aside their arms, and smote him fiercely
+and rudely with the round stones of the earth, till they
+had reduced his body to a disfigured mass; and in this
+manner they slew him.</p>
+
+<p>They then buried him a man's height in the earth;
+but the earth, being angry at the fratricide,<a name="FNanchor_XXXVI._64" id="FNanchor_XXXVI._64"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXVI._64" class="fnanchor">[XXXVI.]</a> refused<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+to receive the body, and cast it up on the surface.
+They buried him a second time, and again the body
+was thrown up from beneath the clay. Six times the
+sons of Turenn buried the body of Kian a man's
+height in the earth, and six times did the earth cast it
+up, refusing to receive it. But when they had buried
+him the seventh time, the earth refused no longer, and
+the body remained in the grave.</p>
+
+<p>Then the sons of Turenn prepared to go forward
+after Luga of the Long Arms to the battle. But as
+they were leaving the grave, they thought they heard
+a faint, muffled voice coming up from the ground
+beneath their feet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">The blood you have spilled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The hero you've killed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall follow your steps till your doom be fulfilled!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_III" id="BCHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DEFEAT AND FLIGHT OF THE LOCHLANNS.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now as to Luga. After parting from his father, he
+journeyed westward till he reached Ath-Luan,<a name="FNanchor_XXXVII._65" id="FNanchor_XXXVII._65"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXVII._65" class="fnanchor">[XXXVII.]</a> thence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+to Ros-Coman, and over Moy-Lurg to the Curlieu Hills,
+and to the mountain of Kesh-Corran, till he reached
+the "Great Plain of the Assembly," where the foreigners
+were encamped, with the spoils of Connaught around
+them.</p>
+
+<p>As he drew nigh to the Fomorian encampment,
+Bres, the son of Balor, arose and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"A wonderful thing has come to pass this day; for
+the sun, it seems to me, has risen in the west."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be better that it were so," said the
+druids,<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> "than that matters should be as they are."</p>
+
+<p>"What else can it be, then?" asked Bres.</p>
+
+<p>"The light you see," replied the druids, "is the
+brightness of the face, and the flashing of the weapons
+of Luga of the Long Arms, our deadly enemy, he
+who slew our tax-gatherers, and who now approaches."</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga came up peacefully and saluted them.</p>
+
+<p>"How does it come to pass that you salute us," said
+they, "since you are, as we know well, our enemy?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have good cause for saluting you," answered
+Luga; "for only one half of my blood is Dedannan;
+the other half comes from you; for I am the son of
+the daughter of Balor of the Mighty Blows, your
+king.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> And now I come in peace, to ask you to give
+back to the men of Connaught all the milch cows you
+have taken from them."</p>
+
+<p>"May ill luck follow thee," said one of the Fomorian
+leaders, in a voice loud and wrathful, "until thou
+get one of them, either a milch cow or a dry cow!"</p>
+
+<p>And the others spoke in a like strain.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Luga put a druidical spell upon the plundered
+cattle; and he sent all the milch cows home, each to
+the door of her owner's house, throughout all that
+part of Connaught that had been plundered. But the
+dry cows he left, so that the Fomorians might be
+cumbered, and that they might not leave their encampment
+till the Fairy Host should arrive to give
+them battle.</p>
+
+<p>Luga tarried three days and three nights near
+them, and at the end of that time the Fairy Host
+arrived, and placed themselves under his command.
+They encamped near the Fomorians, and in a little
+time Bove Derg, son of the Dagda, joined them with
+twenty-nine hundred men.</p>
+
+<p>Then they made ready for the fight. The Ildana
+put on Mannanan's coat of mail and his breast-plate;
+he took also his helmet, which was called Cannbarr,
+and it glittered in the sun with dazzling brightness;
+he slung his broad, dark-blue shield from his shoulder
+at one side; his long, keen-edged sword hung at his
+thigh; and lastly, he took his two long, heavy-handled
+spears, which had been tempered in the poisonous
+blood of adders. The other kings and chiefs of the
+men of Erin arrayed their men in battle ranks;
+hedges of glittering spears rose high above their
+heads; and their shields, placed edge to edge, formed
+a firm fence around them.</p>
+
+<p>Then at the signal they attacked the Fomorians,
+and the Fomorians, in no degree dismayed, answered
+their onset. At first a cloud of whizzing javelins flew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+from rank to rank across the open space, and as the
+warriors rushed together in closer conflict, their spears
+were shivered in their hands. Then they drew their
+gold-hilted swords, and fought foot to foot and shield
+to shield, so that a forest of bright flashes rose high
+above their helmets, from the clashing of their keen-tempered
+weapons.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the fight, Luga looked round, and
+seeing at some distance, Bres, surrounded by his
+Fomorian warriors, dealing havoc and death among
+the Dedannans, he rushed through the press of battle,
+and attacked first Bres's guards so fiercely that in
+a few moments twenty of them fell beneath his blows.</p>
+
+<p>Then he struck at Bres himself, who, unable to
+withstand his furious onset, cried aloud&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why should we be enemies, since thou art of my
+kin? Let there be peace between us, for nothing can
+withstand thy blows. Let there be peace, and I will
+undertake to bring my Fomorians to assist thee at
+Moytura,<a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> and I will promise never again to come
+to fight against thee."</p>
+
+<p>And Bres swore by the sun and the moon, by the
+sea and land, and by all the elements,<a name="FNanchor_XXXVIII._66" id="FNanchor_XXXVIII._66"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXVIII._66" class="fnanchor">[XXXVIII.]</a> to fulfil his
+engagement; and on these conditions Luga granted
+him his life.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Fomorians, seeing their chief overcome,
+dropped their arms, and sued for quarter. The Fomorian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+druids and men of learning next came to Luga
+to ask him to spare their lives; and Luga answered
+them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"So far am I from wishing to slay you, that in
+truth, if you had taken the whole Fomorian race
+under your protection, I would have spared them."</p>
+
+<p>And after this, Bres, the son of Balor, returned to
+his own country with his druids, and with those of
+his army who had escaped from the battle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_IV" id="BCHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ERIC-FINE ON THE SONS OF TURENN FOR THE
+SLAYING OF KIAN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Towards the close of the day, when the battle was
+ended, Luga espied two of his near friends; and he
+asked them if they had seen his father, Kian, in the
+fight. And when they answered, "No," Luga said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My father is not alive; for if he lived he would
+surely have come to help me in the battle. And now
+I swear that neither food nor drink will I take till
+I have found out who has slain him, and the manner
+of his death."</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga set out with a small chosen band of
+the Fairy Host, and he halted not till he reached the
+place where he had parted from his father. And from
+that he travelled on to the plain of Murthemna, where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+Kian had been forced to take the shape of a pig to
+avoid the sons of Turenn, and where they had slain
+him.</p>
+
+<p>When he had come near to the very spot, he
+walked some little way before his companions, and
+the stones of the earth spoke beneath his feet, and
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here thy father lies, O Luga. Grievous was
+Kian's strait when he was forced to take the shape
+of a pig on seeing the three sons of Turenn; and here
+they slew him in his own shape!"</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">The blood that they spilled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The hero they killed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shall darken their lives till their doom be fulfilled!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Luga stood for a while silent, pondering on these
+words. But as his companions came up, he told them
+what had happened; and having pointed out the spot
+from which the voice came, he caused the ground to
+be dug up. There they found the body, and raised it
+to the surface; and when they had examined it, they
+saw that it was covered all over with gory wounds
+and bruises.</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga spoke after a long silence, "A cruel
+and merciless death has my beloved father suffered at
+the hands of the sons of Turenn!"</p>
+
+<p>He kissed his father's face three times, and again
+spoke, grieving, "Ill fare the day on which my father
+was slain! Woful is this deed to me, for my eyes see
+not, my ears hear not, and my heart's pulse has ceased
+to beat, for grief. Why, O ye gods whom I worship,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+why was I not present when this deed was done?
+Alas! an evil thing has happened, for the Dedannans
+have slain their brother Dedannan. Ill shall they fare
+of this fratricide, for its consequences shall follow
+them, and long shall the crime of brother against
+brother continue to be committed in Erin!"</p>
+
+<p>And he spoke this speech&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A dreadful doom my father found<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On that ill-omened even-tide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And here I mourn beside the mound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where, whelmed by numbers, Kian died,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This lonely mound of evil fame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That long shall bear the hero's name!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Alas! an evil deed is done,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And long shall Erin rue the day:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There shall be strife 'twixt sire and son,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And brothers shall their brothers slay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vengeance shall smite the murderers too,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And vengeance all their race pursue!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The light has faded from mine eyes;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My youthful strength and power have fled<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Weary my heart with ceaseless sighs;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ambition, hope, and joy are dead;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And all the world is draped in gloom&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The shadow of my father's tomb!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Then they placed the hero again in the grave, and
+they raised a tomb over him with his name graved in
+Ogam;<a name="FNanchor_XXXIX._67" id="FNanchor_XXXIX._67"></a><a href="#Footnote_XXXIX._67" class="fnanchor">[XXXIX.]</a> after which his lamentation lays were sung,
+and his funeral games were performed.</p>
+
+<p>When these rites were ended, Luga said to his
+people, "Go ye now to Tara, where the king of Erin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+sits on his throne with the Dedannans around him;
+but do not make these things known till I myself
+have told them."</p>
+
+<p>So Luga's people went straightway to Tara, as he
+had bade them; but of the murder of Kian they said
+naught. Luga himself arrived some time after, and
+was received with great honour, being put to sit high
+over the others, at the king's side; for the fame of his
+mighty deeds at the battle of the Assembly Plain had
+been noised over the whole country, and had come to
+the ears of the king.</p>
+
+<p>After he was seated, he looked round the hall, and
+saw the sons of Turenn in the assembly. Now these
+three sons of Turenn exceeded all the champions in
+Tara, in comeliness of person, in swiftness of foot,
+and in feats of arms; and, next to Luga himself, they
+were the best and bravest in the battles against the
+Fomorians; wherefore they were honoured by the king
+beyond most others.</p>
+
+<p>Luga asked the king that the chain of silence<a name="FNanchor_XL._68" id="FNanchor_XL._68"></a><a href="#Footnote_XL._68" class="fnanchor">[XL.]</a>
+should be shaken; and when it was shaken, and when
+all were listening in silence, he stood up and spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I perceive, ye nobles of the Dedannan race, that
+you have given me your attention, and now I have
+a question to put to each man here present: What
+vengeance would you take of the man who should
+knowingly and of design kill your father?"</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+<p>They were all struck with amazement on hearing
+this, and the king of Erin said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What does this mean? For that your father has
+not been killed, this we all know well!"</p>
+
+<p>"My father has indeed been killed," answered
+Luga; "and I see now here in this hall those who slew
+him. And furthermore, I know the manner in which
+they put him to death, even as they know it themselves."</p>
+
+<p>The sons of Turenn, hearing all this, said nothing;
+but the king spoke aloud and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If any man should wilfully slay my father, it is
+not in one hour or in one day I would have him put
+to death; but I would lop off one of his members
+each day, till I saw him die in torment under my
+hands!"</p>
+
+<p>All the nobles said the same, and the sons of
+Turenn in like manner.</p>
+
+<p>"The persons who slew my father are here present,
+and are joining with the rest in this judgment," said
+Luga; "and as the Dedannans are all now here to
+witness, I claim that the three who have done this
+evil deed shall pay me a fitting eric-fine for my father.
+Should they refuse, I shall not indeed transgress the
+king's law nor violate his protection; but of a certainty
+they shall not leave this hall of Micorta<a name="FNanchor_XLI._69" id="FNanchor_XLI._69"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLI._69" class="fnanchor">[XLI.]</a> till the
+matter is settled."</p>
+
+<p>And the king of Erin said, "If I had killed your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+father, I should be well content if you were willing
+to accept an eric-fine from me."</p>
+
+<p>Now the sons of Turenn spoke among themselves;
+and Ur and Urcar said, "It is of us Luga speaks this
+speech. He has doubtless found out that we slew his
+father; and it is better that we now acknowledge the
+deed, for it will avail us naught to hide it."</p>
+
+<p>Brian, however, at first set his face against this,
+saying that he feared Luga only wanted an acknowledgment
+from them in presence of the other Dedannans,
+and that afterwards he might not accept a
+fine. But the other two were earnest in pressing him,
+so that he consented, and then he spoke to Luga&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is of us thou speakest all these things, Luga;
+for it has been said that we three have been at enmity
+with the three sons of Canta. Now, as to the slaying
+of thy father Kian, let that matter rest; but we are
+willing to pay an eric-fine for him, even as if we had
+killed him."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall accept an eric-fine from you," said Luga,
+"though ye indeed fear I shall not. I shall now name
+before this assembly the fine I ask, and if you think
+it too much, I shall take off a part of it.</p>
+
+<p>"The first part of my eric-fine is three apples; the
+second part is the skin of a pig; the third is a spear;
+the fourth, two steeds and a chariot; the fifth, seven
+pigs; the sixth, a hound-whelp; the seventh, a cooking-spit;
+and the eighth, three shouts on a hill. That is
+my eric," said Luga; "and if ye think it too much, say
+so now, that I may remit a part; but if not, then it
+will be well that ye set about paying it."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"So far," said Brian, "we do not deem it too
+great. It seems, indeed, so small that we fear there is
+some hidden snare in what you ask, which may work
+us mischief."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not deem my eric too small," said Luga;
+"and now I engage here, before the assembled Dedannans,
+that I will ask no more, and that I will seek
+no further vengeance for my father's death. But, as I
+have made myself answerable to them for the faithful
+fulfilment of my promise, I demand the same guarantee
+from you, that you also be faithful to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas that you should doubt our plighted word!"
+said the sons of Turenn. "Are we not ourselves
+sufficient guarantee for the payment of an eric-fine
+greater even than this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not deem your word sufficient guarantee,"
+answered Luga; "for often have we known great
+warriors like you to promise a fine before all the
+people, and afterwards to go back of their promise."</p>
+
+<p>And the sons of Turenn consented, though unwillingly,
+for they grieved that their word should be
+doubted. So they bound themselves on either side&mdash;Luga
+not to increase his claims; and the sons of
+Turenn, on their part, to pay him the full fine. And
+the king of Erin and Bove Derg, son of the Dagda,
+and the nobles of the Dedannans in general, were
+witnesses and sureties of this bond.</p>
+
+<p>Then Luga stood up and said, "It is now time
+that I give you a full knowledge of this eric-fine.</p>
+
+<p>"The three apples I ask are the apples of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+Garden of Hisberna,<a name="FNanchor_XLII._70" id="FNanchor_XLII._70"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLII._70" class="fnanchor">[XLII.]</a> in the east of the world, and
+none others will I have. There are no apples in the
+rest of the world like them, for their beauty and for
+the secret virtues they possess. Their colour is the
+colour of burnished gold; they have the taste of honey;
+and if a wounded warrior or a man in deadly sickness
+eat of them, he is cured immediately. And they are
+never lessened by being eaten, being as large and
+perfect at the end as at the beginning. Moreover
+any champion that possesses one of them may perform
+with it whatsoever feat he pleases, by casting it from
+his hand, and the apple will return to him of itself.
+And though you are three brave warriors, ye sons of
+Turenn, methinks you will not find it easy to bring
+away these apples; for it has been long foretold that
+three young champions from the Island of the West
+would come to take them by force, so that the king
+has set guards to watch for your coming.</p>
+
+<p>"The pig's skin I seek from you belongs to Tuis,
+the king of Greece. When the pig was alive, every
+stream of water through which she walked was turned
+into wine for nine days, and all sick and wounded
+people that touched her skin were at once cured,
+if only the breath of life remained. Now the king's
+druids told him that the virtue lay, not in the pig
+herself, but in her skin; so the king had her killed and
+skinned, and he has her skin now. This, too, ye valiant
+champions, is a part of my eric-fine which you will
+find it hard to get, either by force or by friendship.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+<p>"The spear I demand from you is the venomed
+spear of Pezar, king of Persia. Its name is Slaughterer.
+In time of peace, its blazing, fiery head is always kept
+in a great caldron of water, to prevent it from burning
+down the king's palace; and in time of war, the
+champion who bears it to the battle-field can perform
+any deed he pleases with it. And it will be no easy
+matter to get this spear from the king of Persia.</p>
+
+<p>"The two steeds and the chariot belong to Dobar,
+king of Sigar.<a name="FNanchor_XLIII._71" id="FNanchor_XLIII._71"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLIII._71" class="fnanchor">[XLIII.]</a> The chariot exceeds all the chariots
+in the world for beauty of shape and goodliness of
+workmanship. The two noble steeds have no equal
+for strength and fleetness, and they travel with as
+much ease on sea as on land.</p>
+
+<p>"The seven pigs I demand are the pigs of Asal,
+the king of the Golden Pillars. Whoever eats a part
+of them shall not suffer from ill health or disease; and
+even though they should be killed and eaten to-day,
+they will be alive and well to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>"The hound-whelp belongs to the king of Iroda,<a name="FNanchor_XLIV._72" id="FNanchor_XLIV._72"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLIV._72" class="fnanchor">[XLIV.]</a>
+and his name is Failinis. He shines as brightly as
+the sun in a summer sky; and every wild beast of the
+forest that sees him falls down to the earth powerless
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>"The cooking-spit belongs to the warlike women
+of the island of Fincara. They are thrice fifty in
+number, and woe to the champion who approaches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+their house; for each of them is a match for three
+good warriors in single combat; and they never yet
+gave a cooking-spit to any one without being overcome
+in battle.</p>
+
+<p>"The hill on which I require you to give three
+shouts is the Hill of Midkena, in the north of Lochlann.<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+Midkena and his sons are always guarding this hill,
+for they are under gesa<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> not to allow any one to
+shout on it. Moreover, it was they that instructed my
+father in championship and feats of arms, and they
+loved him very much; so that even if I should forgive
+you his death they would not. And, though you
+should be able to procure all the rest of the eric-fine,
+you will not, I think, succeed in this, for they will
+be sure to avenge on you my father's death.</p>
+
+<p>"And this, ye sons of Turenn, is the eric-fine I
+demand from you!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_V" id="BCHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE SONS OF TURENN OBTAIN MANNANAN'S CANOE,
+"THE WAVE-SWEEPER."</p>
+
+
+<p>The sons of Turenn were so astounded on hearing
+this eric-fine that they spoke not one word; but rising
+up, they left the meeting, and repaired to the house
+of their father Turenn.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He heard their story to the end, and then said,
+"Your tidings are bad, my sons, and I fear me you are
+doomed to meet your death in seeking what the
+Ildana asks. But the doom is a just one, for it was
+an evil thing to kill Kian. Now as to this eric-fine: it
+cannot be obtained by any living man without the
+help of either Luga himself or of Mannanan Mac Lir;<a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+but if Luga wishes to aid you, ye shall be able to
+get it. Go ye now, therefore, and ask him to lend you
+Mannanan's steed, Enbarr of the Flowing Mane. If
+he wishes you to get the full eric-fine, he will lend
+you the steed; otherwise he will refuse, saying that
+she does not belong to him, and that he cannot lend
+what he himself has got on loan. Then, if ye obtain
+not the steed, ask him for the loan of Mannanan's
+canoe, the Wave-sweeper, which would be better for
+you than the steed; and he will lend you that, for he
+is forbidden to refuse a second request."</p>
+
+<p>So the sons of Turenn returned to Luga, and
+having saluted him, they said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is not in the power of any man to obtain this
+eric-fine without thy own aid, O Luga; we ask thee,
+therefore, to lend us Mannanan's steed, Enbarr of the
+Flowing Mane."</p>
+
+<p>"That steed is not my own," said Luga; "and I
+cannot lend that which I have myself obtained on
+loan."</p>
+
+<p>"If that be so," said Brian, "then I pray thee lend
+us Mannanan's canoe, the Wave-sweeper."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall lend you that," replied Luga; "it lies at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+Bruga of the Boyne;<a name="FNanchor_XLV._73" id="FNanchor_XLV._73"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLV._73" class="fnanchor">[XLV.]</a> and ye have my consent to
+take it."</p>
+
+<p>So they came again to their father, and this time
+Ethnea, their sister, was with him; and they told
+them that Luga had given them the canoe.</p>
+
+<p>"I have much fear," said Turenn, "that it will
+avail you little against the dangers of your quest.
+Nevertheless, Luga desires to obtain that part of the
+eric that will be useful to him at the battle of Moytura,<a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+and so far he will help you. But in seeking
+that which is of no advantage to him, namely, the
+cooking-spit, and the three shouts on Midkena's Hill,
+therein he will give you no aid, and he will be glad
+if ye perish in your attempts to obtain it."</p>
+
+<p>They then set out for Bruga of the Boyne, accompanied
+by their sister Ethnea, leaving Turenn lamenting
+after them. The canoe they found lying in the
+river; and Brian went into it and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me that only one other person can
+sit here along with me;" and he began to complain
+very bitterly of its smallness. He ceased, however,
+at the bidding of Ethnea, who told him that the
+canoe would turn out large enough when they came
+to try it, and that it was under strict command not to
+let any one grumble at its smallness. And she went
+on to say&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, my beloved brothers, it was an evil deed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+to slay the father of Luga of the Long Arms! and
+I fear you will suffer much woe and hardship on
+account of it."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Ethnea.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The deed was a dark one, a deed full of woe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Your brother Dedannan to slay;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And hard and relentless the heart of your foe,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The bright-faced Ildana, that forced you to go,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">This eric of vengeance to pay!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">The Brothers.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, cease, sister Ethnea, cease thy sad wail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Why yield to this terror and gloom?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Long, long shall the poets remember the tale,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For our courage and valour and swords shall prevail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or win us a glorious tomb!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Ethnea.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then search ye, my brothers, go search land and sea;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Go search ye the isles of the East.&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alas, that the cruel Ildana's decree<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Has banished my three gentle brothers from me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">On this fearful and perilous quest!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_VI" id="BCHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE APPLES OF THE GARDEN OF HISBERNA.</p>
+
+
+<p>After this the three brothers entered the canoe,
+which they now found large enough to hold themselves
+and their arms, and whatsoever else they wished
+to bring; for this was one of its secret gifts. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+then bade their sister farewell, and, leaving her weeping
+on the shore, they rowed swiftly till they had got
+beyond the beautiful shores and bright harbours of
+Erin, out on the open sea.</p>
+
+<p>Then the two younger brothers said, "Now our
+quest begins: what course shall we take?"</p>
+
+<p>Brian answered, "As the apples are the first part of
+the fine, we shall seek them first."</p>
+
+<p>And then he spoke to the canoe, "Thou canoe of
+Mannanan, thou Sweeper of the waves, we ask thee
+and we command thee, that thou sail straightway to
+the Garden of Hisberna!"</p>
+
+<p>The canoe was not unmindful of the voice of its
+master, and obeyed the command without delay,
+according to its wont. It took the shortest way across
+the deep sea-chasms, and, gliding over the green-sided
+waves more swiftly than the clear, cold wind of March,
+it stayed not in its course till it reached the harbour
+near the land of Hisberna.</p>
+
+<p>Brian now spoke to his brothers, "Be sure that
+this quest is a perilous one, since we know that the
+best champions of the country, with the king at their
+head, are always guarding the apples. And now in
+what manner, think you, is it best for us to approach
+the garden?"</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to us," answered his brothers, "that we
+had better go straight and attack these champions, and
+either bring away the apples, or fall fighting for them.
+For we cannot escape the dangers that lie before us;
+and if we are doomed to fall in one of these adventures,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+it may, perchance, be better for us to die here than to
+prolong our hardships."</p>
+
+<p>But Brian answered, "Not so, my brothers; for it
+becomes a warrior to be prudent and wary as well as
+brave. We should now act so that the fame of our
+skill and valour may live after us, and that future men
+may not say, 'These sons of Turenn did not deserve to
+be called brave champions, for they were senseless and
+rash, and sought their own death by their folly.' In
+the present case, then, what I counsel is this: Let us
+take the shape of strong, swift hawks; and as we
+approach the garden, have ye care of the light, sharp
+lances of the guards, which they will certainly hurl at
+us: avoid them actively and cunningly, and when the
+men have thrown all, let us swoop down and bring
+away an apple each."</p>
+
+<p>They approved this counsel; and Brian, striking
+his two brothers and himself with a druidical magic
+wand, all three were changed into three beautiful
+hawks. Then, flying swiftly to the garden, they
+began to descend in circles towards the tops of the
+trees; but the sharp-eyed guards perceived them, and
+with a great shout they threw showers of venomous
+darts at them. The hawks, however, mindful of
+Brian's warning, watched the spears with keen glances,
+and escaped them every one, until the guards had
+thrown all their light weapons. Then, swooping
+suddenly down on the trees, the two younger brothers
+carried off an apple each, and Brian two, one between
+his talons and the other in his beak; and the three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+rose again into the air without wound or hurt of any
+kind. Then, directing their course westward, they
+flew over the wide sea with the speed of an arrow.</p>
+
+<p>The news spread quickly through the city, how
+three beautiful hawks had carried off the apples; and
+the king and his people were in great wrath. Now
+the king had three daughters, very skilful in magic
+and cunning in counsel; and they forthwith transformed
+themselves into three swift-winged, sharp-taloned
+griffins, and pursued the hawks over the
+sea. But the hawks, when they saw they were
+pursued, increased their speed, and flew like the wind,
+and left their pursuers so far behind that they
+appeared to the griffins like three specks on the
+sky. Then the angry griffins let fly from their eyes,
+and from their open beaks, bright flashes of flame
+straight forward, which overtook and blinded the
+hawks, and scorched them, so that they could bear the
+heat no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Evil is our state now," said Ur and Urcar, "for
+these sheets of flame are burning us, and we shall
+perish if we do not get relief."</p>
+
+<p>"I will try whether I cannot relieve you," said Brian;
+and with that he struck his brothers and himself with
+his golden druidical wand; and all three were instantly
+turned into swans. The swans dropped down on the
+sea; and when the griffins saw the hawks no longer
+straight before them, they gave up the chase. And
+the sons of Turenn went safely to their canoe, bringing
+the apples with them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_VII" id="BCHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE GIFTED SKIN OF THE PIG.</p>
+
+
+<p>After resting a little while, they held council as to
+their next journey; and what they resolved on was
+to go to Greece, to seek the skin of the pig, and to
+bring it away, either by consent or by force. So they
+went into the canoe, and Brian spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thou canoe of Mannanan, thou Sweeper of the
+Waves, we ask thee and we command thee that thou
+sail with us straightway to Greece!"</p>
+
+<p>And the canoe, obeying as before, glided swiftly
+and smoothly over the waves, till the sons of Turenn
+landed near the palace of the king of Greece.</p>
+
+<p>"In what shape, think you, should we go to this
+court?" said Brian.</p>
+
+<p>"We think it best," answered the others, "to
+go in our own shapes; that is to say, as three bold
+champions."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," said Brian. "It seems best to me that
+we should go in the guise of learned poets from Erin;
+for poets are held in much honour and respect by the
+great nobles of Greece."</p>
+
+<p>"It is, indeed, hard for us to do that," answered his
+brothers, "for as to poems, we neither have any, nor
+do we know how to compose them."</p>
+
+<p>However, as Brian would have it so, they consented,
+though unwillingly; and, tying up their hair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+after the manner of poets, they knocked at the door of
+the palace. The door-keeper asked who was there.</p>
+
+<p>"We are skilful poets from Erin," said Brian, "and
+we have come to Greece with a poem for the king."</p>
+
+<p>The door-keeper went and gave the message.</p>
+
+<p>"Let them be brought in," said the king, "for it is
+to seek a good and bountiful master whom they may
+serve faithfully that they have come so far from Erin."</p>
+
+<p>The sons of Turenn were accordingly led in to the
+banquet hall, where sat the king surrounded by his
+nobles; and, bowing low, they saluted him; and he
+saluted them in return, and welcomed them. They sat
+at the table among the company, and joined the feast
+at once, drinking and making merry like the others;
+and they thought they had never seen a banquet hall
+so grand, or a household so numerous and mirthful.</p>
+
+<p>At the proper time the king's poets arose, according
+to custom, to recite their poems and their lays for the
+company. And when they had come to an end, Brian,
+speaking low, said to his brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"As we have come here as poets, it is meet that
+we should practise the poetic art like the others;
+therefore now arise, and recite a poem for the king."</p>
+
+<p>"We have no poems," they replied, "and we do
+not wish to practise any art except the art we have
+learned and practised from our youth, namely, to fight
+like brave champions, and to take by valour and force
+of arms that which we want, if we be stronger than
+our enemies, or to fall in battle if they be the
+stronger."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That is not a pleasant way of making poetry,"
+said Brian; and with that he arose and requested
+attention for his poem. And when they sat listening,
+he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy bounty, great monarch, shall gladden the bard;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the <i>Imnocta-fessa</i> I claim as reward.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A bard unrequited&mdash;how dreadful a foe!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy bounty shall add to thy wealth and thy fame;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the <i>Imnocta-fessa</i> is all that I claim.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Your poem would doubtless be thought a very
+good one," said the king, "if we were able to judge of
+it; but it is unlike all other poems I have ever heard,
+for I do not in the least understand its sense."</p>
+
+<p>"I will unfold its sense," said Brian.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"This means that as the oak excels all the other trees
+of the forest, so dost thou excel all the other kings of
+the world for greatness, nobility, and generosity.</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>Imnocta-fessa.</i>' <i>Imnocta</i> means 'skin,' and <i>fessa</i>
+'a pig.' That is to say; thou hast, O king, the skin of
+a pig, which I desire to get from thee as a guerdon
+for my poetry.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A bard unrequited&mdash;how dreadful a foe!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"<i>O</i> means 'an ear;' that is to say, thou and I shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+be ear to ear fighting with each other for the skin, if
+thou give it not of thy own free will.</p>
+
+<p>"And that, O king, is the sense of my poem."</p>
+
+<p>"Thy poem would have been a very good one,"
+said the king, "and I would have given it due meed
+of praise if my pig's skin had not been mentioned in
+it. But it is a foolish request of thine, O ferdana,<a name="FNanchor_XLVI._74" id="FNanchor_XLVI._74"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLVI._74" class="fnanchor">[XLVI.]</a>
+to ask for that skin; for, even though all the poets
+and men of science of Erin, and all the nobles of the
+whole world were to demand it from me, I would
+refuse it. Nevertheless, thou shalt not pass unrewarded,
+for I will give thee thrice the full of the skin
+of red gold&mdash;one for thyself, and one for each of thy
+brothers."</p>
+
+<p>"Thy ransom is a good one, O king," said Brian;
+"but I am a near-hearted and suspicious man, and
+I pray thee let me see with my eyes thy servants
+measure the gold, lest they deal unfairly with me."</p>
+
+<p>The king agreed to this; so his servants went with
+the three sons of Turenn to the treasure-room, and one
+of them drew forth the skin from its place, to measure
+the gold. As soon as Brian caught sight of it, he
+sprang suddenly towards the servant, and, dashing
+him to the ground with his right hand, he snatched
+the skin with his left, and bound it hastily over his
+shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Then the three drew their keen swords, and rushed
+into the banquet hall. The king's nobles, seeing how
+matters stood, surrounded and attacked them; but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+sons of Turenn, nothing daunted by the number of
+their foes, hewed down the foremost and scattered the
+rest, so that scarce one of the whole party escaped
+death or deadly wounds.</p>
+
+<p>Then at last Brian and the king met face to face,
+nor was either slow to answer the challenge of the
+other. They fought as great champions fight, and it
+was long doubtful which should prevail; but the end
+of the combat was, that the king of Greece fell by the
+overpowering valour of Brian, the son of Turenn.</p>
+
+<p>After this victory, the three brothers rested in the
+palace till they had regained their strength, and healed
+up their wounds by means of the apples and the pig's
+skin; and at the end of three days and three nights
+they found themselves able to undertake the next
+adventure.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_VIII" id="BCHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE BLAZING SPEAR OF THE KING OF PERSIA.</p>
+
+
+<p>So, after holding council, they resolved to go to seek
+the spear of the king of Persia; and Brian reminded
+his brothers that now, as they had the apples and the
+skin to aid them, it would be all the easier to get
+the spear, as well as the rest of the fine.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving now the shores of Greece with all its blue
+streams, they went on board the canoe, which, at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+Brian's command, flew across the wide seas; and soon
+they made land near the palace of Pezar, king of
+Persia. And seeing how they had fared so well in
+their last undertaking, they resolved to put on the
+guise of poets this time also.</p>
+
+<p>And so they put the poet's tie on their hair, and,
+passing through the outer gate, they knocked at the
+door of the palace. The door-keeper asked who they
+were, and from what country they had come.</p>
+
+<p>"We are poets from Erin," answered Brian; "and
+we have brought a poem for the king."</p>
+
+<p>So they were admitted and brought to the presence
+of the king, who seated them among the nobles of his
+household; and they joined in the drinking and the
+feasting and the revelry.</p>
+
+<p>The king's poets now arose, and chanted their
+songs for the king and his guests. And when the
+applause had ceased, Brian, speaking softly, said to
+his brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Arise, now, and chant a poem for the king."</p>
+
+<p>But they answered, "Ask us not to do that which
+we are unable to do; but if you wish us to exercise
+the art we have learned from our youth, we shall do
+so, namely, the art of fighting and overcoming our
+foes."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be an unusual way of reciting
+poetry," said Brian; "but I have a poem for the king,
+and I shall now chant it for him."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he stood up; and when there was
+silence, he recited this poem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In royal state may Pezar ever reign,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like some vast yew tree, monarch of the plain;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">May Pezar's mystic javelin, long and bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bring slaughter to his foes in every fight!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">When Pezar fights and shakes his dreadful spear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whole armies fly and heroes quake with fear:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What shielded foe, what champion can withstand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The blazing spear in mighty Pezar's hand!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Your poem is a good one," said the king; "but
+one thing in it I do not understand, namely, why you
+make mention of my spear."</p>
+
+<p>"Because," answered Brian, "I wish to get that
+spear as a reward for my poem."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a very foolish request," said the king,
+"for no man ever escaped punishment who asked me
+for my spear. And as to your poetry, the highest
+reward I could now bestow on you, and the greatest
+favour these nobles could obtain for you, is that I
+should spare your life."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Brian and his brothers started up in
+great wrath and drew their swords, and the king and
+his chiefs drew their swords in like manner; and they
+fought a deadly fight. But Brian at last, drawing
+forth one of his apples, and taking sure aim, cast it at
+the king and struck him on the forehead; so that
+Pezar fell, pierced through the brain.</p>
+
+<p>After this Brian fought on more fiercely than
+before, dealing destruction everywhere around him;
+but when the chiefs saw that their king had fallen,
+they lost heart and fled through the doors, till at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+length none remained in the banquet hall but the
+three sons of Turenn.</p>
+
+<p>Then they went to the room where the spear was
+kept; and they found it with its head down deep in
+a great caldron of water, which hissed and bubbled
+round it. And Brian, seizing it boldly in his hand,
+drew it forth; after which the three brothers left the
+palace and went to their canoe.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_IX" id="BCHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE CHARIOT AND STEEDS OF THE KING OF SIGAR.</p>
+
+
+<p>Resting now for some days from their toil, they
+resolved to seek the steeds and chariot of the king
+of Sigar; for this was the next part of the Ildana's
+eric-fine. So they commanded the canoe, and the
+canoe, obedient to their behest, glided swiftly and
+smoothly over the green waves till they landed in
+Sigar. Brian bore the great, heavy, venomed spear
+in his hand; and the three brothers were of good
+heart, seeing how they had succeeded in their last
+quest, and that they had now three parts of the fine.</p>
+
+<p>"In what shape think you we should go to this
+court?" said Brian.</p>
+
+<p>"How should we go," answered the others, "but in
+our own shapes, namely, as three hostile champions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+who have come to get the chariot and steeds, either
+by force or by good will?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is not what seems best to me," said Brian.
+"My counsel is, that we go as soldiers from Erin,
+willing to serve for pay; and should the king take us
+into his service, it is likely we shall find out where
+the chariot and steeds are kept."</p>
+
+<p>His brothers having agreed to this, the three set
+out for the palace.</p>
+
+<p>It happened that the king was holding a fair-meeting
+on the broad, level green before the palace;
+and when the three warriors came near, the people
+made way for them. They bowed low to the king;
+and he asked them who they were, and from what
+part of the world they had come.</p>
+
+<p>"We are valiant soldiers from Erin," they answered,
+"seeking for service and pay among the great kings of
+the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wish to enter my service?" asked the
+king: and they answered, "Yes." So they made a
+covenant with each other&mdash;the king to place them in
+a post of honour and trust, and they to serve him
+faithfully, and to name their own reward. Whereupon
+the brothers entered the ranks of the king's
+body-guard.</p>
+
+<p>They remained in the palace for a month and a
+fortnight, looking round and carefully noting everything;
+but they saw nothing of the chariot and steeds.
+At the end of that time Brian said to his brothers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It fares ill with us here, my brothers; for we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+know nothing of the chariot and steeds at this hour,
+more than when we first came hither."</p>
+
+<p>The others said this was quite true, and asked if
+he meant to do anything in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"This is what I think we should do," answered
+Brian. "Let us put on our travelling array, and take
+our arms of valour in our hands; and in this fashion
+let us go before the king, and tell him that unless he
+shows us the chariot and steeds, we shall leave his
+service."</p>
+
+<p>This they did without delay; and when they had
+come before the king, he asked them why they came
+to his presence so armed and in travelling gear.</p>
+
+<p>"We will tell thee of that, O king," answered
+Brian. "We are valiant soldiers from Erin, and into
+whatsoever lands we have travelled, we have been
+trusted with the secret counsels of the kings who
+have taken us into their service; and we have been
+made the guardians of their rarest jewels and of all
+their gifted arms of victory. But as to thee, O king,
+thou hast not so treated us since we came hither; for
+thou hast a chariot and two steeds, which exceed all
+the chariots and steeds in the world, and yet we have
+never seen them."</p>
+
+<p>"A small thing it is that has caused you to prepare
+for departure," said the king; "and there is,
+moreover, no need that you should leave my service;
+for I would have shown you those steeds the day you
+came, had I only known that you wished it. But ye
+shall see them now; for I have never had in my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+service soldiers from a distant land, in whom I and
+my people have placed greater trust than we have
+placed in you."</p>
+
+<p>He then sent for the steeds, and had them yoked to
+the chariot&mdash;those steeds that were as fleet as the clear,
+cold wind of March, and which travelled with equal
+speed on land and on sea.</p>
+
+<p>Brian, viewing them narrowly, said aloud, "Hear
+me, O king of Sicily. We have served thee faithfully
+up to this time; and now we wish to name our own
+pay, according to the covenant thou hast made with
+us. The guerdon we demand is yonder chariot and
+steeds; these we mean to have, and we shall ask for
+nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>But the king, in great wrath, said, "Foolish and
+luckless men! Ye shall certainly die because you have
+dared to ask for my steeds!"</p>
+
+<p>And the king and his warriors drew their swords,
+and rushed towards the sons of Turenn to seize them.</p>
+
+<p>They, on the other hand, were not taken unaware;
+and a sore fight began. And Brian, watching his
+opportunity, sprang with a sudden bound into the
+chariot, and, dashing the charioteer to the ground, he
+seized the reins in his left hand; then, raising the
+venomed spear of Pezar in his right, he smote the
+king with its fiery point in the breast, so that he fell
+dead. And the three brothers dealt red slaughter
+among the king's guards, till those who were not slain
+scattered and fled in all directions. So they fared in
+this undertaking.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_X" id="BCHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE SEVEN PIGS OF THE KING OF THE GOLDEN
+PILLARS.</p>
+
+
+<p>After resting till their wounds were healed, Ur and
+Urcar asked where they should go next.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall go," said Brian, "to Asal, the king of
+the Golden Pillars, to ask him for his seven pigs; for
+this is the next part of the Ildana's eric-fine."</p>
+
+<p>So they set out; and the canoe brought them
+straightway to the land of the Golden Pillars, without
+delay and without mishap. As they drew nigh to
+the harbour, they saw the shore lined with men all
+armed. For the fame of the deeds of these great
+champions had begun to be noised through many
+lands; how they had been forced to leave Erin by the
+hard sentence of the Ildana; and how they were
+seeking and bearing away the most precious and
+gifted jewels of the world to pay the fine. Wherefore
+the king of the Golden Pillars had armed his people,
+and had sent them to guard the harbours.</p>
+
+<p>The king himself came down to the beach to meet
+them. As soon as they had come within speaking
+distance, he bade them stay their course; and then he
+asked them, in an angry and chiding tone, if they were
+the three champions from Erin, who had overcome
+and slain so many kings.</p>
+
+<p>Brian answered, "Be not displeased with us, O<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+king for in all this matter we are not to blame. The
+Ildana has demanded a fine which we perforce must
+pay; for we have promised, and the Dedannans are
+our guarantee. If the kings to whom he sent us had
+given us peaceably the precious things we demanded,
+we would gladly have departed in peace; but as they
+did not, we fought against them, unwillingly indeed
+and overthrew them; for no one has as yet been able
+to withstand us."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me now," said the king, "what has brought
+you to my country?"</p>
+
+<p>"We have come for thy seven pigs," answered
+Brian; "for they are a part of the fine."</p>
+
+<p>"And in what manner do you think ye shall get
+them?" asked the king.</p>
+
+<p>Brian answered, "Thou hast heard, O king, how
+the Ildana has brought us to these straits, and we
+must pay him the fine, every jot, or else we shall die
+at the hands of our people. Thou, perchance, wilt have
+pity on our hardships, and give us these pigs in token
+of kindness and friendship, and if so we shall be
+thankful; but if not, then we will fight for them, and
+either bring them away by force, after slaying thee
+and thy people or fall ourselves in the attempt."</p>
+
+<p>Hearing this, the king and his people went into
+council; and after debating the matter at full length,
+they thought it best to give the pigs peaceably, seeing
+that no king, however powerful, had as yet been able
+to withstand the sons of Turenn.</p>
+
+<p>The three champions wondered greatly when this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+was told to them; for in no other country had they
+been able to get any part of the fine without battle
+and hardship, and without leaving much of their blood
+behind them. So they were now very glad; and
+thanked Asal and his people.</p>
+
+<p>The king then brought them to his palace, and
+gave them a kind welcome; and they were supplied
+with food and drink to their hearts' desire, and slept
+on soft, downy beds. So they rested after all their
+weary journeys and toils.</p>
+
+<p>When they arose next morning, they were brought
+to the king's presence, and the pigs were given to
+them; and Brian addressed the king in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The prizes we've brought to this land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">We have won them in conflict and blood;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the gift we have sought at thy hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That gift thou hast freely bestowed.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The red spear rewarded our deeds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When Pezar the mighty we slew;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the fight for the chariot and steeds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ah, long shall the Sigarites rue!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Great Asal! in happier days,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">When our deeds bring us glory and fame,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Green Erin shall echo thy praise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And her poets shall honour thy name!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_XI" id="BCHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE HOUND-WHELP OF THE KING OF IRODA.</p>
+
+
+<p>"Whither do you go next, ye sons of Turenn?" asked
+Asal.</p>
+
+<p>"We go," answered Brian, "to Iroda, for Failinis,
+the king's hound-whelp."</p>
+
+<p>"Then grant me this boon," said the king, "namely,
+that ye let me go with you to Iroda. For my daughter
+is the king's wife; and I will try to prevail on him
+that he give you the hound-whelp freely and without
+battle."</p>
+
+<p>This they agreed to. But the king wished that
+they should go in his own ship; so it was got ready,
+and they went on board with all their wealth; and
+it is not told how they fared till they reached the
+borders of Iroda. The shores were covered with fierce,
+armed men, who were there by orders of the king
+to guard the harbour; and these men shouted at the
+crew, warning them to come no farther; for they
+knew the sons of Turenn, and well they knew what
+they came for.</p>
+
+<p>Asal then requested the three champions to remain
+where they were for a time, while he went on shore
+to talk with his son-in-law. Accordingly he landed,
+and went to the king, who, after he had welcomed
+him, asked what had brought the sons of Turenn to
+his country.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"They have come for your hound-whelp," answered
+Asal.</p>
+
+<p>And the king of Iroda said, "It was an evil
+counsel you followed, when you came with these
+men to my shores; for to no three champions in
+the world have the gods given such strength or such
+good luck as that they can get my hound-whelp,
+either by force or by my own free will."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be unwise to refuse them," replied Asal.
+"They have overpowered and slain many great kings;
+for they have gifted arms that no warrior, however
+powerful, can withstand; and behold, I have come
+hither to tell you what manner of men these are, that
+you might be advised by me, and give them your
+hound-whelp in peace."</p>
+
+<p>So he pressed him earnestly; but his words were
+only thrown away on the king of Iroda, who spoke
+scornfully of the sons of Turenn, and refused Asal's
+request with wrathful words.</p>
+
+<p>Asal, much troubled at this, went and told the
+sons of Turenn how matters stood. And they, having
+without delay put on their battle-dress, and taken
+their arms in their hands, challenged the king of
+Iroda and his people. Then began a very fierce and
+bloody battle; for though nothing could stand before
+the sons of Turenn, yet the warriors of Iroda were
+many and very brave. So they fought till the two
+younger brothers became separated from Brian, and
+he was quite surrounded. But as he wielded the
+dreadful spear of Pezar, with its blazing, fiery point,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+his enemies fell back dismayed, and the ranks were
+broken before him, so that those who crossed his path
+stood in a gap of danger.</p>
+
+<p>At length he espied the king of Iroda, where he
+fought hedged round by spears; and he rushed through
+the thick of the battle straight towards him, striking
+down spears and swords and men as he went. And
+now these two valiant warriors fought hand to
+hand a stout and watchful and fierce battle&mdash;for the
+others fell back by the king's command; and it was
+long before any advantage was gained on either side.
+But though to those who looked on, Brian seemed
+the more wrathful of the two, yet he held back his
+hand, so as not to slay his foe; and this it was, indeed,
+that prolonged the combat, for he sought to tire out
+the king. At length, watching his opportunity, Brian
+closed suddenly, and, seizing the king in his strong
+arms, he lifted him clean off the ground, and bore him
+to where Asal stood. Then, setting him down, he
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Behold thy son-in-law; it would have been
+easier to kill him three times over than to bring him
+to thee once!"</p>
+
+<p>When the people saw their king a prisoner, they
+ceased fighting; and the end of all was that peace
+was made, and the hound-whelp was given over to
+the sons of Turenn. Then they took their leave, and
+left the shores of Iroda in friendship with the king
+and with Asal his father-in-law.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_XII" id="BCHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">RETURN OF THE SONS OF TURENN, WITH PART OF
+THE ERIC-FINE.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now we shall speak of Luga of the Long Arms. It
+was revealed to him that the sons of Turenn had
+obtained all those parts of the fine which he wanted for
+the battle of Moytura;<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> but that they had not yet got
+the cooking-spit, or given the three shouts on Midkena's
+Hill. So he sent after them a druidical spell,
+which, falling on them soon after they had left Iroda,
+caused them to forget the remaining part of the fine,
+and filled them with a longing desire to return to
+their native home. Accordingly they went on board
+their canoe, bringing with them every part of the fine
+they had gotten already; and the canoe glided swiftly
+over the waves to Erin.</p>
+
+<p>At this time Luga was with the king at a fair-meeting
+on the plain before Tara; and it was made
+known to him secretly that the sons of Turenn had
+landed at Bruga of the Boyne. He left the assembly
+anon, telling no one; and he went direct to Caher-Crofinn<a name="FNanchor_XLVII._75" id="FNanchor_XLVII._75"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLVII._75" class="fnanchor">[XLVII.]</a>
+at Tara, and, closing the gates and doors
+after him, he put on his battle array, namely, the
+smooth Greek armour of Mannanan Mac Lir, and the
+enchanted mantle of the daughter of Flidas.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
+<p>Soon after, the sons of Turenn were seen approaching;
+and as they came forward, the multitude flocked
+out to meet them, gazing with wonder at the many
+marvellous things they had brought. When the three
+champions had come to the royal tent, they were
+joyfully welcomed by the king and by the Dedannans
+in general; and then the king spoke kindly to them,
+and asked if they had brought the eric-fine.</p>
+
+<p>"We have obtained it after much hardship and
+danger," they replied; "and now we wish to know
+where Luga is, that we may hand it over to him."</p>
+
+<p>The king told them that Luga was at the assembly;
+but when they sent to search for him, he was
+nowhere to be found.</p>
+
+<p>"I can tell where he is," said Brian. "It has been
+made known to him that we have arrived in Erin,
+bringing with us gifted arms that none can withstand;
+and he has gone to one of the strongholds of Tara, to
+avoid us, fearing we might use these venomed weapons
+against himself."</p>
+
+<p>Messengers were then sent to Luga to tell him
+that the sons of Turenn had arrived, and to ask him
+to come forth to the meeting, that they might give
+him the fine.</p>
+
+<p>But he answered, "I will not come to the meeting
+yet; but go ye back, and tell the sons of Turenn to
+give the fine to the king for me."</p>
+
+<p>The messengers returned with this answer; and
+the sons of Turenn gave to the king for Luga all the
+wonderful things they had brought, keeping, however<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+their own arms; after which the whole company went
+into the palace.</p>
+
+<p>When Luga was told how matters stood, he came
+to where the king and all the others were; and the
+king gave him the fine. Then Luga, looking narrowly
+at everything that had been given up to him, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here, indeed, is an eric enough to pay for any
+one that ever yet was slain, or that shall be slain
+to the end of time. But yet there is one kind of fine
+that must be paid to the last farthing, namely, an
+eric-fine; for of this it is not lawful to hold back
+even the smallest part. And moreover, O king, thou
+and the Dedannans whom I see here present, are
+guarantees for the full payment of my eric-fine. Now
+I see here the three apples, and the skin of the pig,
+and the fiery-headed spear, and the chariot and
+steeds, and the seven pigs, and the hound-whelp;
+but where, ye sons of Turenn, is the cooking-spit
+of the women of Fincara? And I have not heard
+that ye have given the three shouts on Midkena's
+Hill."</p>
+
+<p>On hearing this, the sons of Turenn fell into a
+faintness like the faintness before death. And when
+they had recovered they answered not one word, but
+left the assembly and went to their father's house.
+To him and their sister Ethnea they told all that
+had befallen them; and how they should set out on
+another quest, as they had forgotten part of the eric-fine
+through the spells of Luga.</p>
+
+<p>At this Turenn was overwhelmed with grief; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+Ethnea wept in great fear and sorrow. And so they
+passed that night. Next day, they went down to the
+shore, and their father and sister went with them
+to their ship, and bade them farewell.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_XIII" id="BCHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE COOKING-SPIT OF THE WOMEN OF FINCARA.</p>
+
+
+<p>Then they went on board their ship&mdash;for they had
+Mannanan's canoe no longer&mdash;and they sailed forth
+on the green billowy sea to search for the Island of
+Fincara. For a whole quarter of a year they wandered
+hither and thither over the wide ocean, landing
+on many shores and inquiring of all they met; yet
+they were not able to get the least tidings of the
+island.</p>
+
+<p>At last, they came across one very old man, who
+told them that he had heard of the Island of Fincara
+in the days of his youth; and that it lay not on the
+surface, but down deep in the waters, for it was sunk
+beneath the waves by a spell in times long past.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then Brian put on his water-dress, with his helmet
+of transparent crystal on his head, and, telling his
+brothers to await his return, he leaped over the side
+of the ship, and sank at once out of sight. He walked
+about for a fortnight down in the green salt sea,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+seeking for the Island of Fincara; and at last he
+found it.</p>
+
+<p>There were many houses on the island; but one he
+saw larger and grander than the rest. To this he
+straightway bent his steps, and found it open. On
+entering, he saw in one large room a great number of
+beautiful ladies, busily employed at all sorts of embroidery
+and needlework; and in their midst was a
+long, bright cooking-spit lying on a table.</p>
+
+<p>Without speaking a word, he walked straight to
+the table, and, seizing the spit in one hand, he turned
+round and walked towards the door. The women
+neither spoke nor moved, but each had her eyes fixed
+on him from the moment he entered, admiring his
+manly form, his beauty, and his fearlessness; but
+when they saw him about to walk off with the spit,
+they all burst out laughing; and one, who seemed
+chief among them, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thou hast attempted a bold deed, O son of
+Turenn! Know that there are thrice fifty warlike
+women here, and that the weakest among us would
+be able of herself to prevent thee taking this cooking-spit,
+even if thy two brothers were here to help thee.
+But thou art a brave and courageous champion, else
+thou wouldst not have attempted, unaided, to take it
+by force, knowing the danger. And for thy boldness
+and valour, and for the comeliness of thy person, we
+will let thee take this one, for we have many others
+besides."</p>
+
+<p>So Brian, after thanking them, brought away the
+spit joyfully, and sought his ship.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ur and Urcar waited for Brian in the same spot
+the whole time, and when he came not, they began to
+fear that he would return no more. With these
+thoughts they were at last about to leave the place,
+when they saw the glitter of his crystal helmet down
+deep in the water, and immediately after he came to
+the surface with the cooking-spit in his hand. They
+brought him on board, and now all felt very joyful and
+courageous of heart.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_XIV" id="BCHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE THREE SHOUTS ON MIDKENA'S HILL.</p>
+
+
+<p>The three brothers next sailed away towards the
+north of Lochlann, and never abated speed till they
+moored their vessel near the Hill of Midkena, which
+rose smooth and green over the sea-shore. When
+Midkena saw them approaching, he knew them at
+once, and, coming towards them armed for battle, he
+addressed them aloud&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You it was that slew Kian, my friend and pupil;
+and now come forth and fight, for you shall not leave
+these shores till you answer for his death."</p>
+
+<p>Brian, in no degree daunted by the fierce look and
+threatening speech of Midkena, sprang ashore, and
+the two heroes attacked each other with great fury.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+When the three sons of Midkena heard the clash of
+arms, they came forth, and, seeing how matters stood,
+they rushed down to aid their father; but just as they
+arrived at the shore, Midkena fell dead, cloven through
+helmet and head by the heavy sword of Brian.</p>
+
+<p>And now a fight began, three on each side; and if
+men were afar off, even in the land of Hisberna, in
+the east of the world, they would willingly come the
+whole way to see this battle, so fierce and haughty
+were the minds of those mighty champions, so skilful
+and active were they in the use of their weapons, so
+numerous and heavy were their blows, and so long did
+they continue to fight without either party giving
+way. The three sons of Turenn were at last dreadfully
+wounded&mdash;wounded almost to death. But neither
+fear nor weakness did this cause them, for their valour
+and their fury arose all the more for their wounds,
+and with one mighty onset they drove their spears
+through the bodies of their foes; and the sons of
+Midkena fell before them into the long sleep of death.</p>
+
+<p>But now that the fight was ended, and the battle-fury
+of the victors had passed off&mdash;now it was that they
+began to feel the effects of their wounds. They threw
+themselves full length on the blood-stained sward, and
+long they remained without moving or speaking a
+word, as if they were dead; and a heavy curtain of
+darkness fell over their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>At last Brian, raising his head, spoke to his
+brothers to know if they lived, and when they
+answered him feebly, he said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My dear brothers, let us now arise and give the
+three shouts on the hill while there is time, for I feel
+the signs of death."</p>
+
+<p>But they were not able to rise.</p>
+
+<p>Then Brian, gathering all his remaining strength,
+stood up and lifted one with each hand, while his own
+blood flowed plentifully; and then they raised three
+feeble shouts on Midkena's Hill.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="BCHAPTER_XV" id="BCHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">RETURN AND DEATH OF THE SONS OF TURENN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Making no further delay, he led them to their ship,
+and they set sail for Erin. While they were yet
+far off, Brian, gazing over the sea towards the west,
+suddenly cried out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Lo, I see Ben Edar<a name="FNanchor_XLVIII._76" id="FNanchor_XLVIII._76"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLVIII._76" class="fnanchor">[XLVIII.]</a> yonder, rising over the
+waters; and I see also Dun Turenn farther towards
+the north."</p>
+
+<p>And Ur answered from where he reclined with
+Urcar on the deck, "If we could but get one sight of
+Ben Edar methinks we should regain our health and
+strength; and as thou lovest us, and as thou lovest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+thy own renown, my brother, come and raise our
+heads and rest them on thy breast, that we may see
+Erin once more. After that, we shall welcome either
+life or death."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Ur.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O brother, torch of valour, strong of hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Come, place our weary heads upon thy breast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And let us look upon our native land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Before we sink to everlasting rest!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Brian.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Belovèd sons of Turenn, woe is me!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My wounds are deep, my day of strength is past;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet not for this I grieve, but that I see<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Your lives, my noble brothers, ebbing fast!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Ur.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Would we could give our lives to purchase thine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ah, gladly would we die to ease thy pain!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For art thou not the pride of Turenn's line,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The noblest champion of green Erin's plain?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Brian.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">That mighty Dannan healer, Dianket;<a name="FNanchor_XLIX._77" id="FNanchor_XLIX._77"></a><a href="#Footnote_XLIX._77" class="fnanchor">[XLIX.]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or Midac, who excelled his sire in skill;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The maiden-leech, Armedda, mightier yet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who knew the herbs to cure, the herbs to kill:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, were they here; or had we now at hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Those gifted apples from the distant East;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then might we hope to reach our native land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And live again in joy and peace and rest!<br /></span>
+</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Ur.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Brother, methinks could we but see once more<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Ben Edar's slopes, or Bregia's<a name="FNanchor_L._78" id="FNanchor_L._78"></a><a href="#Footnote_L._78" class="fnanchor">[L.]</a> dewy plain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tailltenn,<a name="FNanchor_LI._79" id="FNanchor_LI._79"></a><a href="#Footnote_LI._79" class="fnanchor">[LI.]</a> or Bruga's<a name="FNanchor_LII._80" id="FNanchor_LII._80"></a><a href="#Footnote_LII._80" class="fnanchor">[LII.]</a> mystic mansion hoar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Our blood would course in health and strength again.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Or let us once behold our father's home,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or winding Liffey down by Ahaclee,<a name="FNanchor_LIII._81" id="FNanchor_LIII._81"></a><a href="#Footnote_LIII._81" class="fnanchor">[LIII.]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Old Frevan's hill,<a name="FNanchor_LIV._82" id="FNanchor_LIV._82"></a><a href="#Footnote_LIV._82" class="fnanchor">[LIV.]</a> or Tara's<a name="FNanchor_LV._83" id="FNanchor_LV._83"></a><a href="#Footnote_LV._83" class="fnanchor">[LV.]</a> regal dome;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Then welcome death or life, whiche'er may be!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>So Brian raised their heads and rested them on his
+breast, and they gazed on the rocky cliffs and green
+slopes of Ben Edar while the ship wafted slowly
+towards land.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this they landed on the north side of
+Ben Edar, from which they made their way slowly
+to Dun Turenn. And when they had reached the
+green in front of the house, Brian cried out&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Father, dear father, come forth to thy children!"</p>
+
+<p>Turenn came forth and saw his sons all wounded
+and pale and feeble.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
+<p>And Brian said, "Go, beloved father&mdash;go quick to
+Tara, and quickly return. Bring this cooking-spit
+to Luga, and tell him that we have given the three
+shouts on Midkena's Hill. Say that we have now paid
+the full eric-fine, and bring back from him the apples
+of the Garden of Hisberna, to heal our wounds, else
+we die."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Brian.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Father, our wounds are deadly; nought can save<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Thy children's lives but Luga's friendly hand:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Go, seek him, father&mdash;fare thee fast&mdash;and crave<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The healing apples from Hisberna's land!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Turenn.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In vain, my sons, ye seek to fly your doom;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The stern Ildana's mind too well I know:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alas! far liefer would he see your tomb,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Than all the treasures all this world could show!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center"><span class="smcap">Brian.</span><br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But he is just; and though his sire we slew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Have we not paid full eric for the deed?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The great Ildana is our kinsman too,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And will relent in this our time of need.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then go, my father, thou art swift and strong;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Speed like the wind&mdash;why linger here to mourn?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Go straight to Luga's home, nor tarry long;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Or, father, we shall die ere thou return!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Turenn set out and travelled like the wind till he
+reached Tara, where he found Luga.</p>
+
+<p>He gave him the cooking-spit, and said, "Behold,
+my three sons have now paid thee the full eric-fine,
+for they have given the three shouts on Midkena's
+Hill. But they are wounded even unto death; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+now give me, I pray thee, the apples from the Garden
+of Hisberna, to cure them, else they die."</p>
+
+<p>But Luga refused, and turned away from Turenn.</p>
+
+<p>Turenn hastened back to his sons with a sorrowful
+heart, and told them that he had failed to get the
+apples.</p>
+
+<p>Then Brian said, "Take me with thee to Tara. I
+will see him, and perchance he may have pity on us,
+and give us the apples."</p>
+
+<p>And it was done so. But when Brian begged for
+the apples, Luga said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will not give them to thee. If thou shouldst
+offer me the full of the whole earth of gold, I would
+not give them to thee. Thou and thy brothers committed
+a wicked and pitiless deed when you slew my
+father. For that deed you must suffer, and with
+nothing short of your death shall I be content."</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">For the blood that you spilled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">For the hero you killed&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The deed is avenged, and your doom is fulfilled!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Brian turned away and went back to his brothers,
+and, lying down between them, his life departed; and
+his brothers died at the same moment.</p>
+
+<p>Then their father and their sister stood hand in
+hand over their bodies, lamenting. And Turenn spoke
+this lay&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, pulseless is my heart this woful hour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My strength is gone, my joy for ever fled;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three noble champions, Erin's pride and power,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">My three fair youths, my children, cold and dead!<br /></span>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Mild Ur, the fair-haired; Urcar, straight and tall;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The kings of Banba<a name="FNanchor_LVI._84" id="FNanchor_LVI._84"></a><a href="#Footnote_LVI._84" class="fnanchor">[LVI.]</a> worthy both to be;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Brian, bravest, noblest, best of all,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Who conquered many lands beyond the sea:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Lo, I am Turenn, your unhappy sire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Mourning with feeble voice above your grave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No life, no wealth, no honours I desire;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A place beside my sons is all I crave!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After this Turenn and Ethnea fell on the bodies
+of the three young heroes and died.</p>
+
+<p>And they were all buried in one grave.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">This is the story of the Fate of the Children of
+Turenn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_OVERFLOWING_OF_LOUGH_NEAGH_AND_THE_STORY_OF_LIBAN_THE_MERMAID" id="THE_OVERFLOWING_OF_LOUGH_NEAGH_AND_THE_STORY_OF_LIBAN_THE_MERMAID"></a>THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH,<br />
+<span class="small">AND THE</span><br />
+STORY OF LIBAN THE MERMAID.</h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>In the days of old a good king ruled over Muman,<a name="FNanchor_LVII._85" id="FNanchor_LVII._85"></a><a href="#Footnote_LVII._85" class="fnanchor">[LVII.]</a>
+whose name was Marid Mac Carido. He had two
+sons, Ecca and Rib. Ecca was restless and unruly,
+and in many ways displeased the king; and he told
+his brother Rib that he had made up his mind to
+leave his home, and win lands for himself in some far
+off part of the country. Rib tried hard to dissuade
+him; but though this delayed his departure for a
+while, he was none the less bent on going.</p>
+
+<p>At last Ecca, being wrought upon by his stepmother
+Ebliu (from whom Slieve Eblinne<a name="FNanchor_LVIII._86" id="FNanchor_LVIII._86"></a><a href="#Footnote_LVIII._86" class="fnanchor">[LVIII.]</a> was
+afterwards named), did a grievous wrong to his
+father, and fled from Muman with all his people;
+and his brother Rib and his stepmother Ebliu went
+with him. Ten hundred men they were in all,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+besides women and children; and they turned their
+faces towards the north.</p>
+
+<p>After they had travelled for some time, their
+druids<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> told them that it was not fated for them to
+settle in the same place; and accordingly, when they
+had come to the Pass of the two Pillar Stones, they
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>Rib and his people turned to the west, and they
+journeyed till they came to the plain of Arbthenn.
+And there the water of a fountain burst forth over the
+land, and drowned them all; and a great lake was
+formed, which to this day is called the Lake of Rib.<a name="FNanchor_LIX._87" id="FNanchor_LIX._87"></a><a href="#Footnote_LIX._87" class="fnanchor">[LIX.]</a></p>
+
+<p>Ecca continued his journey northwards; and he
+and his people fared slowly on till they came near
+to Bruga<a name="FNanchor_LX._88" id="FNanchor_LX._88"></a><a href="#Footnote_LX._88" class="fnanchor">[LX.]</a> of the Boyne, the palace of Mac Indoc,
+where they were fain to rest. No sooner had they
+halted, than a tall man came forth from the palace,
+namely, Angus Mac Indoc of the Bruga, son of the
+Dagda, and commanded them to leave the place
+without delay. But they, being spent with the toil
+of travel, heeded not his words, and, pitching their
+tents, they rested on the plain before the palace.
+Whereupon Angus, being wroth that his commands
+were unheeded, killed all their horses that night.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, he came forth again, and he said to
+them, "Your horses I slew last night; and now, unless
+ye depart from this place, I will slay your people
+to-night."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p><p>And Ecca said to him, "Much evil hast thou
+done to us already, for thou hast killed all our horses.
+And now we cannot go, even though we desire it, for
+without horses we cannot travel."</p>
+
+<p>Then Angus brought to them a very large horse
+in full harness, and they put all their goods on him.
+And when they were about to go, he said to them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Beware that ye keep this great steed walking
+continually; not even a moment's rest shall ye give
+him, otherwise he will certainly be the cause of your
+death."<a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p>After this they set out again, on a Sunday in the
+mid-month of autumn, and travelled on till they
+reached the Plain of the Grey Copse,<a name="FNanchor_LXI._89" id="FNanchor_LXI._89"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXI._89" class="fnanchor">[LXI.]</a> where they
+intended to abide. They gathered then round the
+great steed to take their luggage off him, and each was
+busy seeing after his own property, so that they forgot
+to keep the horse moving. And the moment he
+stood still, a magic well sprang up beneath his feet.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now Ecca, when he saw the well spring up, was
+troubled, remembering Angus's warning. And he
+caused a house to be built round it, and near it he
+built his palace, for the better security. And he chose
+a woman to take care of the well, charging her strictly
+to keep the door locked, except when the people of the
+palace came for water.</p>
+
+<p>After that the King of Ulad,<a name="FNanchor_LXII._90" id="FNanchor_LXII._90"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXII._90" class="fnanchor">[LXII.]</a> that is to say, Muridach,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+the son of Fiaca Findamnas (who was grandson of
+Conal Carna of the Red Branch<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>) came against Ecca
+to drive him forth from Ulad. But Ecca made a stout
+fight, so that he won the lordship of half of Ulad from
+Muridach. And after that his people settled down on
+the Plain of the Grey Copse.</p>
+
+<p>Now Ecca had two daughters, Ariu and Liban,
+of whom Ariu was the wife of Curnan the Simpleton.
+And Curnan went about among the people, foretelling
+that a lake would flow over them from the well, and
+urging them earnestly to make ready their boats.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Come forth, come forth, ye valiant men; build boats, and build ye fast!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see the water surging out, a torrent deep and vast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I see our chief and all his host o'erwhelmed beneath the wave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Ariu, too, my best beloved, alas! I cannot save.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But Liban east and west shall swim<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Long ages on the ocean's rim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">By mystic shores and islets dim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And down in the deep sea cave!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And he ceased not to warn all he met, repeating
+this verse continually; but the people gave no heed to
+the words of the Simpleton.</p>
+
+<p>Now the woman who had charge of the well, on a
+certain occasion forgot to close the door, so that the
+spell was free to work evil. And immediately the
+water burst forth over the plain, and formed a great
+lake, namely the Lake of the Copse. And Ecca and
+all his family and all his folk were drowned, save only
+his daughter Liban, and Conang, and Curnan the
+Simpleton. And they buried Ariu, and raised a
+mound over her, which is called from her Carn-Arenn.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of Conang nothing more is told. But as to
+Curnan, he died of grief after his wife Ariu; and he
+was buried in a mound, which is called Carn-Curnan
+to this day in memory of him.</p>
+
+<p>And thus the great Lake of the Copse was formed,
+which is now called Lough Necca,<a name="FNanchor_LXIII._91" id="FNanchor_LXIII._91"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXIII._91" class="fnanchor">[LXIII.]</a> in memory of
+Ecca, the son of Marid. And it was the overflow of
+this lake which, more than all other causes, scattered
+the Ultonians over Erin.</p>
+
+<p>Now as to Liban. She also was swept away like
+the others; but she was not drowned. She lived for
+a whole year with her lap-dog, in her chamber beneath
+the lake, and God protected her from the water. At
+the end of the year she was weary; and when she
+saw the speckled salmon swimming and playing all
+round her, she prayed and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"O my Lord, I wish I were a salmon, that I
+might swim with the others through the clear green
+sea!"</p>
+
+<p>And at the words she took the shape of a salmon,
+except her face and breast, which did not change.
+And her lap-dog was changed to an otter, and attended
+her afterwards whithersoever she went, as long as she
+lived in the sea.</p>
+
+<p>And so she remained swimming about from sea to
+sea for three hundred years; that is to say, from the
+time of Ecca, the son of Marid, to the time of Comgall
+of Bangor.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now on one occasion, Comgall sent Beoc, the son<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+of Indli, from Bangor to Rome, to talk with Gregory<a name="FNanchor_LXIV._92" id="FNanchor_LXIV._92"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXIV._92" class="fnanchor">[LXIV.]</a>
+concerning some matters of order and rule. And when
+Beoc's curragh<a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> was sailing over the sea, he and his
+crew heard sweet singing in the waters beneath them,
+as it were the chanting of angels.</p>
+
+<p>And Beoc, having listened for a while, looked down
+into the water, and asked what the chant was for, and
+who it was that sang.</p>
+
+<p>And Liban answered, "I am Liban, the daughter
+of Ecca, son of Marid; and it is I who sang the chant
+thou hast heard."</p>
+
+<p>"Why art thou here?" asked Beoc.</p>
+
+<p>And she replied, "Lo, I have lived for three hundred
+years beneath the sea; and I have come hither to
+fix a day and a place of meeting with thee. I shall
+now go westward; and I beseech thee, for the sake
+of the holy men of Dalaradia,<a name="FNanchor_LXV._93" id="FNanchor_LXV._93"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXV._93" class="fnanchor">[LXV.]</a> to come to Inver
+Ollarba<a name="FNanchor_LXVI._94" id="FNanchor_LXVI._94"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXVI._94" class="fnanchor">[LXVI.]</a> to meet me, on this same day at the end of
+a year. Say also to Comgall and to the other holy
+men of Bangor, all that I say to thee. Come with
+thy boats and thy fishing-nets, and thou shalt take
+me from the waters in which I have lived."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not grant thee the boon thou askest," said
+Beoc, "unless thou give me a reward."</p>
+
+<p>"What reward dost thou seek?" asked Liban.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p><p>"That thou be buried in one grave with me in my
+own monastery," answered Beoc.</p>
+
+<p>"That shall be granted to thee," said Liban.</p>
+
+<p>Beoc then went on his way to Rome. And when
+he had returned, he related to Comgall and to the
+other saints of the monastery at Bangor, the story of
+the mermaid. And now the end of the year was nigh.</p>
+
+<p>Then they made ready their nets, and on the day
+appointed they went in their boats to Inver Ollarba, a
+goodly company of the saints of Erin. And Liban was
+caught in the net of Fergus of Miluc:<a name="FNanchor_LXVII._95" id="FNanchor_LXVII._95"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXVII._95" class="fnanchor">[LXVII.]</a> and her head
+and shoulders were those of a maiden, but she had the
+body of a fish.</p>
+
+<p>Now the boat in which she was brought to land
+was kept half full of sea water, in which she remained
+swimming about. And many came to see her; and all
+were filled with wonder when they saw her strange
+shape and heard her story.</p>
+
+<p>Among the rest came the chief of the tribe of
+Hua-Conang, wearing a purple cloak; and she kept
+gazing at him earnestly. The young chief, seeing this,
+said to her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dost thou wish to have this cloak? If so, I will
+give it to thee willingly."</p>
+
+<p>But she answered, "Not so: I desire not thy
+cloak. But it brings to my mind my father Ecca;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+for on the day he was drowned, he wore a cloak of
+purple like thine. But may good luck be on thee for
+thy gentleness, and on him who shall come after thee
+in thy place; and in every assembly where thy successor
+sits, may he be known to all without inquiry."</p>
+
+<p>After that there came up a large-bodied, dark-visaged,
+fierce hero, and killed her lap-dog. Whereupon
+she was grieved; and she told him that the
+heroism of himself and his tribe should be stained
+by the baseness of their minds, and that they should
+not be able to defend themselves against injuries till
+they should do penance, by fasting, for her sake.</p>
+
+<p>Then the warrior repented what he had done, and
+humbled himself before her.</p>
+
+<p>And now there arose a contention about her, as to
+whom she should belong. Comgall said she was his,
+forasmuch as she was caught in his territory. But
+Fergus urged that she belonged to him by right, as it
+was in his net she was taken. And Beoc said he had
+the best right of all to her, on account of the promise
+she had made to him.</p>
+
+<p>And as no one could settle the dispute, these three
+saints fasted and prayed that God would give a judgment
+between them, to show who should own Liban.</p>
+
+<p>And an angel said to one of the company, "Two
+wild oxen will come hither to-morrow from Carn-Arenn,
+that is to say, from the grave-mound of Liban's sister,
+Ariu. Yoke a chariot to them, and place the mermaid
+in it; and into whatsoever territory they shall bring
+her, she shall remain with the owner thereof."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The oxen came on the morrow, as the angel had
+foretold. And when they were yoked, and when Liban
+was placed in the chariot, they brought her straightway
+to Beoc's church, namely to Tec-Da-Beoc.</p>
+
+<p>Then the saints gave her a choice&mdash;either to die
+immediately after baptism, and go to heaven; or to
+live on earth as long as she had lived in the sea, and
+then to go to heaven after these long ages. And the
+choice she took was to die immediately. Whereupon
+Comgall baptised her; and he gave her the name of
+Murgen, that is, "Sea-born," or Murgelt, that is "Mermaid."</p>
+
+<p>And she is counted among the holy virgins, and
+held in honour and reverence, as God ordained for her
+in heaven; and wonders and miracles are performed
+through her means at Tec-Da-Beoc.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONNLA_OF_THE_GOLDEN_HAIR_AND_THE_FAIRY_MAIDEN" id="CONNLA_OF_THE_GOLDEN_HAIR_AND_THE_FAIRY_MAIDEN"></a>CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR,<br />
+AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.</h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>Connla of the Golden Hair was the son of Conn
+the Hundred-fighter.<a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> One day as he stood with his
+father on the royal Hill of Usna,<a name="FNanchor_LXVIII._96" id="FNanchor_LXVIII._96"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXVIII._96" class="fnanchor">[LXVIII.]</a> he saw a lady a
+little way off, very beautiful, and dressed in strange
+attire. She approached the spot where he stood;
+and when she was near, he spoke to her, and asked
+who she was, and from what place she had come.</p>
+
+<p>The lady replied, "I have come from the Land
+of the Living<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>&mdash;a land where there is neither death
+nor old age, nor any breach of law. The inhabitants
+of earth call us Aes-shee,<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> for we have our dwellings
+within large, pleasant, green hills. We pass our time
+very pleasantly in feasting and harmless amusements,
+never growing old; and we have no quarrels or
+contentions."</p>
+
+<p>The king and his company marvelled very much;
+for though they heard this conversation, no one saw
+the lady except Connla alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is this thou art talking to, my son?" said
+the king.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
+<p>And anon she answered for the youth, "Connla
+is speaking with a lovely, noble-born young lady,
+who will never die, and who will never grow
+old. I love Connla of the Golden Hair, and I have
+come to bring him with me to Moy-mell,<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> the plain
+of never-ending pleasure. On the day that he comes
+with me he shall be made king; and he shall reign
+for ever in Fairyland, without weeping and without
+sorrow. Come with me, O gentle Connla of the
+ruddy cheek, the fair, freckled neck, and the golden
+hair! Come with me, beloved Connla, and thou
+shalt retain the comeliness and dignity of thy form,
+free from the wrinkles of old age, till the awful day
+of judgment!"</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thy flowing golden hair, thy comely face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy tall majestic form of peerless grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That show thee sprung from Conn's exalted race.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>King Conn the Hundred-fighter, being much
+troubled, called then on his druid,<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Coran, to put forth
+his power against the witchery of the banshee<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"O Coran of the mystic arts and of the mighty
+incantations, here is a contest such as I have never
+been engaged in since I was made king at Tara&mdash;a
+contest with an invisible lady, who is beguiling
+my son to Fairyland by her baleful charms. Her
+cunning is beyond my skill, and I am not able to
+withstand her power; and if thou, Coran, help not, my
+son will be taken away from me by the wiles and
+witchery of a woman from the fairy hills."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Coran, the druid, then came forward, and began
+to chant against the voice of the lady. And his
+power was greater than hers for that time, so that
+she was forced to retire.</p>
+
+<p>As she was going away she threw an apple to
+Connla, who straightway lost sight of her; and the
+king and his people no longer heard her voice.</p>
+
+<p>The king and the prince returned with their
+company to the palace; and Connla remained for
+a whole month without tasting food or drink, except
+the apple. And though he ate of it each day, it
+was never lessened, but was as whole and perfect in
+the end as at the beginning. Moreover, when they
+offered him aught else to eat or drink, he refused
+it; for while he had his apple he did not deem
+any other food worthy to be tasted. And he began
+to be very moody and sorrowful, thinking of the
+lovely fairy maiden.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the month, as Connla stood by
+his father's side among the nobles, on the Plain of
+Arcomin, he saw the same lady approaching him from
+the west. And when she had come near, she addressed
+him in this manner&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"A glorious seat, indeed, has Connla among
+wretched, short-lived mortals, awaiting the dreadful
+stroke of death! But now, the ever-youthful people
+of Moy-mell, who never feel old age, and who fear
+not death, seeing thee day by day among thy friends,
+in the assemblies of thy Fatherland, love thee with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+a strange love; and they will make thee king over
+them if thou wilt come with me."</p>
+
+<p>When the king heard the words of the lady, he
+commanded his people to call the druid again to him,
+saying&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Bring my druid, Coran, to me; for I see that
+the fairy lady has this day regained the power of her
+voice."</p>
+
+<p>At this the lady said, "Valiant Conn, fighter
+of a hundred, the faith of the druids has come to
+little honour among the upright, mighty, numberless
+people of this land. When the righteous law shall be
+restored, it will seal up the lips of the false, black
+demon; and his druids shall no longer have power to
+work their guileful spells."</p>
+
+<p>Now the king observed, and marvelled greatly,
+that whenever the lady was present, his son never
+spoke one word to any one, nay, even though they
+addressed him many times. And when the lady had
+ceased to speak, the king said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Connla, my son, has thy mind been moved by the
+words of the lady?"</p>
+
+<p>Connla spoke then, and replied, "Father, I am
+very unhappy; for though I love my people beyond
+all, yet I am filled with sadness on account of this
+lady!"</p>
+
+<p>When Connla had said this, the maiden again
+addressed him, and chanted these words in a very
+sweet voice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2">THE CHANT OF THE FAIRY MAIDEN TO CONNLA OF
+THE GOLDEN HAIR.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center">I.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">A land of youth, a land of rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">A land from sorrow free;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">It lies far off in the golden west,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">On the verge of the azure sea.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">A swift canoe of crystal bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">That never met mortal view&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We shall reach the land ere fall of night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">In that strong and swift canoe:<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">We shall reach the strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Of that sunny land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">From druids and demons free;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The land of rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In the golden west,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">On the verge of the azure sea!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center">II.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A pleasant land of winding vales, bright streams, and verdurous plains,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where summer all the live-long year, in changeless splendour reigns;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A peaceful land of calm delight, of everlasting bloom;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Old age and death we never know, no sickness, care, or gloom;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The land of youth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Of love and truth,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">From pain and sorrow free;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The land of rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In the golden west,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">On the verge of the azure sea!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center">III.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There are strange delights for mortal men in that island of the west;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sun comes down each evening in its lovely vales to rest;<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">And though far and dim<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i5">On the ocean's rim<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">It seems to mortal view,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">We shall reach its halls<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Ere the evening falls,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">In my strong and swift canoe;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And ever more<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">That verdant shore<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">Our happy home shall be;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The land of rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In the golden west,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">On the verge of the azure sea!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0 center">IV.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It will guard thee from the druids, from the demons of the air;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that western shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where thou and I in joy and love shall live for evermore:<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">From the druid's incantation,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">From his black and deadly snare,<br /></span>
+<span class="i5">From the withering imprecation<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Of the demon of the air,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that silver strand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where thou shalt reign in endless joy, the king of the Fairy-land!<a name="FNanchor_LXIX._97" id="FNanchor_LXIX._97"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXIX._97" class="fnanchor">[LXIX.]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When the maiden had ended her chant, Connla
+suddenly walked away from his father's side, and
+sprang into the curragh, the gleaming, straight-gliding,
+strong, crystal canoe. The king and his people saw
+them afar off and dimly, moving away over the bright
+sea towards the sunset. They gazed sadly after them,
+till they lost sight of the canoe over the utmost
+verge; and no one can tell whither they went, for
+Connla was never again seen in his native land.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_VOYAGE_OF_MAILDUN" id="THE_VOYAGE_OF_MAILDUN"></a>THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">AN ACCOUNT<br />
+OF THE ADVENTURES OF MAILDUN AND HIS CREW,<br />
+AND OF THE WONDERFUL THINGS THEY SAW DURING THEIR VOYAGE
+OF THREE YEARS AND SEVEN MONTHS, IN THEIR CURRAGH,<a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a><br />
+ON THE WESTERN SEA.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_I" id="CCHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">MAILDUN'S CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH. HE BEGINS HIS
+VOYAGE IN QUEST OF THE PLUNDERERS WHO SLEW
+HIS FATHER.</p>
+
+
+<p>There was once an illustrious man of the tribe of
+Owenaght<a name="FNanchor_LXX._98" id="FNanchor_LXX._98"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXX._98" class="fnanchor">[LXX.]</a> of Ninus, Allil Ocar Aga by name, a goodly
+hero, and lord of his own tribe and territory. One
+time, when he was in his house unguarded, a fleet
+of plunderers landed on the coast, and spoiled his
+territory. The chief fled for refuge to the church of
+Dooclone; but the spoilers followed him thither, slew
+him, and burned the church over his head.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
+<p>Not long after Allil's death, a son was born to
+him. The child's mother gave him the name of
+Maildun; and, wishing to conceal his birth, she brought
+him to the queen of that country, who was her dear
+friend. The queen took him to her, and gave out that
+he was her own child, and he was brought up with
+the king's sons, slept in the same cradle with them,
+and was fed from the same breast and from the same
+cup. He was a very lovely child; and the people who
+saw him thought it doubtful if there was any other
+child living at the time equally beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>As he grew up to be a young man, the noble
+qualities of his mind gradually unfolded themselves.
+He was high-spirited and generous, and he loved
+all sorts of manly exercises. In ball-playing, in
+running and leaping, in throwing the stone, in chess-playing,
+in rowing, and in horse-racing, he surpassed
+all the youths that came to the king's palace, and won
+the palm in every contest.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when the young men were at their
+games, a certain youth among them grew envious of
+Maildun; and he said, in an angry and haughty
+tone of voice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is a cause of much shame to us that we have
+to yield in every game, whether of skill or of strength,
+whether on land or on water, to an obscure youth,
+of whom no one can tell who is his father or his
+mother, or what race or tribe he belongs to."</p>
+
+<p>On hearing this, Maildun ceased at once from
+play; for until that moment he believed that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+was the son of the king of the Owenaght, and of the
+queen who had nursed him. And going anon to
+the queen, he told her what had happened; and he
+said to her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If I am not thy son, I will neither eat nor drink
+till thou tell me who my father and mother are."</p>
+
+<p>She tried to soothe him, and said, "Why do you
+worry yourself searching after this matter? Give
+no heed to the words of this envious youth. Am
+I not a mother to you? And in all this country,
+is there any mother who loves her son better than
+I love you?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered, "All this is quite true; yet I pray
+thee let me know who my parents are."</p>
+
+<p>The queen then, seeing that he would not be
+put off, brought him to his mother, and put him
+into her hands. And when he had spoken with
+her, he asked her to tell him who his father was.</p>
+
+<p>"You are bent on a foolish quest, my child,"
+she said; "for even if you knew all about your
+father, the knowledge would bring neither advantage
+nor happiness to you; for he died before you were
+born."</p>
+
+<p>"Even so," he replied, "I wish to know who he
+was."</p>
+
+<p>So his mother told him the truth, saying, "Your
+father was Allil Ocar Aga, of the tribe of Owenaght
+of Ninus."</p>
+
+<p>Maildun then set out for his father's territory;
+and his three foster brothers, namely, the king's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+three sons, who were noble and handsome youths like
+himself, went with him. When the people of his
+tribe found out that the strange youth was the son
+of their chief, whom the plunderers had slain years
+before, and when they were told that the three
+others were the king's sons, they gave them all a
+joyful welcome, feasting them, and showing them
+much honour; so that Maildun was made quite happy,
+and soon forgot all the abasement and trouble he
+had undergone.</p>
+
+<p>Some time after this, it happened that a number
+of young people were in the churchyard of Dooclone&mdash;the
+same church in which Maildun's father had been
+slain&mdash;exercising themselves in casting a hand-stone.
+The game was to throw the stone clear over the
+charred roof of the church that had been burned; and
+Maildun was there contending among the others. A
+foul-tongued fellow named Brickna, a servant of the
+people who owned the church, was standing by; and
+he said to Maildun&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It would better become you to avenge the
+man who was burned to death here, than to be
+amusing yourself casting a stone over his bare, burnt
+bones."</p>
+
+<p>"Who was he?" inquired Maildun.</p>
+
+<p>"Allil Ocar Aga, your father," replied the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Who slew him?" asked Maildun.</p>
+
+<p>"Plunderers from a fleet slew him and burned him
+in this church," replied Brickna; "and the same
+plunderers are still sailing in the same fleet."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Maildun was disturbed and sad after hearing this.
+He dropped the stone that he held in his hand, folded
+his cloak round him, and buckled on his shield. And
+he left the company, and began to inquire of all he
+met, the road to the plunderers' ships. For a long
+time he could get no tidings of them; but at last some
+persons, who knew where the fleet lay, told him that
+it was a long way off, and that there was no reaching
+it except by sea.</p>
+
+<p>Now Maildun was resolved to find out these
+plunderers, and to avenge on them the death of his
+father. So he went without delay into Corcomroe,<a name="FNanchor_LXXI._99" id="FNanchor_LXXI._99"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXI._99" class="fnanchor">[LXXI.]</a>
+to the druid<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Nuca, to seek his advice about building
+a curragh, and to ask also for a charm to protect him,
+both while building it, and while sailing on the sea
+afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>The druid gave him full instructions. He told
+him the day he should begin to build his curragh, and
+the exact day on which he was to set out on his
+voyage; and he was very particular about the number
+of the crew, which, he said, was to be sixty chosen
+men, neither more nor less.</p>
+
+<p>So Maildun built a large triple-hide curragh,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
+following the druid's directions in every particular,
+chose his crew of sixty, among whom were his two
+friends, Germane and Diuran Lekerd; and on the day
+appointed put out to sea.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
+<p>When he had got only a very little way from the
+land, he saw his three foster brothers running down
+to the shore, signalling and calling out to him to
+return and take them on board; for they said they
+wished to go with him.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall not turn back," said Maildun; "and
+you cannot come with us; for we have already got
+our exact number."</p>
+
+<p>"We will swim after you in the sea till we are
+drowned, if you do not return for us," replied they;
+and so saying, the three plunged in and swam after
+the curragh.</p>
+
+<p>When Maildun saw this, he turned his vessel
+towards them, and took them on board rather than
+let them be drowned.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_II" id="CCHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FIRST ISLAND. TIDINGS OF THE PLUNDERERS.</p>
+
+
+<p>They sailed that day and night, as well as the whole
+of next day, till darkness came on again; and at midnight
+they saw two small bare islands, with two great
+houses on them near the shore. When they drew
+near, they heard the sounds of merriment and laughter,
+and the shouts of revellers intermingled with the loud
+voices of warriors boasting of their deeds. And listening
+to catch the conversation, they heard one warrior
+say to another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Stand off from me, for I am a better warrior than
+thou; it was I who slew Allil Ocar Aga, and burned
+Dooclone over his head; and no one has ever dared to
+avenge it on me. Thou hast never done a great deed
+like that!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now surely," said Germane and Diuran to
+Maildun, "Heaven has guided our ship to this place!
+Here is an easy victory. Let us now sack this house,
+since God has revealed our enemies to us, and delivered
+them into our hands!"</p>
+
+<p>While they were yet speaking, the wind arose, and
+a great tempest suddenly broke on them. And they
+were driven violently before the storm, all that night
+and a part of next day, into the great and boundless
+ocean; so that they saw neither the islands they had
+left nor any other land; and they knew not whither
+they were going.</p>
+
+<p>Then Maildun said, "Take down your sail and
+put by your oars, and let the curragh drift before the
+wind in whatsoever direction it pleases God to lead
+us;" which was done.</p>
+
+<p>He then turned to his foster brothers, and said to
+them, "This evil has befallen us because we took you
+into the curragh, thereby violating the druid's directions;
+for he forbade me to go to sea with more than
+sixty men for my crew, and we had that number
+before you joined us. Of a surety more evil will come
+of it."</p>
+
+<p>His foster brothers answered nothing to this, but
+remained silent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_III" id="CCHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND OF THE MONSTROUS ANTS.</p>
+
+
+<p>For three days and three nights they saw no land.
+On the morning of the fourth day, while it was yet
+dark, they heard a sound to the north-east; and
+Germane said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is the voice of the waves breaking on the
+shore."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it was light they saw land and made
+towards it. While they were casting lots to know
+who should go and explore the country, they saw
+great flocks of ants coming down to the beach, each of
+them as large as a foal. The people judged by their
+numbers, and by their eager and hungry look, that
+they were bent on eating both ship and crew; so
+they turned their vessel round and sailed quickly
+away.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Their multitudes countless, prodigious their size;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Were never such ants seen or heard of before.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They struggled and tumbled and plunged for the prize,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And fiercely the famine-fire blazed from their eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As they ground with their teeth the red sand of the shore!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_IV" id="CCHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE TERRACED ISLE OF BIRDS.</p>
+
+
+<p>Again for three days and three nights they saw no
+land. But on the morning of the fourth day they
+heard the murmur of the waves on the beach; and as
+the day dawned, they saw a large high island, with
+terraces all round it, rising one behind another. On
+the terraces grew rows of tall trees, on which were
+perched great numbers of large, bright-coloured birds.</p>
+
+<p>When the crew were about to hold council as to
+who should visit the island and see whether the
+birds were tame, Maildun himself offered to go. So
+he went with a few companions; and they viewed
+the island warily, but found nothing to hurt or
+alarm them; after which they caught great numbers
+of the birds and brought them to their ship.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A shield-shaped island, with terraces crowned,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And great trees circling round and round:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From the summit down to the wave-washed rocks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">There are bright-coloured birds in myriad flocks&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their plumes are radiant; but hunger is keen;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">So the birds are killed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Till the curragh is filled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the sailors embark on the ocean green!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_V" id="CCHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">A MONSTER.</p>
+
+
+<p>They sailed from this, and on the fourth day discovered
+a large, sandy island, on which, when they came near,
+they saw a huge, fearful animal standing on the beach,
+and looking at them very attentively. He was somewhat
+like a horse in shape; but his legs were like the
+legs of a dog; and he had great, sharp claws of a blue
+colour.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun, having viewed this monster for some
+time, liked not his look; and, telling his companions to
+watch him closely, for that he seemed bent on mischief,
+he bade the oarsmen row very slowly towards land.</p>
+
+<p>The monster seemed much delighted when the ship
+drew nigh the shore, and gambolled and pranced about
+with joy on the beach, before the eyes of the voyagers;
+for he intended to eat the whole of them the moment
+they landed.</p>
+
+<p>"He seems not at all sorry to see us coming," said
+Maildun; "but we must avoid him and put back from
+the shore."</p>
+
+<p>This was done. And when the animal observed
+them drawing off, he ran down in a great rage to the
+very water's edge, and digging up large, round pebbles
+with his sharp claws, he began to fling them at the
+vessel; but the crew soon got beyond his reach, and
+sailed into the open sea.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A horrible monster, with blazing eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In shape like a horse and tremendous in size,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Awaiting the curragh, they saw;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With big bony jaws<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And murderous claws,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">That filled them with terror and awe:<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">How gleeful he dances,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And bellows and prances,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">As near to the island they draw;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Expecting a feast&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The bloodthirsty beast&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">With his teeth like edge of a saw:<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Then he ran to the shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With a deafening roar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Intending to swallow them raw:<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">But the crew, with a shout,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Put their vessel about,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And escaped from his ravenous maw!<a name="FNanchor_LXXII._100" id="FNanchor_LXXII._100"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXII._100" class="fnanchor">[LXXII.]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_VI" id="CCHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE DEMON HORSE-RACE.</p>
+
+
+<p>After sailing a long distance, they came in view of
+a broad, flat island. It fell to the lot of Germane to go
+and examine it, and he did not think the task a
+pleasant one. Then his friend Diuran said to him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will go with you this time; and when next it
+falls to my lot to visit an island, you shall come with
+me." So both went together.</p>
+
+<p>They found the island very large; and some distance
+from the shore they came to a broad green<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+race-course, in which they saw immense hoof-marks,
+the size of a ship's sail, or of a large dining-table. They
+found nut-shells, as large as helmets, scattered about;
+and although they could see no one, they observed all
+the marks and tokens that people of huge size were
+lately employed there at sundry kinds of work.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing these strange signs, they became alarmed,
+and went and called their companions from the boat to
+view them. But the others, when they had seen them,
+were also struck with fear, and all quickly retired
+from the place and went on board their curragh.</p>
+
+<p>When they had got a little way from the land, they
+saw dimly, as it were through a mist, a vast multitude
+of people on the sea, of gigantic size and demoniac
+look, rushing along the crests of the waves with great
+outcry. As soon as this shadowy host had landed,
+they went to the green, where they arranged a horse-race.</p>
+
+<p>The horses were swifter than the wind; and as
+they pressed forward in the race, the multitudes raised
+a mighty shout like thunder, which reached the crew
+as if it were beside them. Maildun and his men, as
+they sat in their curragh, heard the strokes of the
+whips and the cries of the riders; and though the race
+was far off, they could distinguish the eager words of
+the spectators:&mdash;"Observe the grey horse!" "See
+that chestnut horse!" "Watch the horse with the
+white spots!" "My horse leaps better than yours!"</p>
+
+<p>After seeing and hearing these things, the crew
+sailed away from the island as quickly as they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+able, into the open ocean, for they felt quite sure that
+the multitude they saw was a gathering of demons.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A spacious isle of meadowy plains, with a broad and sandy shore:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Two bold and trusty spies are sent, its wonders to explore.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mysterious signs, strange, awful sights, now meet the wanderers' eyes:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vast hoof-marks, and the traces dire of men of monstrous size:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And lo! on the sea, in countless hosts, their shadowy forms expand;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They pass the affrighted sailors by, and like demons they rush to land;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They mount their steeds, and the race is run, in the midst of hell's uproar:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then the wanderers quickly raise their sails, and leave the accursèd shore.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_VII" id="CCHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE PALACE OF SOLITUDE.</p>
+
+
+<p>They suffered much from hunger and thirst this
+time, for they sailed a whole week without making
+land; but at the end of that time they came in sight of
+a high island, with a large and very splendid house
+on the beach near the water's edge. There were two
+doors&mdash;one turned inland, and the other facing the sea;
+and the door that looked towards the sea was closed
+with a great flat stone. In this stone was an opening,
+through which the waves, as they beat against the
+door every day, threw numbers of salmon into the
+house.</p>
+
+<p>The voyagers landed, and went through the whole
+house without meeting any one. But they saw in one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+large room an ornamented couch, intended for the head
+of the house, and in each of the other rooms was a
+larger one for three members of the family: and there
+was a cup of crystal on a little table before each couch.
+They found abundance of food and ale, and they ate
+and drank till they were satisfied, thanking God for
+having relieved them from hunger and thirst.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Aloft, high towering o'er the ocean's foam,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The spacious mansion rears its glittering dome.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each day the billows, through the marble door,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shoot living salmon floundering on the floor.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Couches that lure the sailors to recline,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Abundant food, brown ale, and sparkling wine;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tables and chairs in order duly placed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With crystal cups and golden goblets graced.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But not a living soul the wanderers found;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twas silence all and solitude profound.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They eat and drink, give thanks, then hoist their sail,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And skim the deep once more, obedient to the gale.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_VIII" id="CCHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND OF THE WONDERFUL APPLE TREE.</p>
+
+
+<p>After leaving this, they suffered again from hunger,
+till they came to an island with a high hill round it
+on every side. A single apple tree grew in the middle,
+very tall and slender, and all its branches were in like
+manner exceedingly slender, and of wonderful length,
+so that they grew over the hill and down to the sea.</p>
+
+<p>When the ship came near the island, Maildun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+caught one of the branches in his hand. For three
+days and three nights the ship coasted the island,
+and during all this time he held the branch, letting
+it slide through his hand, till on the third day
+he found a cluster of seven apples on the very end.
+Each of these apples supplied the travellers with food
+and drink for forty days and forty nights.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_IX" id="CCHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND OF BLOODTHIRSTY QUADRUPEDS.</p>
+
+
+<p>A beautiful island next came in view, in which
+they saw, at a distance, multitudes of large animals
+shaped like horses. The voyagers, as they drew
+near, viewed them attentively, and soon observed that
+one of them opened his mouth and bit a great piece
+out of the side of the animal that stood next him,
+bringing away skin and flesh. Immediately after,
+another did the same to the nearest of his fellows.
+And, in short, the voyagers saw that all the animals
+in the island kept worrying and tearing each other
+from time to time in this manner; so that the
+ground was covered far and wide with the blood
+that streamed from their sides.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In needless strife they oft contend,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A cruel, mutual-mangling brood;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Their flesh with gory tusks they rend,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And crimson all the isle with blood.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_X" id="CCHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">AN EXTRAORDINARY MONSTER.</p>
+
+
+<p>The next island had a wall all round it. When they
+came near the shore, an animal of vast size, with a
+thick, rough skin, started up inside the wall, and ran
+round the island with the swiftness of the wind.
+When he had ended his race, he went to a high
+point, and standing on a large, flat stone, began to
+exercise himself according to his daily custom, in the
+following manner. He kept turning himself completely
+round and round in his skin, the bones and flesh
+moving, while the skin remained at rest.</p>
+
+<p>When he was tired of this exercise, he rested a
+little; and he then began turning his skin continually
+round his body, down at one side and up at the other
+like a mill-wheel; but the bones and flesh did not
+move.</p>
+
+<p>After spending some time at this sort of work, he
+started and ran round the island as at first, as if to
+refresh himself. He then went back to the same spot,
+and this time, while the skin that covered the lower
+part of his body remained without motion, he whirled
+the skin of the upper part round and round like the
+movement of a flat-lying millstone. And it was in
+this manner that he spent most of his time on the
+island.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun and his people, after they had seen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+these strange doings, thought it better not to venture
+nearer. So they put out to sea in great haste. The
+monster, observing them about to fly, ran down to the
+beach to seize the ship; but finding that they had got
+out of his reach, he began to fling round stones at
+them with great force and an excellent aim. One of
+them struck Maildun's shield and went quite through
+it, lodging in the keel of the curragh; after which the
+voyagers got beyond his range and sailed away.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In a wall-circled isle a big monster they found,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">With a hide like an elephant, leathery and bare;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He threw up his heels with a wonderful bound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And ran round the isle with the speed of a hare.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But a feat more astounding has yet to be told:<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He turned round and round in his leathery skin;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His bones and his flesh and his sinews he rolled&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He was resting outside while he twisted within!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Then, changing his practice with marvellous skill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">His carcase stood rigid and round went his hide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">It whirled round his bones like the wheel of a mill&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He was resting within while he twisted outside!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Next, standing quite near on a green little hill,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">After galloping round in the very same track,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While the skin of his belly stood perfectly still,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Like a millstone he twisted the skin of his back!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But Maildun and his men put to sea in their boat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For they saw his two eyes looking over the wall;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And they knew by the way that he opened his throat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">He intended to swallow them, curragh and all!<a name="FNanchor_LXXIII._101" id="FNanchor_LXXIII._101"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXIII._101" class="fnanchor">[LXXIII.]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XI" id="CCHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF RED-HOT ANIMALS.</p>
+
+
+<p>Not daring to land on this island, they turned away
+hurriedly, much disheartened, not knowing whither to
+turn or where to find a resting-place. They sailed for
+a long time, suffering much from hunger and thirst,
+and praying fervently to be relieved from their
+distress. At last, when they were beginning to
+sink into a state of despondency, being quite worn
+out with toil and hardship of every kind, they
+sighted land.</p>
+
+<p>It was a large and beautiful island, with innumerable
+fruit trees scattered over its surface, bearing
+abundance of gold-coloured apples. Under the trees
+they saw herds of short, stout animals, of a bright red
+colour, shaped somewhat like pigs; but coming nearer,
+and looking more closely, they perceived with astonishment
+that the animals were all fiery, and that their
+bright colour was caused by the red flames which
+penetrated and lighted up their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>The voyagers now observed several of them
+approach one of the trees in a body, and striking
+the trunk all together with their hind legs, they
+shook down some of the apples and ate them. In
+this manner the animals employed themselves every
+day, from early morning till the setting of the sun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+when they retired into deep caves, and were seen no
+more till next morning.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous flocks of birds were swimming on the
+sea, all round the island. From morning till noon,
+they continued to swim away from the land, farther
+and farther out to sea; but at noon they turned round,
+and from that to sunset they swam back towards the
+shore. A little after sunset, when the animals had
+retired to their caves, the birds flocked in on the
+island, and spread themselves over it, plucking the
+apples from the trees and eating them.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun proposed that they should land on the
+island, and gather some of the fruit, saying that it
+was not harder or more dangerous for them than for
+the birds; so two of the men were sent beforehand to
+examine the place. They found the ground hot under
+their feet, for the fiery animals, as they lay at rest,
+heated the earth all around and above their caves;
+but the two scouts persevered notwithstanding, and
+brought away some of the apples.</p>
+
+<p>When morning dawned, the birds left the island
+and swam out to sea; and the fiery animals, coming
+forth from their caves, went among the trees as usual,
+and ate the apples till evening. The crew remained
+in their curragh all day; and as soon as the animals
+had gone into their caves for the night, and the birds
+had taken their place, Maildun landed with all his
+men. And they plucked the apples till morning, and
+brought them on board, till they had gathered as much
+as they could stow into their vessel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XII" id="CCHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE PALACE OF THE LITTLE CAT.</p>
+
+
+<p>After rowing for a long time, their store of apples
+failed them, and they had nothing to eat or drink; so
+that they suffered sorely under a hot sun, and their
+mouths and nostrils were filled with the briny smell
+of the sea. At last they came in sight of land&mdash;a
+little island with a large palace on it. Around the
+palace was a wall, white all over, without stain or
+flaw, as if it had been built of burnt lime, or carved
+out of one unbroken rock of chalk; and where it
+looked towards the sea it was so lofty that it seemed
+almost to reach the clouds.</p>
+
+<p>The gate of this outer wall was open, and a number
+of fine houses, all snowy white, were ranged round
+on the inside, enclosing a level court in the middle,
+on which all the houses opened. Maildun and
+his people entered the largest of them, and walked
+through several rooms without meeting with any
+one. But on reaching the principal apartment, they
+saw in it a small cat, playing among a number of
+low, square, marble pillars, which stood ranged in a
+row; and his play was, leaping continually from the
+top of one pillar to the top of another. When the
+men entered the room, the cat looked at them for a
+moment, but returned to his play anon, and took no
+further notice of them.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Looking now to the room itself, they saw three
+rows of precious jewels ranged round the wall from
+one door-jamb to the other. The first was a row of
+brooches of gold and silver, with their pins fixed in
+the wall, and their heads outwards; the second, a row
+of torques of gold and silver; and the third, a row of
+great swords, with hilts of gold and silver.</p>
+
+<p>Round the room were arranged a number of
+couches, all pure white and richly ornamented.
+Abundant food of various kinds was spread on
+tables, among which they observed a boiled ox and a
+roast hog; and there were many large drinking-horns,
+full of good, intoxicating ale.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it for us that this food has been prepared?"
+said Maildun to the cat.</p>
+
+<p>The cat, on hearing the question, ceased from
+playing, and looked at him; but he recommenced his
+play immediately. Whereupon Maildun told his
+people that the dinner was meant for them; and
+they all sat down, and ate and drank till they were
+satisfied, after which they rested and slept on the
+couches.</p>
+
+<p>When they awoke, they poured what was left
+of the ale into one vessel; and they gathered the
+remnants of the food to bring them away. As they
+were about to go, Maildun's eldest foster brother asked
+him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I bring one of those large torques away
+with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"By no means," said Maildun; "it is well that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+we have got food and rest. Bring nothing away,
+for it is certain that this house is not left without
+some one to guard it."</p>
+
+<p>The young man, however, disregarding Maildun's
+advice, took down one of the torques and brought it
+away. But the cat followed him, and overtook him
+in the middle of the court, and, springing on him like
+a blazing, fiery arrow, he went through his body, and
+reduced it in a moment to a heap of ashes. He then
+returned to the room, and, leaping up on one of the
+pillars, sat upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun turned back, bringing the torque with
+him, and, approaching the cat, spoke some soothing
+words; after which he put the torque back to the
+place from which it had been taken. Having done
+this, he collected the ashes of his foster brother, and,
+bringing them to the shore, cast them into the sea.
+They all then went on board the curragh, and continued
+their voyage, grieving for their lost companion,
+but thanking God for His many mercies to them.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XIII" id="CCHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">AN ISLAND THAT DYED BLACK AND WHITE.</p>
+
+
+<p>On the morning of the third day, they came to another
+island, which was divided into two parts by a wall
+of brass running across the middle. They saw two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+great flocks of sheep, one on each side of the wall;
+and all those at one side were black, while those at
+the other side were white.</p>
+
+<p>A very large man was employed in dividing and
+arranging the sheep; and he often took up a sheep
+and threw it with much ease over the wall from one
+side to the other. When he threw over a white sheep
+among the black ones, it became black immediately;
+and in like manner, when he threw a black sheep
+over, it was instantly changed to white.</p>
+
+<p>The travellers were very much alarmed on witnessing
+these doings and Maildun said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is very well that we know so far. Let us now
+throw something on shore, to see whether it also will
+change colour; if it does, we shall avoid the island."</p>
+
+<p>So they took a branch with black-coloured bark
+and threw it towards the white sheep, and no sooner
+did it touch the ground than it became white. They
+then threw a white-coloured branch on the side of the
+black sheep, and in a moment it turned black.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very lucky for us," said Maildun, "that we
+did not land on the island, for doubtless our colour
+would have changed like the colour of the branches."</p>
+
+<p>So they put about with much fear, and sailed
+away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XIV" id="CCHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND OF THE BURNING RIVER.</p>
+
+
+<p>On the third day, they came in view of a large, broad
+island, on which they saw a herd of gracefully shaped
+swine; and they killed one small porkling for food.
+Towards the centre rose a high mountain, which they
+resolved to ascend, in order to view the island; and
+Germane and Diuran Lekerd were chosen for this task.</p>
+
+<p>When they had advanced some distance towards
+the mountain, they came to a broad, shallow river;
+and sitting down on the bank to rest, Germane dipped
+the point of his lance into the water, which instantly
+burned off the top, as if the lance had been thrust into
+a furnace. So they went no farther.</p>
+
+<p>On the opposite side of the river, they saw a herd
+of animals like great hornless oxen, all lying down;
+and a man of gigantic size near them: and Germane
+began to strike his spear against his shield, in order to
+rouse the cattle.</p>
+
+<p>"Why are you frightening the poor young calves
+in that manner?" demanded the big shepherd, in a
+tremendous voice.</p>
+
+<p>Germane, astonished to find that such large
+animals were nothing more than calves, instead of
+answering the question, asked the big man where the
+mothers of those calves were.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"They are on the side of yonder mountain," he
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>Germane and Diuran waited to hear no more; but,
+returning to their companions, told them all they had
+seen and heard; after which the crew embarked and
+left the island.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XV" id="CCHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE MILLER OF HELL.</p>
+
+
+<p>The next island they came to, which was not far off
+from the last, had a large mill on it; and near the
+door stood the miller, a huge-bodied, strong, burly man.
+They saw numberless crowds of men and horses laden
+with corn, coming towards the mill; and when their
+corn was ground they went away towards the west.
+Great herds of all kinds of cattle covered the plain as
+far as the eye could reach, and among them many
+wagons laden with every kind of wealth that is
+produced on the ridge of the world. All these the
+miller put into the mouth of his mill to be ground;
+and all, as they came forth, went westwards.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun and his people now spoke to the miller,
+and asked him the name of the mill, and the meaning
+of all they had seen on the island. And he, turning
+quickly towards them, replied in few words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This mill is called the Mill of Inver-tre-Kenand,
+and I am the miller of hell. All the corn and all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+riches of the world that men are dissatisfied with, or
+which they complain of in any way, are sent here to
+be ground; and also every precious article, and every
+kind of wealth, which men try to conceal from God.
+All these I grind in the Mill of Inver-tre-Kenand, and
+send them afterwards away to the west."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke no more, but turned round and busied
+himself again with his mill. And the voyagers, with
+much wonder and awe in their hearts, went to their
+curragh and sailed away.<a name="FNanchor_LXXIV._102" id="FNanchor_LXXIV._102"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXIV._102" class="fnanchor">[LXXIV.]</a></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XVI" id="CCHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF WEEPING.</p>
+
+
+<p>After leaving this, they had not been long sailing
+when they discovered another large island, with a great
+multitude of people on it. They were all black, both
+skin and clothes, with black head-dresses also; and
+they kept walking about, sighing and weeping and
+wringing their hands, without the least pause or rest.</p>
+
+<p>It fell to the lot of Maildun's second foster brother
+to go and examine the island. And when he went
+among the people, he also grew sorrowful, and fell to
+weeping and wringing his hands, with the others.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+Two of the crew were sent to bring him back; but
+they were unable to find him among the mourners;
+and, what was worse, in a little time they joined the
+crowd, and began to weep and lament like all the
+rest.</p>
+
+<p>Maildun then chose four men to go and bring back
+the others by force, and he put arms in their hands,
+and gave them these directions&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When you land on the island, fold your mantles
+round your faces, so as to cover your mouths and noses,
+that you may not breathe the air of the country; and
+look neither to the right nor to the left, neither at the
+earth nor at the sky, but fix your eyes on your own
+men till you have laid hands on them."</p>
+
+<p>They did exactly as they were told, and having
+come up with their two companions, namely, those who
+had been sent after Maildun's foster brother, they seized
+them and brought them back by force. But the other
+they could not find. When these two were asked
+what they had seen on the island, and why they began
+to weep, their only reply was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot tell; we only know that we did what
+we saw the others doing."</p>
+
+<p>And after this the voyagers sailed away from the
+island, leaving Maildun's second foster brother behind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XVII" id="CCHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF THE FOUR PRECIOUS WALLS.</p>
+
+
+<p>The next was a high island, divided into four parts
+by four walls meeting in the centre. The first was a
+wall of gold; the second, a wall of silver; the third, a
+wall of copper; and the fourth, a wall of crystal. In
+the first of the four divisions were kings; in the second,
+queens; in the third, youths; and in the fourth, young
+maidens.</p>
+
+<p>When the voyagers landed, one of the maidens
+came to meet them, and leading them forward to a
+house, gave them food. This food, which she dealt out
+to them from a small vessel, looked like cheese, and
+whatever taste pleased each person best, that was the
+taste he found on it. And after they had eaten till
+they were satisfied, they slept in a sweet sleep, as if
+gently intoxicated, for three days and three nights.
+When they awoke on the third day, they found themselves
+in their curragh on the open sea; and there was
+no appearance in any direction either of the maiden or
+of the island.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XVIII" id="CCHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE PALACE OF THE CRYSTAL BRIDGE.</p>
+
+
+<p>They came now to a small island, with a palace on it,
+having a copper chain in front, hung all over with a
+number of little silver bells. Straight before the door<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+there was a fountain, spanned by a bridge of crystal,
+which led to the palace. They walked towards the
+bridge, meaning to cross it, but every time they stepped
+on it they fell backwards flat on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>After some time, they saw a very beautiful young
+woman coming out of the palace, with a pail in her
+hand; and she lifted a crystal slab from the bridge, and,
+having filled her vessel from the fountain, she went
+back into the palace.</p>
+
+<p>"This woman has been sent to keep house for Maildun,"
+said Germane.</p>
+
+<p>"Maildun indeed!" said she, as she shut the door
+after her.</p>
+
+<p>After this they began to shake the copper chain,
+and the tinkling of the silver bells was so soft and
+melodious that the voyagers gradually fell into a
+gentle, tranquil sleep, and slept so till next morning.
+When they awoke, they saw the same young woman
+coming forth from the palace, with the pail in her
+hand; and she lifted the crystal slab as before, filled
+her vessel, and returned into the palace.</p>
+
+<p>"This woman has certainly been sent to keep house
+for Maildun," said Germane.</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful are the powers of Maildun!" said she,
+as she shut the door of the court behind her.</p>
+
+<p>They stayed in this place for three days and three
+nights, and each morning the maiden came forth in the
+same manner, and filled her pail. On the fourth day,
+she came towards them, splendidly and beautifully
+dressed, with her bright yellow hair bound by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+circlet of gold, and wearing silver-work shoes on her
+small, white feet. She had a white mantle over her
+shoulders, which was fastened in front by a silver
+brooch studded with gold; and under all, next her
+soft, snow-white skin, was a garment of fine white
+silk.</p>
+
+<p>"My love to you, Maildun, and to your companions,"
+she said; and she mentioned them all, one after another,
+calling each by his own proper name. "My love to
+you," said she. "We knew well that you were coming
+to our island, for your arrival has long been foretold
+to us."</p>
+
+<p>Then she led them to a large house standing by the
+sea, and she caused the curragh to be drawn high up
+on the beach. They found in the house a number
+of couches, one of which was intended for Maildun
+alone, and each of the others for three of his people.
+The woman then gave them, from one vessel, food
+which was like cheese; first of all ministering to
+Maildun, and then giving a triple share to every
+three of his companions; and whatever taste each
+man wished for, that was the taste he found on it.
+She then lifted the crystal slab at the bridge, filled
+her pail, and dealt out drink to them; and she knew
+exactly how much to give, both of food and of
+drink, so that each had enough and no more.</p>
+
+<p>"This woman would make a fit wife for Maildun,"
+said his people. But while they spoke, she went from
+them with her pail in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>When she was gone, Maildun's companions said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+to him, "Shall we ask this maiden to become thy
+wife?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered, "What advantage will it be to you
+to ask her?"</p>
+
+<p>She came next morning, and they said to her,
+"Why dost thou not stay here with us? Wilt thou
+make friendship with Maildun; and wilt thou take
+him for thy husband?"</p>
+
+<p>She replied that she and all those that lived
+on the island were forbidden to marry with the sons
+of men; and she told them that she could not
+disobey, as she knew not what sin or transgression
+was.</p>
+
+<p>She then went from them to her house; and on
+the next morning, when she returned, and after she
+had ministered to them as usual, till they were
+satisfied with food and drink, and were become
+cheerful, they spoke the same words to her.</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow," she replied, "you will get an
+answer to your question;" and so saying, she walked
+towards her house, and they went to sleep on their
+couches.</p>
+
+<p>When they awoke next morning, they found
+themselves lying in their curragh on the sea, beside
+a great high rock; and when they looked about, they
+saw neither the woman, nor the palace of the crystal
+bridge, nor any trace of the island where they had
+been sojourning.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XIX" id="CCHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF SPEAKING BIRDS.</p>
+
+
+<p>One night, soon after leaving this, they heard in the
+distance, towards the north-east, a confused murmur
+of voices, as if from a great number of persons singing
+psalms. They followed the direction of the sound,
+in order to learn from what it proceeded; and at
+noon the next day, they came in view of an island,
+very hilly and lofty. It was full of birds, some
+black, some brown, and some speckled, who were
+all shouting and speaking with human voices; and
+it was from them that the great clamour came.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XX" id="CCHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE AGED HERMIT, AND THE HUMAN SOULS.</p>
+
+
+<p>At a little distance from this they found another
+small island, with many trees on it, some standing
+singly, and some in clusters, on which were perched
+great numbers of birds. They also saw an aged man
+on the island, who was covered thickly all over with
+long, white hair, and wore no other dress. And when
+they landed, they spoke to him, and asked him who
+he was and what race he belonged to.</p>
+
+<p>"I am one of the men of Erin," he replied. "On<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+a certain day, a long, long time ago, I embarked in a
+small curragh, and put out to sea on a pilgrimage;
+but I had got only a little way from shore, when my
+curragh became very unsteady, as if it were about
+to overturn. So I returned to land, and, in order
+to steady my boat, I placed under my feet at the
+bottom, a number of green surface sods, cut from one
+of the grassy fields of my own country, and began my
+voyage anew. Under the guidance of God, I arrived
+at this spot; and He fixed the sods in the sea for me,
+so that they formed a little island. At first I had
+barely room to stand; but every year, from that time
+to the present, the Lord has added one foot to the
+length and breadth of my island, till in the long
+lapse of ages it has grown to its present size. And
+on one day in each year, He has caused a single tree
+to spring up, till the island has become covered with
+trees. Moreover, I am so old that my body, as you
+see, has become covered with long, white hair, so that
+I need no other dress.</p>
+
+<p>"And the birds that ye see on the trees," he
+continued, "these are the souls of my children, and
+of all my descendants, both men and women, who
+are sent to this little island to abide with me according
+as they die in Erin. God has caused a well of ale
+to spring up for us on the island: and every morning
+the angels bring me half a cake, a slice of fish, and a
+cup of ale from the well; and in the evening the same
+allowance of food and ale is dealt out to each man
+and woman of my people. And it is in this manner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+that we live, and shall continue to live till the end
+of the world; for we are all awaiting here the day of
+judgment."</p>
+
+<p>Maildun and his companions were treated hospitably
+on the island by the old pilgrim for three days and
+three nights; and when they were taking leave of
+him, he told them that they should all reach their
+own country except one man.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXI" id="CCHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND OF THE BIG BLACKSMITHS.</p>
+
+
+<p>When they had been for a long time tossed about
+on the waters, they saw land in the distance. On approaching
+the shore, they heard the roaring of a great
+bellows, and the thundering sound of smiths' hammers
+striking a large glowing mass of iron on an anvil; and
+every blow seemed to Maildun as loud as if a dozen
+men had brought down their sledges all together.</p>
+
+<p>When they had come a little nearer, they heard
+the big voices of the smiths in eager talk.</p>
+
+<p>"Are they near?" asked one.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! silence!" says another.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are they that you say are coming?" inquired
+a third.</p>
+
+<p>"Little fellows, that are rowing towards our shore
+in a pigmy boat," says the first.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When Maildun heard this, he hastily addressed the
+crew&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Put back at once, but do not turn the curragh:
+reverse the sweep of your oars, and let her move stern
+forward, so that those giants may not perceive that
+we are flying!"</p>
+
+<p>The crew at once obey, and the boat begins to
+move away from the shore, stern forward, as he had
+commanded.</p>
+
+<p>The first smith again spoke. "Are they near
+enough to the shore?" said he to the man who was
+watching.</p>
+
+<p>"They seem to be at rest," answered the other;
+"for I cannot perceive that they are coming closer, and
+they have not turned their little boat to go back."</p>
+
+<p>In a short time the first smith asks again, "What
+are they doing now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said the watcher, "they are flying; for
+it seems to me that they are now farther off than they
+were a while ago."</p>
+
+<p>At this the first smith rushed out of the forge&mdash;a
+huge, burly giant&mdash;holding, in the tongs which he
+grasped in his right hand, a vast mass of iron sparkling
+and glowing from the furnace; and, running down to
+the shore with long, heavy strides, he flung the red-hot
+mass with all his might after the curragh. It fell
+a little short, and plunged down just near the prow,
+causing the whole sea to hiss and boil and heave up
+around the boat. But they plied their oars, so that
+they quickly got beyond his reach, and sailed out into
+the open ocean.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXII" id="CCHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE CRYSTAL SEA.</p>
+
+
+<p>After a time, they came to a sea like green crystal.
+It was so calm and transparent that they could see
+the sand at the bottom quite clearly, sparkling in the
+sunlight. And in this sea they saw neither monsters,
+nor ugly animals, nor rough rocks; nothing but the
+clear water and the sunshine and the bright sand.
+For a whole day they sailed over it, admiring its
+splendour and beauty.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXIII" id="CCHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">A LOVELY COUNTRY BENEATH THE WAVES.</p>
+
+
+<p>After leaving this they entered on another sea, which
+seemed like a clear, thin cloud; and it was so transparent,
+and appeared so light, that they thought at
+first it would not bear up the weight of the curragh.</p>
+
+<p>Looking down, they could see, beneath the clear
+water, a beautiful country, with many mansions surrounded
+by groves and woods. In one place was a
+single tree; and, standing on its branches, they saw
+an animal fierce and terrible to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>Round about the tree was a great herd of oxen
+grazing, and a man stood near to guard them, armed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+with shield and spear and sword; but when he looked
+up and saw the animal on the tree, he turned anon
+and fled with the utmost speed. Then the monster
+stretched forth his neck, and, darting his head
+downward, plunged his fangs into the back of the
+largest ox of the whole herd, lifted him off the ground
+into the tree, and swallowed him down in the twinkling
+of an eye; whereupon the whole herd took to flight.</p>
+
+<p>When Maildun and his people saw this, they were
+seized with great terror; for they feared they should
+not be able to cross the sea over the monster, on
+account of the extreme mist-like thinness of the
+water; but after much difficulty and danger they got
+across it safely.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXIV" id="CCHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">AN ISLAND GUARDED BY A WALL OF WATER.</p>
+
+
+<p>When they came to the next island, they observed
+with astonishment that the sea rose up over it on
+every side, steep and high, standing, as it were, like a
+wall all round it. When the people of the island saw
+the voyagers, they rushed hither and thither, shouting,
+"There they are, surely! There they come again for
+another spoil!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Maildun's people saw great numbers of men
+and women, all shouting and driving vast herds of
+horses, cows, and sheep. A woman began to pelt the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+crew from below with large nuts; she flung them so
+that they alighted on the waves round the boat,
+where they remained floating; and the crew gathered
+great quantities of them and kept them for eating.</p>
+
+<p>When they turned to go away, the shouting ceased:
+and they heard one man calling aloud, "Where are
+they now?" and another answering him, "They are
+gone away!"</p>
+
+<p>From what Maildun saw and heard at this island,
+it is likely that it had been foretold to the people that
+their country should some day be spoiled by certain
+marauders; and that they thought Maildun and his
+men were the enemies they expected.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXV" id="CCHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">A WATER-ARCH IN THE AIR.</p>
+
+
+<p>On the next island they saw a very wonderful thing,
+namely, a great stream of water which, gushing up out
+of the strand, rose into the air in the form of a rainbow,
+till it crossed the whole island and came down
+on the strand at the other side. They walked under
+it without getting wet; and they hooked down from
+it many large salmon. Great quantities of salmon of
+a very great size fell also out of the water over their
+heads down on the ground; so that the whole island
+smelled of fish, and it became troublesome to gather
+them on account of their abundance.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>From the evening of Sunday till the evening of
+Monday, the stream never ceased to flow, and never
+changed its place, but remained spanning the island
+like a solid arch of water. Then the voyagers
+gathered the largest of the salmon, till they had as
+much as the curragh would hold; after which they
+sailed out into the great sea.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXVI" id="CCHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE SILVER PILLAR OF THE SEA.</p>
+
+
+<p>The next thing they found after this was an immense
+silver pillar standing in the sea. It had eight sides,
+each of which was the width of an oar-stroke of the
+curragh, so that its whole circumference was eight
+oar-strokes. It rose out of the sea without any land
+or earth about it, nothing but the boundless ocean;
+and they could not see its base deep down in the
+water, neither were they able to see the top on
+account of its vast height.</p>
+
+<p>A silver net hung from the top down to the very
+water, extending far out at one side of the pillar;
+and the meshes were so large that the curragh in full
+sail went through one of them. When they were
+passing through it, Diuran struck the mesh with the
+edge of his spear, and with the blow cut a large
+piece off it.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do not destroy the net," said Maildun; "for what
+we see is the work of great men."</p>
+
+<p>"What I have done," answered Diuran, "is for the
+honour of my God, and in order that the story of our
+adventures may be more readily believed; and I shall
+lay this silver as an offering on the altar of Armagh,
+if I ever reach Erin."</p>
+
+<p>That piece of silver weighed two ounces and a half,
+as it was reckoned afterwards by the people of the
+church of Armagh.</p>
+
+<p>After this they heard some one speaking on the
+top of the pillar, in a loud, clear, glad voice; but they
+knew neither what he said, nor in what language he
+spoke.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXVII" id="CCHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">AN ISLAND STANDING ON ONE PILLAR.</p>
+
+
+<p>The island they saw after this was named Encos;<a name="FNanchor_LXXV._103" id="FNanchor_LXXV._103"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXV._103" class="fnanchor">[LXXV.]</a>
+and it was so called because it was supported by a
+single pillar in the middle. They rowed all round it,
+seeking how they might get into it; but could find
+no landing-place. At the foot of the pillar, however,
+down deep in the water, they saw a door securely
+closed and locked, and they judged that this was
+the way into the island. They called aloud, to find
+out if any persons were living there; but they got
+no reply. So they left it, and put out to sea once
+more.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CCHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLAND QUEEN DETAINS THEM WITH HER MAGIC
+THREAD-CLEW.</p>
+
+<p>The next island they reached was very large. On one
+side rose a lofty, smooth, heath-clad mountain, and
+all the rest of the island was a grassy plain. Near the
+sea-shore stood a great high palace, adorned with
+carvings and precious stones, and strongly fortified
+with a high rampart all round. After landing, they
+went towards the palace, and sat to rest on the
+bench before the gateway leading through the outer
+rampart; and, looking in through the open door,
+they saw a number of beautiful young maidens in
+the court.</p>
+
+<p>After they had sat for some time, a rider appeared
+at a distance, coming swiftly towards the palace; and
+on a near approach, the travellers perceived that it was
+a lady, young and beautiful and richly dressed. She
+wore a blue, rustling silk head-dress; a silver-fringed
+purple cloak hung from her shoulders; her gloves were
+embroidered with gold thread; and her feet were laced
+becomingly in close-fitting scarlet sandals. One of the
+maidens came out and held her horse, while she dismounted
+and entered the palace; and soon after she
+had gone in, another of the maidens came towards
+Maildun and his companions and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You are welcome to this island. Come into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+palace; the queen has sent me to invite you, and is
+waiting to receive you."</p>
+
+<p>They followed the maiden into the palace; and the
+queen bade them welcome, and received them kindly.
+Then, leading them into a large hall in which a plentiful
+dinner was laid out, she bade them sit down and
+eat. A dish of choice food and a crystal goblet of
+wine were placed before Maildun; while a single dish
+and a single drinking-bowl, with a triple quantity of
+meat and drink, were laid before each three of his
+companions. And having eaten and drunk till they
+were satisfied, they went to sleep on soft couches
+till morning.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, the queen addressed Maildun and his
+companions&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Stay now in this country, and do not go a-wandering
+any longer over the wide ocean from island
+to island. Old age or sickness shall never come upon
+you; but you shall be always as young as you are at
+present, and you shall live for ever a life of ease and
+pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us," said Maildun, "how you pass your life
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"That is no hard matter," answered the queen.
+"The good king who formerly ruled over this island
+was my husband, and these fair young maidens that
+you see are our children. He died after a long reign,
+and as he left no son, I now reign, the sole ruler of
+the island. And every day I go to the Great Plain,
+to administer justice and to decide causes among my
+people."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Wilt thou go from us to-day?" asked Maildun.</p>
+
+<p>"I must needs go even now," she replied, "to give
+judgments among the people; but as to you, you will
+all stay in this house till I return in the evening, and
+you need not trouble yourselves with any labour or
+care."</p>
+
+<p>They remained in that island during the three
+months of winter. And these three months appeared
+to Maildun's companions as long as three years, for
+they began to have an earnest desire to return to their
+native land. At the end of that time, one of them
+said to Maildun&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We have been a long time here; why do we not
+return to our own country?"</p>
+
+<p>"What you say is neither good nor sensible,"
+answered Maildun, "for we shall not find in our own
+country anything better than we have here."</p>
+
+<p>But this did not satisfy his companions, and they
+began to murmur loudly. "It is quite clear," said
+they, "that Maildun loves the queen of this island;
+and as this is so, let him stay here; but as for us,
+we will return to our own country."</p>
+
+<p>Maildun, however, would not consent to remain
+after them, and he told them that he would go away
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>Now, on a certain day, not long after this conversation,
+as soon as the queen had gone to the Great Plain
+to administer justice, according to her daily custom,
+they got their curragh ready and put out to sea. They
+had not gone very far from land when the queen came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+riding towards the shore; and, seeing how matters
+stood, she went into the palace and soon returned
+with a ball of thread in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Walking down to the water's edge, she flung the
+ball after the curragh, but held the end of the thread
+in her hand. Maildun caught the ball as it was
+passing, and it clung to his hand; and the queen,
+gently pulling the thread towards her, drew back the
+curragh to the very spot from which they had started
+in the little harbour. And when they had landed, she
+made them promise that if ever this happened again,
+some one should always stand up in the boat and
+catch the ball.</p>
+
+<p>The voyagers abode on the island, much against
+their will, for nine months longer. For every time
+they attempted to escape, the queen brought them
+back by means of the clew, as she had done at first,
+Maildun always catching the ball.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the nine months, the men held
+council, and this is what they said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We know now that Maildun does not wish to
+leave the island; for he loves this queen very much,
+and he catches the ball whenever we try to escape, in
+order that we may be brought back to the palace."</p>
+
+<p>Maildun replied, "Let some one else attend to the
+ball next time, and let us try whether it will cling to
+his hand."</p>
+
+<p>They agreed to this, and, watching their opportunity,
+they again put off towards the open sea. The
+queen arrived, as usual, before they had gone very far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+and flung the ball after them as before. Another man
+of the crew caught it, and it clung as firmly to his
+hand as to Maildun's; and the queen began to draw
+the curragh towards the shore. But Diuran, drawing
+his sword, cut off the man's hand, which fell with the
+ball into the sea; and the men gladly plying their oars,
+the curragh resumed her outward voyage.</p>
+
+<p>When the queen saw this, she began to weep and
+lament, wringing her hands and tearing her hair with
+grief; and her maidens also began to weep and cry
+aloud and clap their hands, so that the whole palace
+was full of grief and lamentation. But none the
+less did the men bend to their oars, and the curragh
+sailed away; and it was in this manner that the
+voyagers made their escape from the island.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXIX" id="CCHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF INTOXICATING WINE-FRUITS.</p>
+
+
+<p>They were now a long time tossed about on the great
+billows, when at length they came in view of an island
+with many trees on it. These trees were somewhat
+like hazels, and they were laden with a kind of fruit
+which the voyagers had not seen before, extremely
+large, and not very different in appearance from
+apples, except that they had a rough, berry-like rind.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After the crew had plucked all the fruit off one
+small tree, they cast lots who should try them, and
+the lot fell on Maildun. So he took some of them,
+and, squeezing the juice into a vessel, drank it. It
+threw him into a sleep of intoxication so deep that he
+seemed to be in a trance rather than in a natural
+slumber, without breath or motion, and with the red
+foam on his lips. And from that hour till the same
+hour next day, no one could tell whether he was living
+or dead.</p>
+
+<p>When he awoke next day, he bade his people to
+gather as much of the fruit as they could bring away
+with them; for the world, as he told them, never produced
+anything of such surpassing goodness. They
+pressed out the juice of the fruit till they had filled
+all their vessels; and so powerful was it to produce
+intoxication and sleep, that, before drinking it, they
+had to mix a large quantity of water with it to
+moderate its strength.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXX" id="CCHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF THE MYSTIC LAKE.</p>
+
+
+<p>The island they came to next was larger than most of
+those they had seen. On one side grew a wood of
+yew trees and great oaks; and on the other side was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+a grassy plain, with one small lake in the midst.
+A noble-looking house stood on the near part of the
+plain, with a small church not far off; and numerous
+flocks of sheep browsed over the whole island.</p>
+
+<p>The travellers went to the church, and found in
+it a hermit, with snow-white beard and hair, and all
+the other marks of great old age. Maildun asked
+who he was, and whence he had come.</p>
+
+<p>He replied, "I am one of the fifteen people, who,
+following the example of our master, Brendan of
+Birra,<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> sailed on a pilgrimage out into the great ocean.
+After many wanderings, we settled on this island,
+where we lived for a long time; but my companions
+died one after another, and of all who came hither,
+I alone am left."</p>
+
+<p>The old pilgrim then showed them Brendan's
+satchel,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> which he and his companions had brought
+with them on their pilgrimage; and Maildun kissed it,
+and all bowed down in veneration before it. And he
+told them that as long as they remained there, they
+might eat of the sheep and of the other food of the
+island; but to waste nothing.</p>
+
+<p>One day, as they were seated on a hill, gazing out
+over the sea, they saw what they took to be a black
+cloud coming towards them from the south-west. They
+continued to view it very closely as it came nearer and
+nearer; and at last they perceived with amazement
+that it was an immense bird, for they saw quite plainly
+the slow, heavy flapping of his wings. When he
+reached the island, he alighted on a little hillock over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+the lake; and they felt no small alarm, for they thought,
+on account of his vast size, that if he saw them, he
+might seize them in his talons, and carry them off over
+the sea. So they hid themselves under trees and in
+the crannies of rocks; but they never lost sight of the
+bird, for they were bent on watching his movements.</p>
+
+<p>He appeared very old, and he held in one claw a
+branch of a tree, which he had brought with him over
+the sea, larger and heavier than the largest full-grown
+oak. It was covered with fresh, green leaves, and was
+heavily laden with clusters of fruit, red and rich-looking
+like grapes, but much larger.</p>
+
+<p>He remained resting for a time on the hill, being
+much wearied after his flight, and at last he began to
+eat the fruit off the branch. After watching him for
+some time longer, Maildun ventured warily towards
+the hillock, to see whether he was inclined to mischief;
+but the bird showed no disposition to harm him.
+This emboldened the others, and they all followed
+their chief.</p>
+
+<p>The whole crew now marched in a body round the
+bird, headed by Maildun, with their shields raised;
+and as he still made no stir, one of the men, by
+Maildun's directions, went straight in front of him,
+and brought away some of the fruit from the branch
+which he still held in his talons. But the bird went
+on plucking and eating his fruit, and never took the
+least notice.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of that same day, as the men sat
+looking over the sea to the south-west, where the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+bird first appeared to them, they saw in the distance
+two others, quite as large, coming slowly towards them
+from the very same point. On they came, flying at a
+vast height, nearer and nearer, till at last they swooped
+down and alighted on the hillock in front of the first
+bird, one on each side.</p>
+
+<p>Although they were plainly much younger than the
+other, they seemed very tired, and took a long rest.
+Then, shaking their wings, they began picking the old
+bird all over, body, wings, and head, plucking out the
+old feathers and the decayed quill points, and smoothing
+down his plumage with their great beaks. After
+this had gone on for some time, the three began
+plucking the fruit off the branch, and they ate till
+they were satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, the two birds began at the very
+same work, picking and arranging the feathers of the
+old bird as before; and at midday they ceased, and
+began again to eat the fruit, throwing the stones and
+what they did not eat of the pulp, into the lake, till the
+water became red like wine. After this the old bird
+plunged into the lake and remained in it, washing
+himself, till evening, when he again flew up on the
+hillock, but perched on a different part of it, to avoid
+touching and defiling himself with the old feathers
+and the other traces of age and decay, which the
+younger birds had removed from him.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the third day, the two younger
+birds set about arranging his feathers for the third
+time; and on this occasion they applied themselves to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+their task in a manner much more careful and particular
+than before, smoothing the plumes with the
+nicest touches, and arranging them in beautiful lines
+and glossy tufts and ridges. And so they continued
+without the least pause till midday, when they ceased.
+Then, after resting for a little while, they opened their
+great wings, rose into the air, and flew away swiftly
+towards the south-west, till the men lost sight of them
+in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the old bird, after the others had left,
+continued to smooth and plume his feathers till evening;
+then, shaking his wings, he rose up, and flew
+three times round the island, as if to try his strength.
+And now the men observed that he had lost all the
+appearances of old age: his feathers were thick and
+glossy, his head was erect and his eye bright, and he
+flew with quite as much power and swiftness as the
+others. Alighting for the last time on the hillock,
+after resting a little, he rose again, and turning his
+flight after the other two, to the point from which he
+had come, he was soon lost to view, and the voyagers
+saw no more of him.</p>
+
+<p>It now appeared very clear to Maildun and his
+companions that this bird had undergone a renewal of
+youth from old age, according to the word of the
+prophet, which says, "Thy youth shall be renewed as
+the eagle." Diuran, seeing this great wonder, said to
+his companions&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Let us also bathe in the lake, and we shall
+obtain a renewal of youth like the bird."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But they said, "Not so, for the bird has left the
+poison of his old age and decay in the water."</p>
+
+<p>Diuran, however, would have his own way; and
+he told them he was resolved to try the virtue of the
+water, and that they might follow his example or not,
+whichever they pleased. So he plunged in and swam
+about for some time, after which he took a little of
+the water and mixed it in his mouth; and in the end
+he swallowed a small quantity. He then came out
+perfectly sound and whole; and he remained so ever
+after, for as long as he lived he never lost a tooth
+or had a grey hair, and he suffered not from disease
+or bodily weakness of any kind. But none of the
+others ventured in.</p>
+
+<p>The voyagers, having remained long enough on
+this island, stored in their curragh a large quantity
+of the flesh of the sheep; and after bidding farewell
+to the ancient cleric, they sought the ocean once
+more.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Now once again, when winds and tide combine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The flying curragh cleaves the crested brine.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Far to the west an island rose to view,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With verdant plains, clear streams, and mountains blue.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An aged hermit, bred in Erin's land,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Welcomed and blessed the chieftain and his band;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Brought food and drink, and bade them rest awhile,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And view the wonders of that lovely isle.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Lo, from the sea, three birds of monstrous size,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With vast wings slowly moving, cleave the skies;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And as they nearer drew, the sailors saw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One held a fruit branch firmly in his claw.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Down by the dear, mysterious lake they light,<br /></span>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+<span class="i0">Eat from the branch, and rest them from their flight.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">The aged bird, with plumes decayed and thin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Paused on the brink awhile, then, plunging in,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He bath'd and smooth'd his feathers o'er and o'er,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shook his great wings and rested on the shore.<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Now while the other two his plumes arrange,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through all his frame appears a wondrous change:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His eyes grow bright, his head erect and bold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His glossy plumage shines like burnished gold;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Free from old age, his glorious form expands;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In radiant youth and beauty proud he stands!<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Such was the gift that lake of wonder gave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Such was the virtue of its mystic wave.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXXI" id="CCHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF LAUGHING.</p>
+
+
+<p>They next came to an island with a great plain extending
+over its whole surface. They saw a vast
+multitude of people on it, engaged in sundry youthful
+games, and all continually laughing. The voyagers
+cast lots who should go to examine the island; and
+the lot fell upon Maildun's third foster brother.</p>
+
+<p>The moment he landed he went among the others
+and joined in their pastimes and in their laughter,
+as if he had been among them all his life. His companions
+waited for him a very long time, but were
+afraid to venture to land after him; and at last, as
+there seemed no chance of his returning, they left
+him and sailed away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXXII" id="CCHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ISLE OF THE BLEST.</p>
+
+
+<p>They came now to a small island with a high rampart
+of fire all round it; and that rampart revolved continually
+round the island. There was one large open
+door in the rampart; and whenever the door, in its
+involution, came in front of them, they could see almost
+the whole island through it, and all that was therein.</p>
+
+<p>And this is what they saw: A great number of
+people, beautiful and glorious-looking, wearing rich
+garments adorned and radiant all over, feasting
+joyously, and drinking from embossed vessels of red
+gold which they held in their hands. The voyagers
+heard also their cheerful, festive songs; and they
+marvelled greatly, and their hearts were full of gladness
+at all the happiness they saw and heard. But
+they did not venture to land.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CCHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE HERMIT OF THE SEA-ROCK.</p>
+
+
+<p>A little time after leaving this, they saw something
+a long way off towards the south, which at first they
+took to be a large white bird floating on the sea, and
+rising and falling with the waves; but on turning
+their curragh towards it for a nearer view, they found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+that it was a man. He was very old, so old that he
+was covered all over with long, white hair, which
+grew from his body; and he was standing on a broad,
+bare rock, and kept continually throwing himself on
+his knees, and never ceased praying.</p>
+
+<p>When they saw that he was a holy man, they
+asked and received his blessing; after which they
+began to converse with him; and they inquired who
+he was, and how he had come to that rock. Then the
+old man gave them the following account:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I was born and bred in the island of Tory.<a name="FNanchor_LXXVI._104" id="FNanchor_LXXVI._104"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXVI._104" class="fnanchor">[LXXVI.]</a>
+When I grew up to be a man, I was cook to the
+brotherhood of the monastery; and a wicked cook I
+was; for every day I sold part of the food intrusted
+to me, and secretly bought many choice and rare
+things with the money. Worse even than this I
+did; I made secret passages underground into the
+church and into the houses belonging to it, and I
+stole from time to time great quantities of golden
+vestments, book-covers adorned with brass and gold,
+and other holy and precious things.</p>
+
+<p>"I soon became very rich, and had my rooms filled
+with costly couches, with clothes of every colour, both
+linen and woollen, with brazen pitchers and caldrons,
+and with brooches and armlets of gold. Nothing was
+wanting in my house, of furniture and ornament, that
+a person in a high rank of life might be expected to
+have; and I became very proud and overbearing.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
+<p>"One day, I was sent to dig a grave for the body
+of a rustic that had been brought from the mainland
+to be buried on the island. I went and fixed on a
+spot in the little graveyard; but as soon as I had
+set to work, I heard a voice speaking down deep in
+the earth beneath my feet&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Do not dig this grave!'</p>
+
+<p>"I paused for a moment, startled; but, recovering
+myself, I gave no further heed to the mysterious
+words, and again I began to dig. The moment I did
+so, I heard the same voice, even more plainly than
+before&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Do not dig this grave! I am a devout and holy
+person, and my body is lean and light; do not put
+the heavy, pampered body of that sinner down upon
+me!'</p>
+
+<p>"But I answered, in the excess of my pride and
+obstinacy, 'I will certainly dig this grave; and I will
+bury this body down on you!'</p>
+
+<p>"'If you put that body down on me, the flesh will
+fall off your bones, and you will die, and be sent to
+the infernal pit at the end of three days; and, moreover,
+the body will not remain where you put it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What will you give me,' I asked, 'if I do not
+bury the corpse on you?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Everlasting life in heaven,' replied the voice.</p>
+
+<p>"'How do you know this; and how am I to be
+sure of it?' I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"And the voice answered me, 'The grave you are
+digging is clay. Observe now whether it will remain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+so, and then you will know the truth of what I tell
+you. And you will see that what I say will come to
+pass, and that you cannot bury that man on me, even
+if you should try to do so.'</p>
+
+<p>"These words were scarce ended, when the grave
+was turned into a mass of white sand before my face.
+And when I saw this, I brought the body away, and
+buried it elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>"It happened, some time after, that I got a new
+curragh made, with the hides painted red all over; and
+I went to sea in it. As I sailed by the shores and
+islands, I was so pleased with the view of the land
+and sea from my curragh that I resolved to live
+altogether in it for some time; and I brought on board
+all my treasures&mdash;silver cups, gold bracelets, and ornamented
+drinking-horns, and everything else, from the
+largest to the smallest article.</p>
+
+<p>"I enjoyed myself for a time, while the air was
+clear and the sea calm and smooth. But one day, the
+winds suddenly arose and a storm burst upon me,
+which carried me out to sea, so that I quite lost sight
+of land, and I knew not in what direction the curragh
+was drifting. After a time, the wind abated to a
+gentle gale, the sea became smooth, and the curragh
+sailed on as before, with a quiet, pleasant movement.</p>
+
+<p>"But suddenly, though the breeze continued to
+blow, I thought I could perceive that the curragh
+ceased moving, and, standing up to find out the cause,
+I saw with great surprise an old man not far off,
+sitting on the crest of a wave.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He spoke to me; and, as soon as I heard his voice,
+I knew it at once, but I could not at the moment call
+to mind where I had heard it before. And I became
+greatly troubled, and began to tremble, I knew not
+why.</p>
+
+<p>"'Whither art thou going?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'I know not,' I replied; 'but this I know, I
+am pleased with the smooth, gentle motion of my
+curragh over the waves.'</p>
+
+<p>"'You would not be pleased,' replied the old man,
+'if you could see the troops that are at this moment
+around you.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What troops do you speak of?' I asked. And
+he answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'All the space round about you, as far as your
+view reaches over the sea, and upwards to the clouds,
+is one great towering mass of demons, on account of
+your avarice, your thefts, your pride, and your other
+crimes and vices.'</p>
+
+<p>"He then asked, 'Do you know why your
+curragh has stopped?'</p>
+
+<p>"I answered, 'No;' and he said, 'It has been
+stopped by me; and it will never move from that
+spot till you promise me to do what I shall ask
+of you.'</p>
+
+<p>"I replied that perhaps it was not in my power
+to grant his demand.</p>
+
+<p>"'It is in your power,' he answered; 'and if you
+refuse me, the torments of hell shall be your doom.'</p>
+
+<p>"He then came close to the curragh, and, laying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+his hands on me, he made me swear to do what he
+demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"'What I ask is this,' said he; 'that you throw
+into the sea this moment all the ill-gotten treasures
+you have in the curragh.'</p>
+
+<p>"This grieved me very much, and I replied, 'It
+is a pity that all these costly things should be lost.'</p>
+
+<p>"To which he answered, 'They will not go to loss;
+a person will be sent to take charge of them. Now
+do as I say.'</p>
+
+<p>"So, greatly against my wishes, I threw all the
+beautiful precious articles overboard, keeping only
+a small wooden cup to drink from.</p>
+
+<p>"'You will now continue your voyage,' he said;
+'and the first solid ground your curragh reaches, there
+you are to stay.'</p>
+
+<p>"He then gave me seven cakes and a cup of watery
+whey as food for my voyage; after which the curragh
+moved on, and I soon lost sight of him. And now I
+all at once recollected that the old man's voice was
+the same as the voice that I had heard come from the
+ground, when I was about to dig the grave for the
+body of the rustic. I was so astonished and troubled
+at this discovery, and so disturbed at the loss of all
+my wealth, that I threw aside my oars, and gave myself
+up altogether to the winds and currents, not caring
+whither I went; and for a long time I was tossed
+about on the waves, I knew not in what direction.</p>
+
+<p>"At last it seemed to me that my curragh ceased
+to move; but I was not sure about it, for I could see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+no sign of land. Mindful, however, of what the old
+man had told me, that I was to stay wherever my
+curragh stopped, I looked round more carefully; and
+at last I saw, very near me, a small rock level with
+the surface, over which the waves were gently laughing
+and tumbling. I stepped on to the rock; and the
+moment I did so, the waves seemed to spring back,
+and the rock rose high over the level of the water;
+while the curragh drifted by and quickly disappeared,
+so that I never saw it after. This rock has been my
+abode from that time to the present day.</p>
+
+<p>"For the first seven years, I lived on the seven
+cakes and the cup of whey given me by the man who
+had sent me to the rock. At the end of that time
+the cakes were all gone; and for three days I fasted,
+with nothing but the whey to wet my mouth. Late
+in the evening of the third day, an otter brought me
+a salmon out of the sea; but though I suffered much
+from hunger, I could not bring myself to eat the fish
+raw, and it was washed back again into the waves.</p>
+
+<p>"I remained without food for three days longer;
+and in the afternoon of the third day, the otter
+returned with the salmon. And I saw another otter
+bring firewood; and when he had piled it up on the
+rock, he blew it with his breath till it took fire and
+lighted up. And then I broiled the salmon and ate
+till I had satisfied my hunger.</p>
+
+<p>"The otter continued to bring me a salmon every
+day, and in this manner I lived for seven years longer.
+The rock also grew larger and larger daily, till it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+became the size you now see it. At the end of seven
+years, the otter ceased to bring me my salmon, and
+I fasted for three days. But at the end of the third
+day, I was sent half a cake of fine wheaten flour and
+a slice of fish; and on the same day my cup of watery
+whey fell into the sea, and a cup of the same size, filled
+with good ale, was placed on the rock for me.</p>
+
+<p>"And so I have lived, praying and doing penance
+for my sins to this hour. Each day my drinking-vessel
+is filled with ale, and I am sent half a wheat-flour
+cake and a slice of fish; and neither rain nor
+wind, nor heat, nor cold, is allowed to molest me on
+this rock."</p>
+
+<p>This was the end of the old man's history. In the
+evening of that day, each man of the crew received
+the same quantity of food that was sent to the old
+hermit himself, namely, half a cake and a slice of fish;
+and they found in the vessel as much good ale as
+served them all.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning he said to them, "You shall
+all reach your own country in safety. And you,
+Maildun, you shall find in an island on your way, the
+very man that slew your father; but you are neither
+to kill him nor take revenge on him in any way.
+As God has delivered you from the many dangers you
+have passed through, though you were very guilty,
+and well deserved death at His hands; so you forgive
+your enemy the crime he committed against you."</p>
+
+<p>After this they took leave of the old man and
+sailed away.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center p2">THE OLD HERMIT'S STORY.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The storms may roar and the seas may rage,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But here, on this bare, brown rock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I pray and repent and I tell my beads,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Secure from the hurricane's shock.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For the good, kind God, in pity to me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Holds out His protecting hand;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Can molest me where I stand.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I robbed the churches and wronged the poor,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And grew richer day by day;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But now on this bare, brown ocean rock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">A heavy penance I pay.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A bloated sinner died unshrived,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And they brought his corse to me&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Go, dig the grave and bury the dead,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And pray for the soul set free."<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I dug the grave, but my hands were stayed<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">By a solemn and fearful sound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For the feeble tones of a dead man's voice<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Came up from the hollow ground!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><i>The dead monk speaks up from the grave</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Place not that pampered corse on mine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For my bones are weak and thin;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I cannot bear the heavy weight<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Of a body defiled by sin.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I was a meek and holy man;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I fasted and watched and prayed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A sinner's corse would defile the clay<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Where my wasted body is laid.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><i>The old hermit continues his story</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The voice then ceased, and I heard no more<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Its hollow, beseeching tone;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then I closed the grave, and left the old monk<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">To rest in his coffin alone.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">My curragh sailed on the western main,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And I saw, as I viewed the sea,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A withered old man upon a wave;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And he fixed his eyes on me.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">He spoke, and his voice my heart's blood froze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And I shook with horror and fear:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twas the very voice of the dead old monk<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">That sounded in mine ear!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><i>The dead monk speaks again</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Far from my grave the sinner's corse<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In unhallowed clay lies deep;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And now in my coffin, undefiled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For ever in peace I sleep.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Go, live and pray on the bare, brown rock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Far out in the stormy sea;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A heavy penance for heavy crimes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And heaven at last for thee!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><i>The old hermit ends his story</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And here I live from age to age;<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">I pray and repent and fast;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">An otter brings me food each day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">And I hope for heaven at last.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The tempests roar and the billows rage,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">But God holds forth His hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Can harm me where I stand.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CCHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">SIGNS OF HOME.</p>
+
+
+<p>Soon after they saw a beautiful verdant island, with
+herds of oxen, cows, and sheep browsing all over its
+hills and valleys; but no houses nor inhabitants were
+to be seen. And they rested for some time on this
+island, and ate the flesh of the cows and sheep.</p>
+
+<p>One day, while they were standing on a hill, a
+large falcon flew by; and two of the crew, who happened
+to look closely at him, cried out, in the hearing
+of Maildun&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"See that falcon! he is surely like the falcons of
+Erin!"</p>
+
+<p>"Watch him closely," cried Maildun; "and observe
+exactly in what direction he is flying!"</p>
+
+<p>And they saw that he flew to the south-east, without
+turning or wavering.</p>
+
+<p>They went on board at once; and, having unmoored,
+they sailed to the south-east after the falcon.
+After rowing the whole day, they sighted land in the
+dusk of the evening, which seemed to them like the
+land of Erin.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="CCHAPTER_XXXV" id="CCHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">MAILDUN MEETS HIS ENEMY, AND ARRIVES HOME.</p>
+
+
+<p>On a near approach, they found it was a small island;
+and now they recognised it as the very same island
+they had seen in the beginning of their voyage, in
+which they had heard the man in the great house
+boast that he had slain Maildun's father, and from
+which the storm had driven them out into the great
+ocean.</p>
+
+<p>They turned the prow of their vessel to the shore,
+landed, and went towards the house. It happened
+that at this very time the people of the house were
+seated at their evening meal; and Maildun and his
+companions, as they stood outside, heard a part of
+their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Said one to another, "It would not be well for us
+if we were now to see Maildun."</p>
+
+<p>"As to Maildun," answered another, "it is very well
+known that he was drowned long ago in the great
+ocean."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be sure," observed a third; "perchance
+he is the very man that may waken you up some
+morning from your sleep."</p>
+
+<p>"Supposing he came now," asks another, "what
+should we do?"</p>
+
+<p>The head of the house now spoke in reply to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+the last question; and Maildun at once knew his
+voice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I can easily answer that," said he. "Maildun has
+been for a long time suffering great afflictions and
+hardships; and if he were to come now, though we
+were enemies once, I should certainly give him a
+welcome and a kind reception."</p>
+
+<p>When Maildun heard this he knocked at the door,
+and the door-keeper asked who was there; to which
+Maildun made answer&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is I, Maildun, returned safely from all my
+wanderings."</p>
+
+<p>The chief of the house then ordered the door to be
+opened; and he went to meet Maildun, and brought
+himself and his companions into the house. They
+were joyfully welcomed by the whole household; new
+garments were given to them; and they feasted and
+rested, till they forgot their weariness and their
+hardships.</p>
+
+<p>They related all the wonders God had revealed to
+them in the course of their voyage, according to the
+word of the sage who says, "It will be a source of
+pleasure to remember these things at a future time."</p>
+
+<p>After they had remained here for some days,
+Maildun returned to his own country. And Diuran
+Lekerd took the five half-ounces of silver he had cut
+down from the great net at the Silver Pillar, and laid
+it, according to his promise, on the high altar of
+Armagh.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_FAIRY_PALACE_OF_THE_QUICKEN_TREES" id="THE_FAIRY_PALACE_OF_THE_QUICKEN_TREES"></a>THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.
+<a name="FNanchor_LXXVII._105" id="FNanchor_LXXVII._105"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXVII._105" class="fnanchor">[LXXVII.]</a></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_I" id="DCHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">COLGA, KING OF LOCHLANN, INVADES ERIN,
+AND IS SLAIN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Once upon a time, a noble, warlike king ruled over
+Lochlann,<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> whose name was Colga of the Hard
+Weapons. On a certain occasion, this king held a
+meeting of his chief people, on the broad, green plain
+before his palace of Berva.<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> And when they were
+all gathered together, he spoke to them in a loud,
+clear voice, from where he sat high on his throne;
+and he asked them whether they found any fault
+with the manner in which he ruled them, and
+whether they knew of anything deserving of blame
+in him as their sovereign lord and king. They
+replied, as if with the voice of one man, that they
+found no fault of any kind.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+<p>Then the king spoke again and said, "You see
+not as I see. Do you not know that I am called
+King of the Four Tribes of Lochlann, and of the
+Islands of the Sea? And yet there is one island
+which acknowledges not my rule."</p>
+
+<p>And when they had asked which of the islands
+he meant, he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That island is Erin of the green hills. My
+forefathers, indeed, held sway over it, and many of
+our brave warriors died there in fight. There fell
+the great king, Balor of the Mighty Blows;<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> his son
+Bres<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> also; and his queen, Kethlenda of the Crooked
+Teeth;<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> there, too, fell Irann and Slana, sisters of
+the king; and many others that I do not name.
+But though our hosts at last subdued the land and
+laid it under tribute, yet they held it not long; for
+the men of Erin arose and expelled our army, regaining
+their ancient freedom.</p>
+
+<p>"And now it is my desire that we once more sail
+to Erin with a fleet and an army, to bring it under
+my power, and take, either by consent or by force, the
+tributes that are due to me by right. And we shall
+thereafter hold the island in subjection till the end
+of the world."</p>
+
+<p>The chiefs approved the counsel of the king, and
+the meeting broke up.</p>
+
+<p>Then the king made proclamation, and sent his
+swift scouts and couriers all over the land, to muster
+his fighting men, till he had assembled a mighty army
+in one place.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And when they had made ready their curve-sided,
+white-sailed ships, and their strong, swift-gliding
+boats, the army embarked. And they raised their
+sails and plied their oars; and they cleft the billowy,
+briny sea; and the clear, cold winds whistled through
+their sails; and they made neither stop nor stay, till
+they landed on the shore of the province of Ulad.<a name="FNanchor_LXXVIII._106" id="FNanchor_LXXVIII._106"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXVIII._106" class="fnanchor">[LXXVIII.]</a></p>
+
+<p>The King of Ireland at that time was Cormac Mac
+Art,<a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> the grandson of Conn the Hundred-fighter.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
+And when Cormac heard that a great fleet had come
+to Erin, and landed an army of foreigners, he straightway
+sent tidings of the invasion to Allen<a name="FNanchor_LXXIX._107" id="FNanchor_LXXIX._107"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXIX._107" class="fnanchor">[LXXIX.]</a> of the
+green hill-slopes, where lived Finn,<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> and the noble
+Fena<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> of the Gaels.</p>
+
+<p>When the king's messengers had told their tale,
+Finn despatched his trusty, swift-footed couriers to
+every part of Erin where he knew the Fena dwelt;
+and he bade them to say that all should meet him
+at a certain place, near that part of the coast where
+the Lochlann army lay encamped. And he himself
+led the Fena of Leinster northwards to join the muster.</p>
+
+<p>They attacked the foreigners, and the foreigners
+were not slow to meet their onset; and the Fena
+were sore pressed in that battle, so that at one time
+the Lochlanns were like to prevail.</p>
+
+<p>Oscar, the son of Oisin,<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> when he saw his friends
+falling all round him, was grieved to the heart;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+and he rested for a space to gather his wrath and
+his strength. Then, renewing the fight, he rushed
+with fury towards the standard of Colga, the Lochlann
+king, dealing havoc and slaughter among those
+foreigners that stood in his track. The king saw
+Oscar approach, and met him; and they fought a
+deadly battle hand-to-hand. Soon their shields were
+rent, their hard helmets were dinted with sword-blows,
+their armour was pierced in many places, and
+their flesh was torn with deep wounds. And the end
+of the fight was, that the king of the foreigners was
+slain by Oscar, the son of Oisin.</p>
+
+<p>When the Lochlanns saw their king fall, they
+lost heart, and the battle went against them. But
+they fought on nevertheless, till evening, when their
+army entirely gave way, and fled from the field.
+And of all the nobles and princes and mighty chiefs
+who sailed to Erin on that expedition, not one was
+left alive, except the youngest son of the king, whose
+name was Midac. Him Finn spared on account of
+his youth; with intent to bring him up in his own
+household.</p>
+
+<p>After the Fena had rested for a time, and buried
+their dead, they turned their faces southward, and
+marched slowly towards Allen, bringing their sick
+and wounded companions. And Finn placed Midac
+among the household of Allen, treating him honourably,
+and giving him servants and tutors. Moreover,
+he enlisted him in the Fena, and gave him a high
+post as befitted a prince.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_II" id="DCHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">MIDAC, THE SON OF COLGA, MEDITATES REVENGE.</p>
+
+
+<p>After this things went on as before, while Midac
+grew up towards manhood, and hunted and feasted
+with the Fena, and fought with them when they
+fought. But he never lost an opportunity of making
+himself acquainted with all their haunts and hunting-grounds,
+their palaces and fortresses, and in particular
+with their manner of carrying on war.</p>
+
+<p>It happened one day that Finn and some of his
+leading chiefs were in council, considering sundry
+matters, especially the state and condition of the
+Fena; and each chief was commanded by Finn to
+speak, and give his opinion or advice on anything
+that he deemed weighty enough to be debated by
+the meeting.</p>
+
+<p>And after many had spoken, Conan Mail, the son
+of Morna, stood up and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me, O king, that you and I and the
+Fena in general are now in great danger. For you
+have in your house, and mixing with your people, a
+young man who has good cause of enmity towards
+you; that is to say, Midac, the son of the king of
+Lochlann. For was it not by you that his father and
+brothers and many of his friends were slain? Now I
+notice that this young prince is silent and distant, and
+talks little to those around him. Moreover, I see that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+day after day he takes much pains to know all matters
+relating to the Fena; and as he has friends in Lochlann,
+mighty men with armies and ships, I fear me the day
+may come when this prince will use his knowledge to
+our destruction."</p>
+
+<p>The king said that all this was quite true, and he
+asked Conan to give his opinion as to what should be
+done.</p>
+
+<p>"What I advise in the matter is this," said Conan,
+"that Midac be not allowed to abide any longer in
+the palace of Allen. But as it is meet that he should
+be treated in a manner becoming a prince, let him be
+given a tract of land for himself in some other part of
+Erin, with a home and a household of his own. Then
+shall we be freed from his presence, and he can no
+longer listen to our counsels, and learn all our secrets
+and all our plans."</p>
+
+<p>This speech seemed to Finn and the other chiefs
+reasonable and prudent, and they agreed to follow the
+advice of Conan Mail.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly Finn sent for the prince, and said to
+him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thou knowest, Midac, that thou hast been brought
+up from boyhood in my household, and that thou hast
+been dealt with in every way as becomes a prince.
+Now thou art a man, and standest in no further need
+of instruction, for thou hast learned everything needful
+for a prince and for a champion of the Fena; and
+it is not meet that thou shouldst abide longer in the
+house of another. Choose, therefore, the two cantreds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+that please thee best in all Erin, and they shall be
+given to thee and to thy descendants for ever as a
+patrimony. There thou shalt build houses and a homestead
+for thyself, and I will help thee with men and
+with cattle and with all things else necessary."</p>
+
+<p>Midac listened in silence; and when the king had
+done speaking, he replied in a cold and distant manner
+and in few words, that the proposal was reasonable
+and proper, and pleased him well. And thereupon he
+chose the rich cantred of Kenri on the Shannon, and
+the cantred of the Islands lying next to it on the
+north, at the other side of the river.<a name="FNanchor_LXXX._108" id="FNanchor_LXXX._108"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXX._108" class="fnanchor">[LXXX.]</a></p>
+
+<p>Now Midac had good reasons for choosing these
+two territories beyond all others in Erin. For the
+river opens out between them like a great sea, in
+which are many islands and sheltered harbours, where
+ships might anchor in safety; and he hoped to bring a
+fleet and an army into Erin some day, to avenge on
+Finn and the Fena the defeats they had inflicted on his
+countrymen, and above all, the death of his father and
+brothers. And being bent on treachery, he could not
+have chosen in all Erin a territory better suited for
+carrying out his secret designs.</p>
+
+<p>So these two cantreds were bestowed on Midac.
+Finn gave him also much cattle and wealth of all
+kinds; so that when his houses were built, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+he was settled in his new territory, with his servants
+and his cattle and his wealth all round him, there
+was no brugaid<a name="FNanchor_LXXXI._109" id="FNanchor_LXXXI._109"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXI._109" class="fnanchor">[LXXXI.]</a> in Erin richer or more prosperous
+than he.</p>
+
+<p>For fourteen years Midac lived in his new home,
+growing richer every year. But the Fena knew
+nothing of his way of life, for he kept himself apart,
+and none of his old acquaintances visited him. And
+though he was enrolled in the ranks of the Fena, he
+never, during all that time, invited one of them to his
+house, or offered them food or drink or entertainment
+of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>One day, Finn and the Fena went to hunt in the
+district of Fermorc,<a href="#Footnote_LXXXII._110" class="fnanchor">[LXXXII.]</a> and over the plains of Hy Conall
+Gavra.<a name="FNanchor_LXXXII._110" id="FNanchor_LXXXII._110"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXII._110" class="fnanchor">[LXXXII.]</a> And when all was arranged and the chase
+about to begin, Finn himself, and a few of his companions,
+went to the top of the hill of Knockfierna<a name="FNanchor_LXXXIII._111" id="FNanchor_LXXXIII._111"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXIII._111" class="fnanchor">[LXXXIII.]</a> to
+see the sport; while the main body of the Fena scattered
+themselves over the plain with their dogs and
+attendants, to start the deer and the wild boars and
+all the other game of the forest.</p>
+
+<p>Then Finn's people pitched their tents, and made
+soft couches of rushes and heather, and dug cooking-places<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>;
+for they intended the hill to be the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+resting-place of all who chose to rest, till the chase was
+ended.</p>
+
+<p>After Finn and his companions had sat for some
+time on the hill, they saw a tall warrior coming
+towards them, armed in full battle array. He wore a
+splendid coat of mail of Lochlann workmanship, and
+over it a mantle of fine satin dyed in divers colours.
+A broad shield hung on his left shoulder, and his
+helmet glittered in the morning sun like polished
+silver. At his left side hung a long sword, with
+golden hilt and enamelled sheath; and he held in
+his right hand his two long, polished, death-dealing
+spears. His figure and gait were wonderfully
+majestic, and as he came near, he saluted the king
+in stately and courteous words.</p>
+
+<p>Finn returned the salutation, and spoke with him
+for a while; and at length he asked him whence he
+had come, and if he had brought any tidings.</p>
+
+<p>"As to the place I came from," he answered, "that
+need not be spoken of; and for news, I have nothing
+to tell except that I am a ferdana,<a name="FNanchor_LXXXIV._112" id="FNanchor_LXXXIV._112"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXIV._112" class="fnanchor">[LXXXIV.]</a> and that I have
+come to thee, O king of the Fena, with a poem."</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks, indeed," replied Finn, "that conflict
+and battle are the poetry you profess; for never have
+I seen a hero more noble in mien and feature."</p>
+
+<p>"I am a ferdana nevertheless," answered the
+stranger; "and if thou dost not forbid me, I will prove
+it by reciting a poem I have brought for thee."</p>
+
+<p>"A mountain-top is not the place for poetry," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+Finn; "and moreover, there is now no opportunity
+either for reciting or listening. For I and these few
+companions of mine have come to sit here that we may
+view the chase, and listen to the eager shouts of the
+men, and the sweet cry of the hounds.</p>
+
+<p>"But if you are, as you say," continued Finn, "a
+ferdana, remain here with us till the chase is ended;
+and then you shall come with me to one of our
+palaces, where I shall listen to your poem, and bestow
+on you such gifts as are meet for a poet of your
+rank."</p>
+
+<p>But the strange champion answered, "It is not
+my wish to go to your palace; and I now put you
+under gesa,<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> which true heroes do not suffer, that you
+listen to my poem, and that you find out and explain
+its meaning."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," said Finn, "let there be no further
+delay; repeat your poem."</p>
+
+<p>So the hero recited the following verse:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I saw a house by a river's shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Famed through Erin in days of yore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Radiant with sparkling gems all o'er,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Its lord deep skilled in magical lore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No conqueror ever defiled its floor;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No spoiler can rive its golden store;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fire cannot burn its battlements hoar;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Safe it stands when the torrents pour;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Feasting and joy for evermore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To all who enter its open door!<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Now if thou hast learned a champion's lore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Tell me the name of that mansion hoar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">With roof of crystal and marble floor&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">The mansion I saw by the river's shore.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I can explain that poem," said Finn. "The mansion
+you saw is Bruga of the Boyne,<a name="FNanchor_LXXXV._113" id="FNanchor_LXXXV._113"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXV._113" class="fnanchor">[LXXXV.]</a> the fairy palace
+of Angus, the Dedannan prince, son of the Dagda,
+which is open to all who wish to partake of its feasts
+and its enjoyments. It cannot be burned by fire, or
+drowned by water, or spoiled by robbers, on account
+of the great power of its lord and master; for there is
+not now, and there never was, and there never shall
+be, in Erin, a man more skilled in magic arts than
+Angus of the Bruga."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the sense of my poem," said the stranger;
+"and now listen to this other, and explain it to me if
+thou canst"&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I saw to the south a bright-faced queen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With couch of crystal and robe of green;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A numerous offspring, sprightly and small,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Plain through her skin you can see them all;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Slowly she moves, and yet her speed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Exceeds the pace of the swiftest steed!<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">Now tell me the name of that wondrous queen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i3">With her couch of crystal and robe of green.<a name="FNanchor_LXXXVI._114" id="FNanchor_LXXXVI._114"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXVI._114" class="fnanchor">[LXXXVI.]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I understand the sense of that poem also," said
+Finn. "The queen you saw is the river Boyne,
+which flows by the south side of the palace of Bruga.
+Her couch of crystal is the sandy bed of the river; and
+her robe of green the grassy plain of Bregia,<a name="FNanchor_LXXXVII._115" id="FNanchor_LXXXVII._115"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXVII._115" class="fnanchor">[LXXXVII.]</a> through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+which it flows. Her children, which you can see
+through her skin, are the speckled salmon, the lively,
+pretty trout, and all the other fish that swim in the
+clear water of the river. The river flows slowly indeed;
+but its waters traverse the whole world in seven years,
+which is more than the swiftest steed can do."</p>
+
+<p>"These are my poems," said the champion; "and
+thou hast truly explained their meaning."</p>
+
+<p>"And now," said Finn, "as I have listened to thy
+poetry and explained it, tell us, I pray thee, who thou
+art and whence thou hast come; for I marvel much
+that so noble a champion should live in any of the five
+provinces of Erin without being known to me and my
+companions."</p>
+
+<p>Then Conan Mail spoke. "Thou art, O king, the
+wisest and most far-seeing of the Fena, and thou hast
+unravelled and explained the hard poetical puzzles of
+this champion. Yet, on the present occasion, thou
+knowest not a friend from a foe; for this man is
+Midac, whom thou didst bring up with much honour
+in thine own house, and afterwards made rich, but
+who is now thy bitter enemy, and the enemy of all
+the Fena. Here he has lived for fourteen years,
+without fellowship or communication with his former
+companions. And though he is enrolled in the order
+of the Fena, he has never, during all that time, invited
+thee to a banquet, or come to see any of his old
+friends, or given food or entertainment to any of the
+Fena, either master or man."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Midac answered, "If Finn and the Fena have
+not feasted with me, that is none of my fault; for my
+house has never been without a banquet fit for either
+king or chief; but you never came to partake of it.
+I did not, indeed, send you an invitation; but that you
+should not have waited for, seeing that I was one of
+the Fena, and that I was brought up in your own
+household. Howbeit, let that pass. I have now a
+feast ready, in all respects worthy of a king; and I
+put you under gesa that you and the chiefs that are
+here with you, come this night to partake of it. I
+have two palaces, and in each there is a banquet. One
+is the Palace of the Island, which stands on the sea;
+and the other is the Palace of the Quicken Trees, which
+is a little way off from this hill; and it is to this that
+I wish you to come."</p>
+
+<p>Finn consented; and Midac, after he had pointed
+out the way to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, left
+them, saying he would go before, that he might have
+things in readiness when they should arrive.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_III" id="DCHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FINN IS ENTRAPPED BY MIDAC, AND HELD BY ENCHANTMENT
+IN THE PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.</p>
+
+
+<p>Finn now held council with his companions, and they
+agreed that the king's son, Oisin, and five other chiefs,
+with their followers, should tarry on the hill till the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+hunting party returned, while Finn went to the palace
+with the rest.</p>
+
+<p>And it was arranged that Finn should send back
+word immediately to the party on the hill, how he
+fared; and that Oisin and the others were to follow
+him to the palace when the hunting party had
+returned.</p>
+
+<p>Those that remained with Oisin were Dermat
+O'Dyna; Fatha Conan, the son of the son of Conn;
+Kylta Mac Ronan; Ficna, the son of Finn; and Innsa,
+the son of Swena Selga.</p>
+
+<p>And of those who went with Finn to the Palace of
+the Quicken Trees, the chief were Gaul Mac Morna;
+Dathkeen the Strong-limbed; Mac Luga of the Red
+Hand; Glas Mac Encarda from Beara; the two sons
+of Aed the Lesser, son of Finn; Racad and Dalgus, the
+two kings of Leinster; Angus Mac Bresal Bola; and
+the two leaders of the Connaught Fena, namely, Mac-na-Corra
+and Corr the Swift-footed.</p>
+
+<p>As Finn and his party came nigh to the palace,
+they were amazed at its size and splendour; and they
+wondered greatly that they had never seen it before.
+It stood on a level green, which was surrounded by a
+light plantation of quicken trees, all covered with
+clusters of scarlet berries. At one side of the little
+plain, very near the palace, was a broad river, with
+a rocky bank at the near side, and a steep pathway
+leading down to a ford.</p>
+
+<p>But what surprised them most was that all was
+lonely and silent&mdash;not a living soul could they see in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+any direction; and Finn, fearing some foul play, would
+have turned back, only that he bethought him of his
+gesa and his promise. The great door was wide open,
+and Conan went in before the others; and after
+viewing the banqueting hall, he came out quite
+enraptured with what he had seen. He praised the
+beauty and perfect arrangement of everything, and
+told his companions that no other king or chief in all
+Erin had a banqueting hall to match the hall of
+Midac, the son of Colga. They all now entered, but
+they found no one&mdash;neither host nor guests nor
+attendants.</p>
+
+<p>As they gazed around, they thought they had
+never seen a banquet hall so splendid. A great fire
+burned brightly in the middle, without any smoke,
+and sent forth a sweet perfume, which filled the whole
+room with fragrance, and cheered and delighted the
+heroes. Couches were placed all round, with rich
+coverlets and rugs, and soft, glossy furs. The curved
+walls were of wood,<a name="FNanchor_LXXXVIII._116" id="FNanchor_LXXXVIII._116"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXVIII._116" class="fnanchor">[LXXXVIII.]</a> close-jointed and polished like
+ivory; and each board was painted differently from
+those above and below; so that the sides of the room,
+from floor to roof, were all radiant with a wonderful
+variety of colours.</p>
+
+<p>Still seeing no one, they seated themselves on the
+couches and rugs. Presently a door opened, and
+Midac walked into the room. He stood for a few
+moments before the heroes, and looked at them one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+after another, but never spoke one word; then, turning
+round, he went out and shut the great door behind
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and his friends were much surprised at this;
+however, they said nothing, but remained resting as
+they were for some time, expecting Midac's return.
+Still no one came, and at length Finn spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We have been invited here, my friends, to a
+banquet; and it seems to me very strange that we
+should be left so long without attendance, and without
+either food or drink. Perhaps, indeed, Midac's attendants
+have made some mistake, and that the feast
+intended for this palace has been prepared in the
+Palace of the Island. But I wonder greatly that such
+a thing should have happened."</p>
+
+<p>"I see something more wonderful than that," said
+Gaul Mac Morna; "for lo, the fire, which was clear
+and smokeless when we first saw it, and which
+smelled more sweetly than the flowers of the plain,
+now fills the hall with a foul stench, and sends up
+a great cloud of black, sooty smoke!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see something more wonderful than that," said
+Glas Mac Encarda; "for the boards in the walls of
+this banquet hall, which were smooth and close-jointed
+and glorious all over with bright colours when
+we came, are now nothing but rough planks, clumsily
+fastened together with tough quicken tree withes, and
+as rude and unshapen as if they had been hacked and
+hewed with a blunt axe!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see something more wonderful than that," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+Foilan, the son of Aed the Lesser; "for this palace,
+which had seven great doors when we came in, all
+wide open, and looking pleasantly towards the sunshine,
+has now only one small, narrow door, close
+fastened, and facing straight to the north!"</p>
+
+<p>"I see something more wonderful than that," said
+Conan Mail; "for the rich rugs and furs and the
+soft couches, which were under us when we sat here
+first, are all gone, not as much as a fragment or a
+thread remaining; and we are now sitting on the
+bare, damp earth, which feels as cold as the snow
+of one night!"<a name="FNanchor_LXXXIX._117" id="FNanchor_LXXXIX._117"></a><a href="#Footnote_LXXXIX._117" class="fnanchor">[LXXXIX.]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then Finn again spoke. "You know, my friends,
+that I never tarry in a house having only one door.
+Let one of you then, arise, and break open that
+narrow door, so that we may go forth from this foul,
+smoky den!"</p>
+
+<p>"That shall be done," cried Conan; and, so saying,
+he seized his long spear, and, planting it on the floor,
+point downwards, he attempted to spring to his feet.
+But he found that he was not able to move, and
+turning to his companions, he cried out with a groan
+of anguish&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, my friends! I see now something more
+wonderful than all; for I am firmly fixed by some
+druidical spell to the cold clay floor of the Palace of
+the Quicken Trees!"</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
+<p>And immediately all the others found themselves,
+in like manner, fixed where they sat. And they
+were silent for a time, being quite confounded and
+overwhelmed with fear and anguish.</p>
+
+<p>At length Gaul spoke, and said, "It seems clear,
+O king, that Midac has planned this treachery, and
+that danger lies before us. I wish, then, that you
+would place your thumb under your tooth of knowledge,<a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
+and let us know the truth; so that we may
+at once consider as to the best means of escaping from
+this strait."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Finn placed his thumb under his
+tooth of knowledge, and mused for a little while.
+Then suddenly withdrawing his thumb, he sank
+back in his seat and groaned aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"May it be the will of the gods," said Gaul, "that
+it is the pain of thy thumb that has caused thee to
+utter that groan!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! not so," replied Finn. "I grieve that my
+death is near, and the death of these dear companions!
+For fourteen years has Midac, the son of the king of
+Lochlann, been plotting against us; and now at last
+he has caught us in this treacherous snare, from which
+I can see no escape.</p>
+
+<p>"For in the Palace of the Island there is, at this
+moment, an army of foreigners, whom Midac has
+brought hither for our destruction. Chief over all
+is Sinsar of the Battles, from Greece, the Monarch of
+the World, who has under his command sixteen warlike
+princes, with many others of lesser note. Next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+to Sinsar is his son, Borba the Haughty, who commands
+also a number of fierce and hardy knights.</p>
+
+<p>"There are, besides, the three kings of the Island
+of the Torrent, large-bodied and bloodthirsty, like
+three furious dragons, who have never yet yielded to
+an enemy on the field of battle. It is these who, by
+their sorcery, have fixed us here; for this cold clay
+that we sit on is part of the soil of the enchanted
+Island of the Torrent, which they brought hither,
+and placed here with foul spells. Moreover, the
+enchantment that binds us to this floor can never
+be broken unless the blood of these kings be sprinkled
+on the clay. And very soon some of Sinsar's
+warriors will come over from the Palace of the
+Island, to slay us all, while we are fixed here helpless,
+and unable to raise a hand in our own defence."</p>
+
+<p>Full of alarm and anguish were the heroes when
+they heard these tidings. And some began to shed
+bitter tears in silence, and some lamented aloud.
+But Finn again spoke and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It becomes us not, my friends, being heroes, to
+weep and wail like women, even though we are in
+danger of death; for tears and lamentations will avail
+us nothing. Let us rather sound the Dord-Fian,<a name="FNanchor_XC._118" id="FNanchor_XC._118"></a><a href="#Footnote_XC._118" class="fnanchor">[XC.]</a>
+sweetly and plaintively, according to our wont, that
+it may be a comfort to us before we die."</p>
+
+<p>So they ceased weeping, and, joining all together,
+they sounded the Dord-Fian in a slow, sad strain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_IV" id="DCHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">INNSA, FINN'S FOSTER SON, DEFENDS THE FORD LEADING
+TO THE PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now let us speak of Oisin, and the party who
+tarried with him on the hill of Knockfierna. When
+he found that his father Finn had not sent back a
+messenger as he had promised, though the night was
+now drawing nigh, he began to fear that something
+was wrong; and he said to his companions&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I marvel much that we have got no news from
+the king, how he and his companions have fared in
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees. It is clear to me
+that he would have fulfilled his promise to send us
+word, if he had not been hindered by some unforeseen
+difficulty. Now, therefore, I wish to know who will
+go to the palace and bring me back tidings."</p>
+
+<p>Ficna, the son of Finn, stood forth and offered
+to go; and Finn's foster son, Innsa, the son of Swena
+Selga, said he would go with him.</p>
+
+<p>They both set out at once, and as they travelled
+with speed, they soon reached the plain on which
+stood the Palace of the Quicken Trees; and now the
+night was darkening around them. As they came
+near to the palace, they marvelled to hear the loud,
+slow strains of the Dord-Fian; and Innsa exclaimed
+joyfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Things go well with our friends, seeing that
+they are amusing themselves with the Dord-Fian!"</p>
+
+<p>But Ficna, who guessed more truly how things
+really stood, replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is my opinion, friend, that matters are not
+so pleasant with them as you think; for it is only
+in time of trouble or danger that Finn is wont to
+have the Dord-Fian sounded in a manner so slow
+and sad."</p>
+
+<p>While they talked in this wise, it chanced that
+the Dord-Fian ceased for a little space; and Finn
+hearing the low hum of conversation outside, asked
+was that the voice of Ficna. And when Ficna
+answered, "Yes," Finn said to him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come not nearer, my son; for this place teems
+with dangerous spells. We have been decoyed hither
+by Midac, and we are all held here by the foul sorcery
+of the three kings of the Island of the Torrent."</p>
+
+<p>And thereupon Finn told him the whole story
+of the treachery that had been wrought on them,
+from beginning to end; and he told him also that
+nothing could free them but the blood of those three
+kings sprinkled on the clay.</p>
+
+<p>Then he asked who the second man was whom
+he had heard conversing with Ficna; and when he
+was told that it was Innsa, the son of Swena Selga,
+he addressed Ficna earnestly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Fly, my son, from this fatal place! Fly, and save
+my foster child from the treacherous swords of the
+foreigners; for they are already on their way hither!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Innsa quickly answered, "That I will never
+do. It would, indeed, be an ungrateful return to a
+kind foster father, to leave thee now in deadly strait,
+and seek my own safety."</p>
+
+<p>And Ficna spoke in a like strain.</p>
+
+<p>Then Finn said, "Be it so, my sons; but a sore
+trial awaits you. Those who come hither from the
+Palace of the Island must needs pass the ford under
+the shadow of these walls. Now this ford is rugged
+and hard to be crossed; and one good man, standing
+in the steep, narrow entrance at the hither side, might
+dispute the passage for a time against many. Go
+now, and defend this ford; and haply some help may
+come in time."</p>
+
+<p>So both went to the ford. And when they had
+viewed it carefully, Ficna, seeing that one man
+might defend it for a short time almost as well as
+two, said to Innsa&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Stay thou here to guard the ford for a little time,
+while I go to the Palace of the Island to see how the
+foreigners might be attacked. Haply, too, I may
+meet with the party coming hither, and decoy them
+on some other track."</p>
+
+<p>And Innsa consented; and Ficna set out straightway
+for the Palace of the Island.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">Now as to the Palace of the Island. When Midac
+returned in the morning, and told how Finn and his
+people were held safe in the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees, the foreigners were in great joy. And they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+feasted and drank and were merry till evening; when
+an Irla<a name="FNanchor_XCI._119" id="FNanchor_XCI._119"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCI._119" class="fnanchor">[XCI.]</a> of the King of the World spoke in secret
+to his brother, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will go now to the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+and I will bring hither the head of Finn the son of
+Cumal; and I shall gain thereby much renown, and
+shall be honoured by the King of the World."</p>
+
+<p>So he went, bringing with him a goodly number
+of his own knights; and nothing is told of what
+befell them till they arrived at the brink of the ford
+under the Palace of the Quicken Trees. Looking
+across through the darkness, the Irla thought he saw
+a warrior standing at the other brink; and he called
+aloud to ask who was there, and whether he belonged
+to the noble or the ignoble races of the world.</p>
+
+<p>And when Innsa answered that he belonged to the
+household of Finn, the son of Cumal, the Irla said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Lo, we are going to the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees, to bring Finn's head to the King of the World;
+and thou shalt come with us and lead us to the door."</p>
+
+<p>"That, indeed," replied Innsa, "would be a strange
+way for a champion to act who has been sent hither
+by Finn to guard this ford. I will not allow any foe
+to pass&mdash;of that be sure; and I warn you that you
+come not to my side of the ford!"</p>
+
+<p>At this the Irla said to his knights, "Force the
+ford: then shall we see if yonder hero can fight as
+well as he threatens."</p>
+
+<p>And at the word, they rushed through the water,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+as many as could find room. But only one or two at
+a time could attack; and the young champion struck
+them down right and left as fast as they came up,
+till the ford became encumbered with their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>And when the conflict had lasted for a long time,
+and when they found that they could not dislodge
+him, the few that remained retired across the ford;
+and Innsa was fain to rest after his long combat.</p>
+
+<p>But the Irla, seeing so many of his knights slain,
+was mad with wrath; and, snatching up his sword
+and shield, he attacked Innsa; and they fought a long
+and bloody fight.</p>
+
+<p>Now the Irla was fresh and strong, while Innsa
+was weary and sore wounded; and at length the
+young hero fell in the ford, and the Irla beheaded
+him, and, exulting in his victory, brought the head
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and his companions, as they sat in miserable
+plight in the Palace of the Quicken Trees, heard the
+clash of arms at the ford, and the shouts and groans
+of warriors; and after a time all was still again; and
+they knew not how the fight had ended.</p>
+
+<p>And now the Irla, thinking over the matter,
+deemed it unsafe to go to the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees without a larger body of knights; so he returned
+towards the Palace of the Island, intending to
+bring Innsa's head to the King of the World. When
+he had come within a little distance of the palace, he
+met Ficna, who was then on his way back to the
+ford; and seeing that he was coming from the Palace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+of the Island, he deemed that he was one of the
+knights of the King of the World.</p>
+
+<p>Ficna spoke to him, and asked whither he had
+come.</p>
+
+<p>"I come," replied the Irla, "from the ford of the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees. There, indeed, on our
+way to the palace, to slay Finn the son of Cumal, we
+were met by a young champion, who defended the
+ford and slew my knights. But he fell at length
+beneath my sword; and, lo, I have brought his head
+for a triumph to the King of the World!"</p>
+
+<p>Ficna took the head tenderly, and kissed the
+cheek thrice, and said, sorrowing&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, dear youth! only this morning I saw the
+light of valour in those dim eyes, and the bloom of
+youth on that faded cheek!"</p>
+
+<p>Then turning wrathfully to the Irla, he asked&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Knowest thou to whom thou hast given the
+young warrior's head?"</p>
+
+<p>And the Irla replied, "Hast thou not come from
+the Palace of the Island, and dost thou not belong to
+the host of the King of the World?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not one of his knights," answered Ficna;
+"and neither shalt thou be, after this hour!"</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon they drew their swords, and fought
+where they stood; and the foreign Irla fell by the
+avenging sword of Ficna, the son of Finn. Ficna
+beheaded him and returned to the ford, bringing the
+head, and also the head of Innsa. And when he had
+come to the ford, he made a grave of green sods on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+the bank, in which he laid the body and the head
+of Innsa, sometimes grieving for the youth, and sometimes
+rejoicing that his death had been avenged.</p>
+
+<p>Then he went on to the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees, bringing the Irla's head; and when he had
+come nigh the door, he called aloud to Finn, who,
+impatient and full of anxious thoughts, asked&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us, Ficna, who fought the battle at the ford,
+and how it has ended."</p>
+
+<p>"Thine own foster son, Innsa, defended the ford
+against many foes, whose bodies now encumber the
+stream."</p>
+
+<p>"And how is it now with my foster son?" asked
+Finn.</p>
+
+<p>"He died where he fought," replied Ficna; "for
+at the end, when he was weary and sore wounded,
+the foreign Irla attacked him, and slew him."</p>
+
+<p>"And thou, my son, didst thou stand by and see
+my nursling slain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Truly I did not," answered Ficna. "Would that
+I had been there, and I would have defended and
+saved him! And even now he is well avenged; for I
+met the Irla soon after, and lo, I have brought thee
+his head. Moreover, I buried thy nursling tenderly
+in a grave of green sods by the ford."</p>
+
+<p>And Finn wept and said, "Victory and blessings
+be with thee, my son! Never were children better than
+mine. Before I saw them, few were my possessions
+and small my consideration in Erin; but since they
+have grown up around me, I have been great and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+prosperous, till I fell by treachery into this evil plight.
+And now, Ficna, return and guard the ford, and
+peradventure our friends may send help in time."</p>
+
+<p>So Ficna went and sat on the brink of the ford.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_V" id="DCHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FICNA, THE SON OF FINN, DEFENDS THE FORD.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now at the Palace of the Island, another Irla, whose
+name was Kironn, brother to him who had been slain
+by Ficna, spoke to some of his own followers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is long since my brother left for the Palace
+of the Quicken Trees; I fear me that he and his
+people have fared ill in their quest. And now I
+will go to seek for them."</p>
+
+<p>And he went, bringing a company of knights well
+armed; and when they had come to the ford, they saw
+Ficna at the far side. Kironn called out and asked
+who he was, and asked also who had made such a
+slaughter in the ford.</p>
+
+<p>Ficna answered, "I am one of the household
+champions of Finn the son of Cumal, and he has sent
+me here to guard this ford. As to the slaughter of
+yonder knights, your question stirs my mind to wrath,
+and I warn you, if you come to this side of the ford,
+you will get a reply, not in words, but in deeds."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Kironn and his men rushed through the
+water, blind with rage, and struck wildly at Ficna.
+But the young hero watchfully parried their strokes
+and thrusts; and one after another they fell beneath
+his blows, till only a single man was left, who ran
+back with all speed to the Palace of the Island to tell
+the tale. And Ficna sat down on the brink, covered
+all over with wounds, and weary from the toil of
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>When these tidings were brought to the palace,
+Midac was very wroth, and he said, "These men
+should not have gone to force the ford without my
+knowledge; for they were far too few in number, and
+neither were they bold and hardy enough to meet
+Finn's valiant champions. I know these Fena well,
+and it is not to me a matter of surprise that the Irla
+and his people fell by them.</p>
+
+<p>"But I will now go with a choice party of my own
+brave men; and I will cross the ford despite their
+guards, and slay Finn and all his companions in the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, there is one man among them, namely,
+Conan Mail,<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> who of all the men of Erin has the largest
+appetite, and is fondest of choice eating and drinking.
+To him will I bring savoury food and delicious drink,
+not, indeed, to delight him with eating and drinking,
+but that I may torment him with the sight and smell
+of what he cannot taste."</p>
+
+<p>So, having got the food, he set out with a chosen
+band; and when he had arrived at the ford, he saw a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+warrior at the far side. He asked who he was, and
+finding that it was Ficna, he spoke guilefully to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear art thou to me, Ficna, dearer even than all
+the rest of Finn's household; for during the time I lived
+among the Fena, you never used me ill, or lifted a hand
+to either man or dog belonging to me."</p>
+
+<p>But Ficna spurned his smooth words, and replied,
+"While you lived among the Fena, there was not a
+man among them that had less to do with you than I.
+But this I know, that you were treated kindly by all,
+especially by my father Finn, and you have repaid
+him by ingratitude and treachery."</p>
+
+<p>When Midac heard this speech he was filled with
+wrath, and no longer hiding his evil mind, he ordered
+Ficna with threats to leave the ford. But Ficna
+laughed with scorn, and replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The task is easy, friend Midac, to dislodge a
+single champion; and surely it is a small matter to you
+whether I stand in this narrow pass or abandon my
+post. Come forward, then, you and your knights; but
+here I will remain to receive you. I only regret you
+did not come sooner, while my blood was hot, and
+before my wounds grew stiff, when you would have
+got a better welcome!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Midac ordered forward his knights, and they
+ran eagerly across the ford. But Ficna overthrew
+them with a mighty onset, like a hawk among a flight
+of small birds, or like a wolf among a flock of sheep.
+When Midac saw this, he buckled on his shield and
+took his sword. Then, treading warily over the rough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+rocks, and over the dead bodies of his knights, he
+confronted Ficna, and they attacked each other with
+deadly hate and fury.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">We shall now speak of those who remained on
+Knockfierna. When Oisin found that the two heroes
+did not return as soon as he expected, he thus
+addressed his companions&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me a long time, my friends, since
+Ficna and Innsa went to the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees; methinks if they have sped successfully they
+should have long since come back with tidings of
+Finn and the others."</p>
+
+<p>And one of his companions answered, "It is plain
+that they have gone to partake of the feast, and it
+fares so well with them that they are in no haste to
+leave the palace."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face spoke and
+said, "It may be as you say, friend, but I should like
+to know the truth of the matter. And now I will
+go and find out why they tarry, for my mind misgives
+me that some evil thing has happened."</p>
+
+<p>And Fatha Conan said he would go with him.</p>
+
+<p>So the two heroes set out for the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees; and when they were yet a good way
+off from the ford they heard the clash of arms. They
+paused for a moment, breathless, to listen, and then
+Dermat exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is the sound of single combat, the combat of
+mighty heroes; it is Ficna fighting with the foreigners,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+for I know his war-shout. I hear the clash of swords
+and the groans of warriors; I hear the shrieks of the
+ravens over the fairy-mansions, and the howls of the
+wild men of the glens! Hasten, Fatha, hasten, for
+Ficna is in sore strait, and his shout is a shout for
+help!"</p>
+
+<p>And so they ran like the wind till they reached the
+hill-brow over the river; and, looking across in the dim
+moonlight, they saw the whole ford heaped with the
+bodies of the slain, and the two heroes fighting to the
+death at the far side. And at the first glance they
+observed that Ficna, being sore wounded, was yielding
+and sheltering behind his shield, and scarce able
+to ward off the blows of Midac.</p>
+
+<p>Then Fatha cried out, "Fly, Dermat, fly! Save our
+dear companion! Save the king's son from death."</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat, pausing for a moment, said, as if
+communing with himself&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is surely an evil plight: for if I run to the
+other side, the foreigner, being the more enraged for
+seeing me, will strike with greater fury, and I may not
+overtake the prince alive; and if I cast my spear, I may
+strike the wrong man!"</p>
+
+<p>But Fatha, overhearing him, said, "Fear not, Dermat,
+for you never yet threw an erring cast of a spear!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat, putting his finger in the silken loop
+of his spear, threw a deadly cast with unerring aim,
+and struck Midac, so that the iron spear-head went
+right through his body, and the length of a warrior's
+hand beyond.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Woe to the man," exclaimed Midac&mdash;"woe to
+him whom that spear reaches: for it is the spear of
+Dermat O'Dyna!"</p>
+
+<p>And now his wrath increased, and he struck at
+Ficna more fiercely than before.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat shouted to him to hold his hand and not
+slay the king's son; and as he spoke he rushed down
+the slope and across the ford, to save the young
+hero. But Midac, still pressing on with unabated
+strength and fury, replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Had you wished to save the prince's life, you
+should have spared mine: now that I have been
+wounded to death by your spear, Finn shall never see
+his son alive!"</p>
+
+<p>Even as he spoke, he raised his sword for a mighty
+blow; and just as Dermat, shouting earnestly, was
+closing on them, he struck the prince lifeless to the
+earth, but fell down himself immediately after.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat came up on the instant, and looked sadly
+at his friend lying dead. Then, addressing Midac, he
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If I had found thee dead, I would have passed
+thee untouched; but now that I have overtaken thee
+alive, I must needs behead thee, for thy head will be
+to Finn a worthy eric<a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> for his son."</p>
+
+<p>And so saying, he struck off Midac's head with one
+sweep of his heavy sword.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat now repaired to the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees, leaving Fatha to watch the ford till his return.
+And when he had come near, he called aloud and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+struck the door with his heavy spear, for his wrath
+had not yet left him; but the door yielded not.</p>
+
+<p>Finn knew the voice, and called out impatiently,
+"Do not try to enter here, Dermat, for this place is
+full of foul spells. But tell us first, I pray thee, who
+fought that long and bitter fight; for we heard the
+clash of arms and the shouts of warriors, but we know
+nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>"Thy noble son, Ficna," returned Dermat, "fought
+single-handed against the foreigners."</p>
+
+<p>"And how fares it with my son after that battle?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is dead," answered Dermat; "first sore
+wounded by many foes whom he slaughtered, and
+afterwards slain by Midac, the son of Colga. But thy
+son is avenged; for though I came to the ford indeed
+too late to save him, I have slain Midac, and here
+I have brought thee his head as an eric."</p>
+
+<p>And for a long time Dermat heard no more.</p>
+
+<p>At last Finn spoke again and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat, for
+often before did you relieve the Fena from sore straits.
+But never have we been in such plight as this. For
+here we sit spell-bound, and only one thing can release
+us, the blood of the three fierce kings of the Island of
+the Torrent sprinkled on this clay. Meantime, unless
+the ford be well defended, the foreigners will come and
+slay us. In you, Dermat, we trust, and unless you aid
+us well and faithfully now, we shall of a certainty
+perish. Guard the ford till the rising of the sun, for
+then I know the Fena will come to aid you."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I and Fatha will of a certainty keep the enemy
+at bay," replied Dermat; and he bade them farewell
+for a time, and was about to return to the ford: but
+Conan Mail, with a groan, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Miserable was the hour when I came to this
+palace, and cold and comfortless is the clay on which I
+sit&mdash;the clay of the Island of the Torrent. But worst
+of all to be without food and drink so long. And
+while I sit here, tormented with hunger and thirst,
+there is great plenty of ale and wine and of rich,
+savoury food yonder in the Palace of the Island. I
+am not able to bear this any longer; and now, Dermat,
+I beseech you to bring me from the palace as much
+food as I can eat and a drinking-horn of wine."</p>
+
+<p>"Cursed be the tongue that spoke these selfish
+words!" said Dermat. "A host of foreigners are now
+seeking to compass your death, with only Fatha and
+myself to defend you. Surely this is work enough for
+two good men! And now it seems I must abandon my
+post, and undertake a task of much danger, to get
+food for the gluttonous Conan Mail!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, Dermat-na-man!"<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> replied Conan, "if it
+were a lovely maiden, with bright eyes and golden hair,
+who made this little request, quickly and eagerly you
+would fly to please her, little recking of danger or
+trouble. But now you refuse me, and the reason is
+not hard to see. For you formerly crossed me four
+times in my courtships; and now it likes you well to
+see me die of hunger in this dungeon!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," said Dermat, "cease your upbraiding,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+and I will try to bring you food; for it is better to
+face danger than to suffer the revilings of your foul
+tongue."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he went back to the ford to Fatha,
+where he stood watching; and after he had told him
+how matters stood, he said to him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I must needs go to the Palace of the Island, to
+get food for Conan Mail; and you shall guard the
+ford till I return."</p>
+
+<p>But Fatha told him that there was food and drink
+enough at the other side of the ford, which Midac had
+brought from the palace, and urged him to bring a
+good meal of this to Conan.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," said Dermat. "He would taunt me with
+bringing him food taken from the hands of dead men;
+and though one may recover from his blow, it is not
+so easy to recover from the venom of his tongue."<a name="FNanchor_XCII._120" id="FNanchor_XCII._120"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCII._120" class="fnanchor">[XCII.]</a></p>
+
+<p>So he left Fatha at the ford, and repaired to the
+Palace of the Island.</p>
+
+<p>As he drew nigh, he heard the noise of feasting
+and revelry, and the loud talk and laughter of men deep
+in drink. Walking tiptoe, he peered warily through
+the open door, and saw the chiefs and the knights
+sitting at the tables; with Sinsar of the Battles and
+his son Borba high seated over all. He saw also
+many attendants serving them with food and drink,
+each holding in his hand a large ornamented drinking-horn,
+filled with wine.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat entered the outer door softly, and stood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+in a dark part of the passage near the door, silent and
+stern, with sword drawn, watching his opportunity.
+And after a time one of the attendants, unsuspecting,
+passed close to him; when Dermat, with a swift, sure
+blow, struck off his head. And he snatched the
+drinking-horn from the man's hand before he fell, so
+that not a drop of the wine was spilled.</p>
+
+<p>Then, laying the drinking-horn aside for a moment,
+he walked straight into the hall, and taking up one
+of the dishes near where the king sat, he went out
+through the open door, bringing with him both dish
+and drinking-horn. And amidst the great crowd, and
+the drinking, and the noise, no one took the least
+notice of him, so that he got off without hindrance
+or harm of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the ford, he found Fatha lying
+fast asleep on the bank. He wondered very much
+that he could sleep in the midst of such a slaughter;
+but knowing that the young warrior was worn out
+with watching and toil, he left him lying asleep, and
+went to the Palace of the Quicken Trees with the
+food for Conan.</p>
+
+<p>When he had come to the door, he called aloud to
+Conan and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have here a goodly meal of choice food: how
+am I to give it to thee?"</p>
+
+<p>Conan said, "Throw it towards me through
+yonder little opening."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat did so; and as fast as he threw the food,
+Conan caught it in his large hands, and ate it up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+ravenously. And when it was all gone, Dermat
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have here a large drinking-horn of good wine:
+how am I to give it to thee?"</p>
+
+<p>Conan answered, "There is a place behind the
+palace where, from a rock, you may reach the lower
+parapet with a light, airy bound. Come from that
+straight over me, and break a hole in the roof with
+your spear, through which you can pour the wine
+down to me."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat did so; and as he poured down the wine,
+Conan, with upturned face, opened his great mouth
+and caught it, and swallowed it every drop.</p>
+
+<p>After this Dermat came down and returned to the
+ford, where he found Fatha still asleep; and he sat
+beside him, but did not awaken him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_VI" id="DCHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DERMAT O'DYNA SLAYS THE THREE KINGS OF THE
+ISLAND OF THE TORRENT, BREAKS THE SPELL
+WITH THEIR BLOOD, AND FREES FINN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Tidings were brought to the Palace of the Island that
+Midac and all whom he led were slain at the ford;
+and the three kings of the Island of the Torrent said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The young king of Lochlann did wrong to make
+this attempt without asking our counsel; and had we
+known of the thing we would have hindered him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+For to us belongs the right to behead Finn and his
+companions, since it is the spell-venom of the clay
+which we brought from the Island of the Torrent that
+holds them bound in the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+And now, indeed, we will go and slay them all."</p>
+
+<p>So they set out with a strong party, and soon
+reached the ford. Looking across in the dim light,
+they saw Dermat, and called aloud to ask who he was.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Dermat O'Dyna," he replied, "one of Finn's
+champions. He has sent me to guard this ford, and
+whoever you are, I warn you not to cross!"</p>
+
+<p>Then they sought to beguile Dermat, and to win
+him over by smooth words; and they replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pleasure to us to meet you, Dermat; for
+we are old friends of yours. We are the three kings
+of the Island of the Torrent, your fellow-pupils in
+valour and all heroic feats. For you and we lived
+with the same tutors from the beginning; and you
+never learned a feat of arms that we did not learn
+in like manner. Leave the ford, then, that we may
+pass on to the Palace of the Quicken Trees."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat answered in few words, "Finn and
+his companions are under my protection till morning;
+and I will defend the ford as long as I am alive!"</p>
+
+<p>And he stood up straight and tall like a pillar, and
+scowled across the ford.</p>
+
+<p>A number of the foreigners now rushed towards
+Dermat, and raging in a confused crowd, assailed him.
+But the strong hero met them as a rock meets the
+waves, and slew them with ease as they came within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+the range of his sword. Yet still they pressed on,
+others succeeding those that fell; and in the midst of
+the rage of battle, Fatha started up from his sleep,
+awakened by the crashing of weapons and the riving
+of shields.</p>
+
+<p>He gazed for a moment, bewildered, at the combatants,
+and, seeing how matters stood, he was wroth
+with Dermat for not awakening him; so that he ran
+at him fiercely with drawn sword. But Dermat
+stepped aside, and, being angry, thus addressed him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Slake thy vengeance on our foes for the present:
+for me, the swords of the foreigners are enough,
+methinks, without thine to aid them!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Fatha turned and attacked the foe, and his
+onset was even more deadly than that of Dermat; so
+that they fell before him to the right and left on the
+ford.</p>
+
+<p>And now at last the three kings, seeing so many
+of their men falling, advanced slowly towards Dermat;
+and Dermat, unterrified, stood in his place to meet
+them. And their weapons clashed and tore through
+their shields, and the fight was long and furious; till at
+last the champion-pride and the battle-fury of Dermat
+arose, so that the three dragon-like kings fell slain
+one by one before him, on that ford of red slaughter.</p>
+
+<p>And now, though smarting with wounds, and breathless,
+and weary, Dermat and Fatha remembered Finn
+and the Fena; and Dermat called to mind what Finn had
+told him as to how the spell was to be broken. So he
+struck off the heads of the three kings, and, followed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+by Fatha, he ran with them, all gory as they were, to
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees.</p>
+
+<p>As they drew nigh to the door, Finn, knowing
+their voices and their footsteps, called aloud anxiously
+to ask how it fared with the combatants at the ford;
+"For," said he, "the crashing and the din of that
+battle exceeded all we have yet heard, and we know
+not how it has ended."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat answered, "King of the Fena, Fatha and
+I have slain the three kings of the Island of the
+Torrent; and lo, here we have their heads all bloody;
+but how am I to bring them to thee?"</p>
+
+<p>"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat; you
+and Fatha have fought a valiant fight, worthy of the
+Fena of Erin! Now sprinkle the door with the blood."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat did so, and in a moment the door flew
+wide open with a crash. And inside they saw the
+heroes in sore plight, all pale and faint, seated on the
+cold clay round the wall. Dermat and Fatha, holding
+the gory heads by the hair, sprinkled the earth under
+each with the blood, beginning with Finn, and freed
+them one by one; and the heroes, as they found the
+spell broken, sprang to their feet with exulting cries.
+And they thanked the gods for having relieved them
+from that perilous strait, and they and the two
+heroes joyfully embraced each other.</p>
+
+<p>But danger still threatened, and they now took
+counsel what they should do; and Finn, addressing
+Dermat and Fatha, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The venom of these foul spells has withered our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+strength, so that we are not able to fight; but at sunrise
+they will lose their power, and we shall be strong
+again. It is necessary, therefore, that you still guard
+the ford, and at the rising of the sun we shall relieve
+you."</p>
+
+<p>So the two heroes went to the ford, and Fatha
+returned with food and drink for Finn and the others.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">After the last battle at the ford, a few who had
+escaped brought back tidings to the King of the World
+and his people, that the three kings of the Island of
+the Torrent had fallen by the hands of Dermat and
+Fatha. But they knew not that Finn and the others
+had been released.</p>
+
+<p>Then arose the king's son, Borba the Haughty, who,
+next to the king himself, was mightiest in battle of all
+the foreign host. And he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Feeble warriors were they who tried to cross this
+ford. I will go now and avenge the death of our
+people on these Fena, and I will bring hither the head of
+Finn the son of Cumal, and place it at my father's feet."</p>
+
+<p>So he marched forth without delay, with a large
+body of chosen warriors, till he reached the edge of the
+ford. And although Dermat and Fatha never trembled
+before a foe, yet when they saw the dark mass drawing
+nigh, and heard the heavy tread and clank of
+arms, they dreaded that they might be dislodged and
+overpowered by repeated attacks, leaving Finn and
+the rest helpless and unprotected. And each in his
+heart longed for the dawn of morning.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>No parley was held this time, but the foreigners
+came straight across the ford&mdash;as many abreast as
+could find footing. And as they drew near, Dermat
+spoke to Fatha&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Fight warily, my friend: ward the blows of the
+foremost, and be not too eager to slay, but rather look
+to thy own safety. It behoves us to nurse our strength
+and prolong the fight, for the day is dawning, and
+sunrise is not far off!"</p>
+
+<p>The foreigners came on, many abreast; but their
+numbers availed them naught, for the pass was narrow;
+and the two heroes, one taking the advancing party
+to the right, and the other to the left, sometimes
+parried and sometimes slew, but never yielded an inch
+from where they stood.</p>
+
+<p>And now at last the sun rose up over the broad
+plain of Kenri; and suddenly the withering spell went
+forth from the bones and sinews of the heroes who sat
+at the Palace of the Quicken Trees, listening with
+anxious hearts to the clash of battle at the ford. Joyfully
+they started to their feet, and, snatching up their
+arms, hastened down to the ford with Finn at their
+head; but one they sent, the swiftest among them, to
+Knockfierna, to take the news to Oisin.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat and Fatha, fighting eagerly, heeded not
+that the sun had risen, though it was now indeed
+glittering before their eyes on the helmets and arms
+of their foes. But as they fought, there rose a great
+shout behind them; and Finn and Gaul and the rest
+ran down the slope to attack the foreigners.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The foreigners, not in the least dismayed, answered
+the attack; and the fight went on, till Gaul Mac
+Morna and Borba the Haughty met face to face in the
+middle of the ford, and they fought a hard and deadly
+combat. The battle-fury of Gaul at length arose, so
+that nothing could stand before him, and, with one
+mighty blow, he cleft the head from the body of Borba.</p>
+
+<p>And now the foreigners began to yield: but they
+still continued to fight, till a swift messenger sped to
+the Palace of the Island, and told the great king,
+Sinsar of the Battles, that his son was dead, slain by
+Gaul; and that his army was sore pressed by the Fena,
+with Finn at their head.</p>
+
+<p>When the people heard these tidings, they raised a
+long and sorrowful cry of lamentation for the king's
+son; but the king himself, though sorrow filled his
+heart, showed it not. And he arose and summoned
+his whole host; and, having arranged them in their
+battalions and in their companies under their princes
+and chiefs, he marched towards the battle-field,
+desiring vengeance on the Fena more than the glory
+of victory.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="DCHAPTER_VII" id="DCHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FIGHT AT THE FORD, WITH THE FOREIGN ARMY.</p>
+
+
+<p>All the Fena who had gone to the chase from Knockfierna
+had returned, and were now with Oisin, the son
+of Finn. And the messenger came slowly up the hill-side,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+and told them, though with much difficulty, for
+he was weary and breathless, the whole story from
+beginning to end, of Finn's enchantment, and of the
+battles at the ford, and how their companions at that
+moment stood much in need of aid against the
+foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the whole body marched straight towards
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees, and arrived on the
+hill-brow over the ford, just as the King of the World
+and his army were approaching from the opposite
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>And now the fight at the ford ceased for a time,
+while the two armies were put in battle array; and
+on neither side was there any cowardice or any desire
+to avoid the combat.</p>
+
+<p>The Fena were divided into four battalions. The
+active, bright-eyed Clann Baskin marched in front of
+the first battalion; the fierce, champion-like Clann
+Morna led the second; the strong, sanguinary Mic-an-Smoil
+brought up the third; and the fourth was led
+forward by the fearless, venomous Clann O'Navnan.</p>
+
+<p>And they marched forward, with their silken
+banners, each banner-staff in the hand of a tall, trusty
+hero; their helmets glittering with precious gems;
+their broad, beautiful shields on their left shoulders;
+with their long, straight, deadly lances in their hands;
+and their heavy, keen-edged swords hanging at the
+left side of each. Onward they marched; and woe to
+those who crossed the path of that host of active, high-minded
+champions, who never turned their backs on
+an enemy in battle!</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And now at last the fight began with showers of
+light, venomous missiles; and many a hero fell even
+before the combatants met face to face. Then they
+drew their long, broad-bladed swords, and the ranks
+closed and mingled in deadly strife. It would be vain
+to attempt a description of that battle, for it was hard
+to distinguish friend from foe. Many a high-souled
+hero fell wounded and helpless, and neither sigh nor
+groan of pain escaped them; but they died, encouraging
+their friends to vengeance with voice and gesture.
+And the first thought of each champion was to take
+the life of his foe rather than to save his own.</p>
+
+<p>The great king Finn himself moved tall and
+stately from battalion to battalion, now fighting in the
+foremost ranks, and now encouraging his friends and
+companions, his mighty voice rising clear over the
+clash of arms and the shouts of the combatants. And
+wherever he moved, there the courage of the Fena rose
+high, and their valour and their daring increased, so
+that the ranks of their foes fell back thinned and
+scattered before them.</p>
+
+<p>Oscar, resting for a moment from the toil of battle,
+looked round, and espied the standard of the King
+of the World, where he stood guarded by his best
+warriors, to protect him from the danger of being
+surrounded and outnumbered by his foes; and the
+young hero's wrath was kindled when he observed
+that the Fena were falling back dismayed wherever
+that standard was borne.</p>
+
+<p>Rushing through the opposing ranks like a lion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+maddened by dogs, he approached the king; and the
+king laughed a grim laugh of joy when he saw him,
+and ordered his guards back; for he was glad in
+his heart, expecting to revenge his son's death by
+slaying with his own hand Finn's grandson, who was
+most loved of all the youthful champions of the Fena.
+Then these two great heroes fought a deadly battle;
+and many a warrior stayed his hand to witness this
+combat. It seemed as if both should fall; for each
+inflicted on the other many wounds. The king's rage
+knew no bounds at being so long withstood, for at
+first sight he despised Oscar for his youth and beauty;
+and he made an onset that caused Oscar's friends, as
+they looked on, to tremble; for during this attack the
+young hero defended himself, and no more. But now,
+having yielded for a time, he called to mind the actions
+and the fame of his forefathers, and attacked the king
+in turn, and, with a blow that no shield or buckler
+could withstand, he swept the head from the king's
+body.</p>
+
+<p>Then a great shout went up from the Fena, and the
+foreigners instantly gave way; and they were pursued
+and slaughtered on every side. A few threw away
+their arms and escaped to the shore, where, hastily
+unmooring their ships, they sailed swiftly away to
+their own country, with tidings of the death of their
+king and the slaughter of their army.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_PURSUIT_OF_THE_GILLA_DACKER" id="THE_PURSUIT_OF_THE_GILLA_DACKER"></a>THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER
+AND HIS HORSE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_I" id="ECHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">ARRIVAL OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.</p>
+
+
+<p>One day in the beginning of summer, Finn, the son
+of Cumal, the son of Trenmore O'Baskin,<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> feasted the
+chief people of Erin at Allen<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> of the broad hill-slopes.
+And when the feast was over, the Fena reminded
+him that it was time to begin the chase through the
+plains and the glens and the wildernesses of Erin.</p>
+
+<p>For this was the manner in which the Fena were
+wont to spend their time. They divided the year
+into two parts. During the first half, namely, from
+Beltane to Samin,<a name="FNanchor_XCIII._121" id="FNanchor_XCIII._121"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCIII._121" class="fnanchor">[XCIII.]</a> they hunted each day with their
+dogs; and during the second half, namely, from Samin
+to Beltane, they lived in the mansions and the betas<a name="FNanchor_XCIV._122" id="FNanchor_XCIV._122"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCIV._122" class="fnanchor">[XCIV.]</a>
+of Erin; so that there was not a chief or a great lord
+or a keeper of a house of hospitality in the whole
+country that had not nine of the Fena quartered on
+him during the winter half of the year.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p><p>Finn and his chiefs now held council as to which
+of the provinces of Erin they should begin with;
+and they chose Munster for the first chase.</p>
+
+<p>Next day they set out, both dogs and men; and
+they travelled through Offaly,<a name="FNanchor_XCV._123" id="FNanchor_XCV._123"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCV._123" class="fnanchor">[XCV.]</a> and by one side of
+Fera-call, and to Brosna of Slieve Bloma, and by
+the Twelve Mountains of Evlinn, till they came to
+Collkilla, which is now called Knockainy.</p>
+
+<p>The chase was then set in order, and they scattered
+themselves over the broad plains of Munster. They
+began at Ardpatrick,<a name="FNanchor_XCVI._124" id="FNanchor_XCVI._124"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCVI._124" class="fnanchor">[XCVI.]</a> and they hunted over Kenn-Avrat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+of Slieve-Keen, and over Coill-na-drua, which
+is now called the district of Fermoy; over the fruitful
+lands of Lehan, and over the confines of Fermorc,
+which is now called Hy Conall Gavra. Then south
+to the patrimony of Curoi Mac Dara, and by the
+shores of Loch Lein; afterwards along the blue-streamy
+Suir, by Caher-Dun-Isca, over the great
+plain of Femin, and across the speckled summit of
+Slieve-na-man-finn; all over East Munster and West
+Munster, as far as Balla-Gavran on the one side,
+and on the other across the Shannon to Cratloe,
+near Limerick of the blue waters.</p>
+
+<p>In short, there was not a plain or a valley, a wood
+or a brake, a mountain or a wilderness, in the two
+provinces of Munster, that they did not hunt over
+on that occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Now it chanced at one time during the chase,
+while they were hunting over the plain of Cliach,<a name="FNanchor_XCVII._125" id="FNanchor_XCVII._125"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCVII._125" class="fnanchor">[XCVII.]</a>
+that Finn went to rest on the hill of Collkilla, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+is now called Knockainy; and he had his hunting-tents
+pitched on a level spot near the summit. Some
+of his chief heroes tarried with him; namely, his son
+Oisin; the valiant Oscar, the son of Oisin; Gaul Mac
+Morna of the Mighty Deeds; Finn's shield-bearer,
+Skeabrac; Kylta Mac Ronan; Dermat O'Dyna of
+the Bright Face; Ligan Lumina the Swift-footed;
+Conan Mail of the Foul Tongue; and Finn Ban Mac
+Bresal.</p>
+
+<p>When the king and his companions had taken
+their places on the hill, the Fena unleashed their
+gracefully shaped, sweet-voiced hounds through the
+woods and sloping glens. And it was sweet music
+to Finn's ear, the cry of the long-snouted dogs, as
+they routed the deer from their covers, and the
+badgers from their dens; the pleasant, emulating
+shouts of the youths; the whistling and signalling
+of the huntsmen; and the encouraging cheers of the
+mighty heroes, as they spread themselves through the
+glens and woods, and over the broad, green plain of
+Cliach.</p>
+
+<p>Then did Finn ask who of all his companions
+would go to the highest point of the hill directly
+over them, to keep watch and ward, and to report
+how the chase went on. For, he said, the Dedannans<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
+were ever on the watch to work the Fena mischief by
+their druidical spells, and more so during the chase
+than at other times.</p>
+
+<p>Finn Ban Mac Bresal stood forward and offered
+to go: and, grasping his broad spears, he went to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+top, and sat viewing the plain to the four points of
+the sky. And the king and his companions brought
+forth the chess-board and chess-men,<a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> and sat them
+down to a game.</p>
+
+<p>Finn Ban Mac Bresal had been watching only
+a little time, when he saw on the plain to the east,
+a Fomor<a name="FNanchor_XCVIII._126" id="FNanchor_XCVIII._126"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCVIII._126" class="fnanchor">[XCVIII.]</a> of vast size coming towards the hill,
+leading a horse. As he came nearer, Finn Ban
+observed that he was the ugliest-looking giant his
+eyes ever lighted on. He had a large, thick body,
+bloated and swollen out to a great size; clumsy,
+crooked legs; and broad, flat feet, turned inwards.
+His hands and arms and shoulders were bony and
+thick and very strong-looking; his neck was long
+and thin; and while his head was poked forward, his
+face was turned up, as he stared straight at Finn
+Mac Bresal. He had thick lips, and long, crooked
+teeth; and his face was covered all over with bushy
+hair.</p>
+
+<p>He was fully armed; but all his weapons were
+rusty and soiled and slovenly looking. A broad
+shield of a dirty, sooty colour, rough and battered,
+hung over his back; he had a long, heavy, straight
+sword at his left hip; and he held in his left hand
+two thick-handled, broad-headed spears, old and rusty,
+and seeming as if they had not been handled for
+years. In his right hand he held an iron club, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+he dragged after him, with its end on the ground;
+and, as it trailed along, it tore up a track as deep
+as the furrow a farmer ploughs with a team of oxen.</p>
+
+<p>The horse he led was even larger in proportion
+than the giant himself, and quite as ugly. His
+great carcase was covered all over with tangled,
+scraggy hair, of a sooty black; you could count his
+ribs, and all the points of his big bones through
+his hide; his legs were crooked and knotty; his
+neck was twisted; and as for his jaws, they were
+so long and heavy that they made his head look
+twice too large for his body.</p>
+
+<p>The giant held him by a thick halter, and seemed
+to be dragging him forward by main force, the animal
+was so lazy and so hard to move. Every now and
+then, when the beast tried to stand still, the giant
+would give him a blow on the ribs with his big iron
+club, which sounded as loud as the thundering of a
+great billow against the rough-headed rocks of the
+coast. When he gave him a pull forward by the
+halter, the wonder was that he did not drag the
+animal's head away from his body; and, on the other
+hand, the horse often gave the halter such a tremendous
+tug backwards that it was equally wonderful
+how the arm of the giant was not torn away from
+his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was not an easy matter to frighten Finn
+Ban Mac Bresal; but when he saw the giant and his
+horse coming straight towards him in that wise, he
+was seized with such fear and horror that he sprang<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+from his seat, and, snatching up his arms, he ran down
+the hill-slope with his utmost speed towards the king
+and his companions, whom he found sitting round the
+chess-board, deep in their game.</p>
+
+<p>They started up when they saw Finn Ban looking
+so scared; and, turning their eyes towards where he
+pointed, they saw the big man and his horse coming
+up the hill. They stood gazing at him in silent
+wonder, waiting till he should arrive; but although
+he was no great way off when they first caught sight
+of him, it was a long time before he reached the
+spot where they stood, so slow was the movement of
+himself and his horse.</p>
+
+<p>When at last he had come up, he bowed his head,
+and bended his knee, and saluted the king with great
+respect.</p>
+
+<p>Finn addressed him; and after having given him
+leave to speak, he asked him who he was, and what
+was his name; from which of the three chief divisions
+of the world he had come, and whether he belonged
+to one of the noble or ignoble races; also what was
+his profession or craft, and why he had no servant
+to attend to his horse&mdash;if, indeed, such an ugly old
+spectre of an animal could be called a horse at all.</p>
+
+<p>The big man made answer and said, "King of the
+Fena, I will answer everything you ask me, as far as
+lies in my power. Whether I come of a noble or of an
+ignoble race, that, indeed, I cannot tell, for I know not
+who my father and mother were. As to where I came
+from, I am a Fomor of Lochlann<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> in the north; but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+have no particular dwelling-place, for I am continually
+travelling about from one country to another, serving
+the great lords and nobles of the world, and receiving
+wages for my service.</p>
+
+<p>"In the course of my wanderings I have often
+heard of you, O king, and of your greatness and
+splendour and royal bounty; and I have come now to
+visit you, and to ask you to take me into your service
+for one year; and at the end of that time I shall fix
+my own wages, according to my custom.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me also why I have no servant for this
+great horse of mine. The reason of that is this: at
+every meal I eat, my master must give me as much
+food and drink as would be enough for a hundred men;
+and whosoever the lord or chief may be that takes me
+into his service, it is quite enough for him to have to
+provide for me, without having also to feed my
+servant.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, I am so very heavy and lazy that I
+should never be able to keep up with a company on
+march if I had to walk; and this is my reason for
+keeping a horse at all.</p>
+
+<p>"My name is the Gilla Dacker,<a name="FNanchor_XCIX._127" id="FNanchor_XCIX._127"></a><a href="#Footnote_XCIX._127" class="fnanchor">[XCIX.]</a> and it is not without
+good reason that I am so called. For there never
+was a lazier or worse servant than I am, or one that
+grumbles more at doing a day's work for his master.
+And I am the hardest person in the whole world to
+deal with; for, no matter how good or noble I may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+think my master, or how kindly he may treat me, it is
+hard words and foul reproaches I am likely to give
+him for thanks in the end.</p>
+
+<p>"This, O Finn, is the account I have to give of
+myself, and these are my answers to your questions."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered Finn, "according to your own
+account, you are not a very pleasant fellow to have
+anything to do with; and of a truth there is not
+much to praise in your appearance. But things may
+not be so bad as you say; and, anyhow, as I have
+never yet refused any man service and wages, I will
+not now refuse you."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Finn and the Gilla Dacker made covenants,
+and the Gilla Dacker was taken into service for
+a year.</p>
+
+<p>Then the big man turned to Conan Mail, and
+asked him whether the foot-service or the horse-service
+had the better pay among the Fena; and Conan
+answered that the horsemen had twice as much pay as
+the footmen.</p>
+
+<p>"If that be so," replied the Gilla Dacker, "I will
+join the horse-service, as I have a fine steed of my
+own; and indeed, if I had known this before, I would
+certainly have come hither on horseback, instead of
+walking.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, as to this same horse of mine, I find I
+must attend to him myself, as I see no one here worthy
+of putting a hand near him. So I will lead him to the
+nearest stud, as I am wont to do, and let him graze
+among your horses. I value him greatly, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+and it would grieve me very much if any harm were to
+befall him; so," continued he, turning to the king, "I
+put him under your protection, O king, and under the
+protection of all the Fena that are here present."</p>
+
+<p>At this speech the Fena all burst out laughing, to
+see the Gilla Dacker showing such concern for his
+miserable, worthless old skeleton of a horse.</p>
+
+<p>Howbeit, the big man, giving not the least heed to
+their merriment, took the halter off the horse's head,
+and turned him loose among the horses of the Fena.</p>
+
+<p>But now, this same wretched-looking old animal,
+instead of beginning to graze, as every one thought he
+would, ran in among the horses of the Fena, and began
+straightway to work all sorts of mischief. He cocked
+his long, hard, switchy tail straight out like a rod, and,
+throwing up his hind legs, he kicked about on this side
+and on that, maiming and disabling several of the
+horses. Sometimes he went tearing through the
+thickest of the herd, butting at them with his hard,
+bony forehead; and he opened out his lips with a
+vicious grin, and tore all he could lay hold on, with
+his sharp, crooked teeth, so that none were safe that
+came in his way either before or behind. And the end
+of it was, that not an animal of the whole herd
+escaped, without having a leg broken, or an eye
+knocked out, or his ribs fractured, or his ear bitten off,
+or the side of his face torn open, or without being in
+some other way cut or maimed beyond cure.</p>
+
+<p>At last he left them, and was making straight
+across to a small field where Conan Mail's horses were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+grazing by themselves, intending to play the same
+tricks among them. But Conan, seeing this, shouted
+in great alarm to the Gilla Dacker, to bring away his
+horse, and not let him work any more mischief; and
+threatening, if he did not do so at once, to go himself
+and knock the brains out of the vicious old brute on
+the spot.</p>
+
+<p>But the Gilla Dacker took the matter quite cool;
+and he told Conan that he saw no way of preventing
+his horse from joining the others, except some one put
+the halter on him and held him, which would, of
+course, he said, prevent the poor animal from grazing,
+and would leave him with a hungry belly at the end
+of the day.</p>
+
+<p>He said, moreover, that as he had no horse-boy,
+and must needs do everything for himself, he thought
+it quite time enough to look after his horse when he
+had to make ready for a journey. "But," said he to
+Conan, "there is the halter; and if you are in any fear
+for your own animals, you may go yourself and bring
+him away from the field."</p>
+
+<p>Conan was in a mighty rage when he heard this;
+and as he saw the big horse just about to cross the
+fence, he snatched up the halter, and running forward,
+with long strides, he threw it over the animal's head
+and thought to lead him back. But in a moment the
+horse stood stock still, and his body and legs became
+as stiff as if they were made of wood; and though
+Conan pulled and tugged with might and main, he
+was not able to stir him an inch from his place.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He gave up pulling at last, when he found it was
+no use; but he still kept on holding the halter, while
+the big horse never made the least stir, but stood as if
+he had been turned into stone; the Gilla Dacker all
+the time looking on quite unconcernedly, and the
+others laughing at Conan's perplexity. But no one
+offered to relieve him.</p>
+
+<p>At last Fergus Finnvel, the poet, spoke to Conan,
+and said, "I never would have believed, Conan Mail,
+that you could be brought to do horse-service for any
+knight or noble in the whole world; but now, indeed,
+I see that you have made yourself a horse-boy to an
+ugly foreign giant, so hateful-looking and low-born
+that not a man of the Fena would have anything to
+say to him. As you have, however, to mind this old
+horse in order to save your own, would it not be better
+for you to mount him, and revenge yourself for all the
+trouble he is giving you, by riding him across the
+country, over the hill-tops, and down into the deep
+glens and valleys, and through stones and bogs and all
+sorts of rough places, till you have broken the heart in
+his big, ugly body?"</p>
+
+<p>Conan, stung by the cutting words of the poet, and
+by the jeers of his companions, jumped upon the
+horse's back, and began to beat him mightily with his
+heels, and with his two big, heavy fists, to make him
+go; but the horse seemed not to take the least notice
+and never stirred.</p>
+
+<p>"I know the reason he does not go," said Fergus
+Finnvel; "he has been accustomed to carry a horseman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+far heavier than you, that is to say, the Gilla Dacker;
+and he will not move till he has the same weight on
+his back."</p>
+
+<p>At this Conan Mail called out to his companions,
+and asked which of them would mount with him, and
+help to avenge the damage done to their horses.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go," said Coil Croda the Battle Victor, son
+of Criffan; and up he went. But the horse never
+moved.</p>
+
+<p>Dara Donn Mac Morna next offered to go, and
+mounted behind the others; and after him Angus
+Mac Art Mac Morna. And the end of it was, that
+fourteen men of the Clann Baskin and Clann Morna<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
+got up along with Conan; and all began to thrash the
+horse together, with might and main. But they were
+none the better of it, for he remained standing stiff
+and immovable as before. They found, moreover, that
+their seat was not at all an easy one&mdash;the animal's
+back was so sharp and bony.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_II" id="ECHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">CONAN AND FIFTEEN OF THE FENA ARE CARRIED
+OFF BY THE GILLA DACKER'S HORSE.</p>
+
+
+<p>When the Gilla Dacker saw the Fena beating his horse
+at such a rate, he seemed very angry, and addressed
+the king in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"King of the Fena, I now see plainly that all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+fine accounts I heard about you and the Fena are
+false, and I will not stay in your service&mdash;no, not
+another hour. You can see for yourself the ill usage
+these men are giving my horse without cause; and
+I leave you to judge whether any one could put up
+with it&mdash;any one who had the least regard for his
+horse. The time is, indeed, short since I entered your
+service, but I now think it a great deal too long; so
+pay me my wages, and let me go my ways."</p>
+
+<p>But Finn said, "I do not wish you to go; stay on
+till the end of your year, and then I will pay you all
+I promised you."</p>
+
+<p>"I swear," answered the Gilla Dacker, "that if this
+were the very last day of my year, I would not wait
+till morning for my wages, after this insult. So, wages
+or no wages, I will now seek another master; but from
+this time forth I shall know what to think of Finn
+Mac Cumal and his Fena!"</p>
+
+<p>With that the Gilla Dacker stood up as straight as
+a pillar, and, turning his face towards the south-west,
+he walked slowly away.</p>
+
+<p>When the horse saw his master leaving the hill, he
+stirred himself at once and walked quietly after him,
+bringing the fifteen men away on his back. And when
+the Fena saw this they raised a loud shout of laughter,
+mocking them.</p>
+
+<p>The Gilla Dacker, after he had walked some little
+way, looked back, and seeing that his horse was
+following, he stood for a moment to tuck up his skirts.
+Then, all at once changing his pace, he set out with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+long, active strides; and if you know what the speed
+of a swallow is, flying across a mountain-side, or the
+dry, fairy wind of a March day sweeping over the
+plains, then you can understand the swiftness of
+the Gilla Dacker, as he ran down the hill-side towards
+the south-west.</p>
+
+<p>Neither was the horse behindhand in the race; for,
+though he carried a heavy load, he galloped like the
+wind after his master, plunging and bounding forward
+with as much freedom as if he had nothing at all on
+his back.</p>
+
+<p>The men now tried to throw themselves off; but
+this, indeed, they were not able to do, for the good
+reason that they found themselves fastened firmly,
+hands and feet and all, to the horse's back.</p>
+
+<p>And now Conan, looking round, raised his big
+voice, and shouted to Finn and the Fena, asking them
+were they content to let their friends be carried off in
+that manner by such a horrible, foul-looking old spectre
+of a horse.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and the others, hearing this, seized their arms
+and started off in pursuit. Now the way the Gilla
+Dacker and his horse took was first through Fermorc,<a name="FNanchor_C._128" id="FNanchor_C._128"></a><a href="#Footnote_C._128" class="fnanchor">[C.]</a>
+which is at the present day called Hy Conall Gavra;
+next over the wide, heathy summit of Slieve Lougher;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+from that to Corca Divna; and they ran along by
+Slieve Mish, till they reached Cloghan Kincat, near
+the deep green sea.</p>
+
+<p>During all this time Finn and his people kept
+them in view, but were not able to overtake them;
+and Ligan Lumina, one of the swiftest of the Fena,
+kept ahead of the others.</p>
+
+<p>The horse now passed by Cloghan Kincat without
+in the least abating his speed; and when he had
+arrived on the beach, even at the very water's edge,
+Ligan overtook him, and caught him by the tail with
+his two hands, intending to hold him till the rest of
+the Fena came up. He gave a mighty pull back; but
+the horse, not in the least checked by this, made no
+more ado but plunged forward through the waves,
+dragging Ligan after him hanging at his tail. And
+Ligan now found that he could neither help his friends
+nor free himself, for his two hands clung fast to the
+tail of the horse.</p>
+
+<p>And so the great horse continued his course without
+stop or stay, bringing the sixteen Fena with him
+through the sea. Now this is how they fared in the
+sea, while the horse was rushing swiftly farther and
+farther to the west: they had always a dry, firm strand
+under them, for the waters retired before the horse
+while behind them was a wild, raging sea, which
+followed close after, and seemed ready every moment
+to topple over their heads. But, though the billows
+were tumbling and roaring all round, neither horse nor
+riders were wetted by as much as a drop of brine or
+a dash of spray.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_III" id="ECHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">PURSUIT.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now as to Finn and the others. They stood on the
+bank over the beach, watching the horse and men till
+they lost sight of them in the sea afar off; and then
+they sat them down, weary after their long chase, and
+full of sadness for the loss of their companions.</p>
+
+<p>After a long silence, Finn spoke and asked the
+chiefs what they thought best to be done. But they
+replied that he was far beyond them all in knowledge
+and wisdom; and they told him they would follow
+whatsoever counsel he and Fergus Finnvel, the poet,
+gave them. Then Finn told Fergus to speak his mind;
+and Fergus said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My counsel is that we go straightway to Ben
+Edar,<a name="FNanchor_CI._129" id="FNanchor_CI._129"></a><a href="#Footnote_CI._129" class="fnanchor">[CI.]</a> where we shall find a ship ready to sail. For
+our forefathers, when they wrested the land from the
+gifted, bright-complexioned Dedannans, bound them by
+covenant to maintain this ship for ever, fitted with
+all things needful for a voyage, even to the smallest
+article, as one of the privileges of Ben Edar; so that
+if at any time one of the noble sons of Gael Glas<a name="FNanchor_CII._130" id="FNanchor_CII._130"></a><a href="#Footnote_CII._130" class="fnanchor">[CII.]</a>
+wished to sail to distant lands from Erin, he should
+have a ship lying at hand in the harbour ready to
+begin his voyage."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p><p>They agreed to this counsel, and turned their steps
+without delay northwards towards Ben Edar. They
+had not gone far when they met two noble-looking
+youths, fully armed, and wearing over their armour
+beautiful mantles of scarlet silk, fastened by brooches
+of gold. The strangers saluted the king with much
+respect; and the king saluted them in return. Then,
+having given them leave to converse, he asked them
+who they were, whither they had come, and who the
+prince or chief was that they served. And the elder
+answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Feradach, and my brother's name is
+Foltlebar; and we are the two sons of the king of
+Innia. Each of us professes an art; and it has long
+been a point of dispute between us, which art is the
+better, my brother's or mine. Hearing that there is
+not in the world a wiser or more far-seeing man than
+thou art, O king, we have come to ask thee to take
+us into thy service among thy household troops for a
+year, and at the end of that time to give judgment
+between us in this matter."</p>
+
+<p>Finn asked them what were the two arts they
+professed.</p>
+
+<p>"My art," answered Feradach, "is this: If at
+any time a company of warriors need a ship, give me
+only my joiner's axe and my crann-tavall,<a name="FNanchor_CIII._131" id="FNanchor_CIII._131"></a><a href="#Footnote_CIII._131" class="fnanchor">[CIII.]</a> and I am
+able to provide a ship for them without delay. The
+only thing I ask them to do is this&mdash;to cover their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+heads close, and keep them covered, while I give the
+crann-tavall three blows of my axe. Then I tell them
+to uncover their heads; and lo, there lies the ship in
+harbour, ready to sail!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Foltlebar spoke and said, "This, O king,
+is the art I profess: On land I can track the wild duck
+over nine ridges and nine glens, and follow her without
+being once thrown out, till I drop upon her in her
+nest. And I can follow up a track on sea quite as
+well as on land, if I have a good ship and crew."</p>
+
+<p>Finn replied, "You are the very men I want; and
+I now take you both into my service. At this
+moment I need a good ship and a skilful pilot more
+than any two things in the whole world. And
+though our own track-men, namely, the Clann
+Navin, are good, yet we now need some one still
+more skilful, to follow the Gilla Dacker through
+unknown seas."</p>
+
+<p>Then the two brothers asked Finn what strait he
+was in at that moment, and why he wanted a ship
+and pilot so much. Whereupon Finn told them the
+whole story of the Gilla Dacker's doings from beginning
+to end. "And we are now," said he, "on our
+way to Ben Edar, to seek a ship, that we may follow
+this giant and his horse, and rescue our companions."</p>
+
+<p>Then Feradach said, "I will get you a ship&mdash;a
+ship that will sail as swiftly as a swallow can
+fly!"</p>
+
+<p>And Foltlebar said, "I will guide your ship in
+the track of the Gilla Dacker till ye lay hands on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+him, in whatsoever quarter of the world he may have
+hidden himself!"</p>
+
+<p>And so they turned back to Cloghan Kincat. And
+when they had come to the beach, Feradach told them
+to cover their heads; and they did so. Then he
+struck three blows of his axe on the crann-tavall;
+after which he bade them look. And lo, they saw a
+ship, fully fitted out with oars and sails, and with all
+things needed for a long voyage, riding before them
+in the harbour!</p>
+
+<p>Then Kylta Mac Ronan went to the top of a high
+hill; and, turning his face inland, he uttered three
+mighty shouts, which were taken up by the people of
+the next valley, and after them by those of the next
+valley beyond. And so the signal spread, till a shout of
+alarm was heard in every plain and hill-side, glen and
+valley, wood and wilderness, in the two provinces of
+Munster. And when the Fena heard these shouts, they
+ceased anon from their sports and pastimes; for they
+knew their king was in danger or strait of some kind.
+And they formed themselves into ranks and troops
+and battalions, and began their march; and it is not
+told how they fared till they reached Cloghan Kincat.</p>
+
+<p>Finn told them the whole story of the Gilla
+Dacker and his horse, and how he had carried away
+Conan and fifteen others to some far-off island in the
+Western Ocean. He also showed them the ship, and
+told them that he himself and a chosen band of the
+Fena were about to sail westward in quest of their
+friends.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And Oisin asked him how many of the chief men
+of the Fena he wished to take with him.</p>
+
+<p>Finn replied, "I foresee that this will be a perilous
+quest; and I think all the chiefs here present few
+enough to bring with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Say not so, O king," said Oisin; "too many have
+gone already, and some must be left behind to guard
+the country, and to keep order. If fifteen good men
+go with you, and that you find the others, the whole
+party will be a match for any foe you are like to meet
+in these western lands."</p>
+
+<p>And Oscar and Gaul Mac Morna spoke in like
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>To this Finn agreed. Then he picked out fifteen
+men, the bravest and best, the most dexterous at the
+sword, and the swiftest of foot among the Fena.</p>
+
+<p>The question then arose, who should lead the Fena
+in the king's absence; and what they agreed on was
+that Oisin should remain behind and take command,
+as he was the eldest and bravest and wisest of the
+king's sons.</p>
+
+<p>Of those who were chosen to go with Finn, the
+chief men were Dermat O'Dyna; Gaul Mac Morna;
+Oscar, the son of Oisin; Aed Beg, the son of Finn;
+Fergus Finnvel, the poet; the three sons of Encarda;
+and Feradach and Foltlebar, the two sons of the king
+of Innia.</p>
+
+<p>So the king and his party took leave of Oisin and
+the rest. And sad, indeed, were they on both sides;
+for no one knew how far the king might have to sail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+among unknown seas and islands, or how long he
+should be away from Erin, or the spells and dangers
+he and his men might encounter in this pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>Then they went on board, and launched their ship
+on the cold, bright sea; and Foltlebar was their pilot
+and steersman. And they set their sail and plied
+their slender oars, and the ship moved swiftly westward
+till they lost sight of the shores of Erin; and
+they saw nothing all round them but a wide girdle of
+sea. After some days' sailing, a great storm came from
+the west, and the black waves rose up against them,
+so that they had much ado to keep their vessel from
+sinking. But through all the roaring of the tempest,
+through the rain and blinding spray, Foltlebar never
+stirred from the helm or changed his course, but still
+kept close on the track of the Gilla Dacker.</p>
+
+<p>At length the storm abated, and the sea grew
+calm. And when the darkness had cleared away,
+they saw to the west, a little way off, a vast rocky cliff
+towering over their heads to such a height, that its
+head seemed hidden among the clouds. It rose up
+sheer from the very water, and looked at that distance
+as smooth as glass, so that at first sight there seemed
+no way to reach the top.</p>
+
+<p>Foltlebar, after examining to the four points of
+the sky, found the track of the Gilla Dacker as far
+as the cliff, but no farther. And he accordingly told
+the heroes that he thought it was on the top of
+that rock the giant lived; and that, anyhow, the
+horse must have made his way up the face of the
+cliff with their companions.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the heroes heard this they were greatly
+cast down and puzzled what to do; for they saw
+no way of reaching the top of the rock; and they
+feared they should have to give up the quest and
+return without their companions. And they sat down
+and looked up at the cliff, with sorrow and vexation
+in their hearts.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_IV" id="ECHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DERMAT O'DYNA, IN QUEST OF THE GILLA DACKER,
+ENCOUNTERS THE WIZARD-CHAMPION AT THE WELL.</p>
+
+
+<p>When now they had been silent for a time, Fergus
+Finnvel, the poet, arose and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My friends, we have here amongst us one who
+has been fostered and taught from the child to the
+man, by Mannanan Mac Lir<a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> in Fairyland, and by
+Angus,<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the wisest of the Dedannans, at Bruga of the
+Boyne. He has been carefully trained by both in
+everything a warrior should learn, and in much
+druidical lore besides; so that he is skilled beyond
+us all in manly arts and champion-feats. But now
+it seems that all his arts and accomplishments go
+for nought, seeing that he is unable to make use of
+them just at the time that we stand most in need
+of them. On the top of that rock, doubtless, the
+Gilla Dacker lives, and there he holds Conan and
+the others in bondage; and surely this hero, who now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+sits idly with us here in our ship, should be able to
+climb up the face of that cliff, and bring us back
+tidings of our dear friends and companions."</p>
+
+<p>When Dermat O'Dyna heard this speech, his
+cheek grew red with shame, and he made this
+reply&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is of me you have spoken these words, Fergus.
+Your reproaches are just; and though the task is
+hard, I will attempt to follow the track of the Gilla
+Dacker, and find out some tidings of our friends."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Dermat arose, and girded on his
+armour, and put on his glittering helmet. He hung
+his sword at his left hip; and he took his two long,
+deadly spears, one in each hand, namely, the Crann-boi
+and the Ga-derg;<a name="FNanchor_CIV._132" id="FNanchor_CIV._132"></a><a href="#Footnote_CIV._132" class="fnanchor">[CIV.]</a> and the battle-fury of a warrior
+descended on him, so that he looked a dreadful foe to
+meet in single combat.</p>
+
+<p>Then, leaning on the handles of his spears, after
+the manner of skilful champions, he leaped with a
+light, airy bound on the nearest shelf of rock. And
+using his spears and his hands, he climbed from ledge
+to ledge, while his companions watched him anxiously
+from below; till, after much toil, he measured the
+soles of his two feet on the green sod at the top
+of the rock. And when, recovering breath, he turned
+round and looked at his companions in the ship far
+below, he started back with amazement and dread at
+the dizzy height.</p>
+
+<p>He now looked inland, and saw a beautiful country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+spread out before him:&mdash;a lovely, flowery plain
+straight in front, bordered with pleasant hills, and
+shaded with groves of many kinds of trees. It was
+enough to banish all care and sadness from one's heart
+to view this country, and to listen to the warbling of
+the birds, the humming of the bees among the flowers,
+the rustling of the wind through the trees, and the
+pleasant voices of the streams and waterfalls.</p>
+
+<p>Making no delay, Dermat set out to walk across
+the plain. He had not been long walking when he
+saw, right before him, a great tree laden with fruit,
+overtopping all the other trees of the plain. It was
+surrounded at a little distance by a circle of pillar-stones;
+and one stone, taller than the others, stood
+in the centre near the tree. Beside this pillar-stone
+was a spring well, with a large, round pool as clear
+as crystal; and the water bubbled up in the centre,
+and flowed away towards the middle of the plain in
+a slender stream.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat was glad when he saw the well; for he
+was hot and thirsty after climbing up the cliff. He
+stooped down to take a drink; but before his lips
+touched the water, he heard the heavy tread of a
+body of warriors, and the loud clank of arms, as if
+a whole host were coming straight down on him.
+He sprang to his feet and looked round; but the
+noise ceased in an instant, and he could see nothing.</p>
+
+<p>After a little while he stooped again to drink;
+and again, before he had wet his lips, he heard the
+very same sounds, nearer and louder than before. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+second time he leaped to his feet; and still he saw no
+one. He knew not what to think of this; and as he
+stood wondering and perplexed, he happened to cast
+his eyes on the tall pillar-stone that stood on the
+brink of the well; and he saw on its top a large,
+beautiful drinking-horn, chased with gold and
+enamelled with precious stones.</p>
+
+<p>"Now surely," said Dermat, "I have been doing
+wrong; it is, no doubt, one of the virtues of this well
+that it will not let any one drink of its waters except
+from the drinking-horn."</p>
+
+<p>So he took down the horn, dipped it into the
+well, and drank without hindrance, till he had slaked
+his thirst.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he taken the horn from his lips,
+when he saw a tall wizard-champion<a name="FNanchor_CV._133" id="FNanchor_CV._133"></a><a href="#Footnote_CV._133" class="fnanchor">[CV.]</a> coming towards
+him from the east, clad in a complete suit of mail,
+and fully armed with shield and helmet, sword and
+spear. A beautiful scarlet mantle hung over his
+armour, fastened at his throat by a golden brooch;
+and a broad circlet of sparkling gold was bended in
+front across his forehead, to confine his yellow hair,
+and keep it from being blown about by the wind.</p>
+
+<p>As he came nearer, he increased his pace, moving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+with great strides; and Dermat now observed that he
+looked very wrathful. He offered no greeting, and
+showed not the least courtesy; but addressed Dermat
+in a rough, angry voice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, Dermat O'Dyna, Erin of the green plains
+should be wide enough for you; and it contains abundance
+of clear, sweet water in its crystal springs and
+green bordered streams, from which you might have
+drunk your fill. But you have come into my island
+without my leave, and you have taken my drinking-horn,
+and have drunk from my well; and this spot
+you shall never leave till you have given me satisfaction
+for the insult."</p>
+
+<p>So spoke the wizard-champion, and instantly
+advanced on Dermat with fury in his eyes. But
+Dermat was not the man to be terrified by any hero
+or wizard-champion alive. He met the foe half-way;
+and now, foot to foot, and knee to knee, and face to
+face, they began a fight, watchful and wary at first,
+but soon hot and vengeful, till their shields and
+helmets could scarce withstand their strong thrusts
+and blows. Like two enraged lions fighting to the
+death, or two strong serpents intertwined in deadly
+strife, or two great opposing billows thundering
+against each other on the ocean border; such was the
+strength and fury and determination of the combat
+of these two heroes.</p>
+
+<p>And so they fought through the long day, till
+evening came, and it began to be dusk; when suddenly
+the wizard-champion sprang outside the range<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+of Dermat's sword, and leaping up with a great
+bound, he alighted in the very centre of the well.
+Down he went through it, and disappeared in a
+moment before Dermat's eyes, as if the well had
+swallowed him up. Dermat stood on the brink,
+leaning on his spear, amazed and perplexed, looking
+after him in the water; but whether the hero had
+meant to drown himself, or that he had played some
+wizard trick, Dermat knew not.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down to rest, full of vexation that the
+wizard-champion should have got off so easily. And
+what chafed him still more was that the Fena knew
+nought of what had happened, and that when he
+returned, he could tell them nothing of the strange
+hero; neither had he the least token or trophy to show
+them after his long fight.</p>
+
+<p>Then he began to think what was best to be done;
+and he made up his mind to stay near the well all
+night, with the hope of finding out something further
+about the wizard-champion on the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>He walked towards the nearest point of a great
+forest that stretched from the mountain down to the
+plain on his left; and as he came near, a herd of
+speckled deer ran by among the trees. He put his
+finger into the silken loop of his spear, and, throwing
+it with an unerring cast, brought down the nearest of
+the herd.</p>
+
+<p>Then, having lighted a fire under a tree, he skinned
+the deer and fixed it on long hazel spits to roast,
+having first, however, gone to the well, and brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+away the drinking-horn full of water. And he sat
+beside the roasting deer to turn it and tend the fire,
+waiting impatiently for his meal; for he was hungry
+and tired after the toil of the day.</p>
+
+<p>When the deer was cooked, he ate till he was
+satisfied, and drank the clear water of the well from
+the drinking-horn; after which he lay down under the
+shade of the tree, beside the fire, and slept a sound
+sleep till morning.</p>
+
+<p>Night passed away and the sun rose, bringing
+morning with its abundant light. Dermat started up,
+refreshed after his long sleep, and, repairing to the
+forest, he slew another deer, and fixed it on hazel
+spits to roast at the fire as before. For Dermat had
+this custom, that he would never eat of any food left
+from a former meal.</p>
+
+<p>And after he had eaten of the deer's flesh and
+drunk from the horn, he went towards the well. But
+though his visit was early, he found the wizard-champion
+there before him, standing beside the pillar-stone,
+fully armed as before, and looking now more
+wrathful than ever. Dermat was much surprised; but
+before he had time to speak the wizard-champion
+addressed him&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dermat O'Dyna, you have now put the cap on all
+your evil deeds. It was not enough that you took my
+drinking-horn and drank from my well: you have
+done much worse than this, for you have hunted on
+my grounds, and have killed some of my speckled
+deer. Surely there are many hunting-grounds in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+Erin of the green plains, with plenty of deer in them;
+and you need not have come hither to commit these
+robberies on me. But now for a certainty you shall
+not go from this spot till I have taken revenge for
+all these misdeeds."</p>
+
+<p>And again the two champions attacked each other,
+and fought during the long day, from morning till
+evening. And when the dusk began to fall, the
+wizard-champion leaped into the well, and disappeared
+down through it, even as he had done the day before.</p>
+
+<p>The selfsame thing happened on the third day.
+And each day, morning and evening, Dermat killed a
+deer, and ate of its flesh, and drank of the water of the
+well from the drinking-horn.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth morning, Dermat found the wizard-champion
+standing as usual by the pillar-stone near
+the well. And as each morning he looked more angry
+than on the morning before, so now he scowled in a
+way that would have terrified any one but Dermat
+O'Dyna.</p>
+
+<p>And they fought during the day till the dusk of
+evening. But now Dermat watched his foe narrowly;
+and when he saw him about to spring into the well, he
+closed on him and threw his arms round him. The
+wizard-champion struggled to free himself, moving all
+the time nearer and nearer to the brink; but Dermat
+held on, till at last both fell into the well. Down they
+went, clinging to each other, Dermat and the wizard-champion;
+down, down, deeper and deeper they went;
+and Dermat tried to look round, but nothing could he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+see save darkness and dim shadows. At length there
+was a glimmer of light; then the bright day burst
+suddenly upon them; and presently they came to the
+solid ground, gently and without the least shock.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_V" id="ECHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DERMAT O'DYNA IN TIR-FA-TONN.<a name="FNanchor_CVI._134" id="FNanchor_CVI._134"></a><a href="#Footnote_CVI._134" class="fnanchor">[CVI.]</a></p>
+
+
+<p>At the very moment they reached the ground, the
+wizard-champion, with a sudden effort, tore himself
+away from Dermat's grasp and ran forward with great
+speed. Dermat leaped to his feet; and he was so
+amazed at what he saw around him that he stood
+stock still and let the wizard-champion escape: a
+lovely country, with many green-sided hills and fair
+valleys between, woods of red yew trees, and plains
+laughing all over with flowers of every hue.</p>
+
+<p>Right before him, not far off, lay a city of great
+tall houses with glittering roofs; and on the side
+nearest to him was a royal palace, larger and grander
+than the rest. On the level green in front of the
+palace were a number of knights, all armed, and
+amusing themselves with various warlike exercises
+of sword and shield and spear.</p>
+
+<p>Straight towards this assembly the wizard-champion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+ran; which, when Dermat saw, he set off in
+pursuit, hoping to overtake him. But the wizard-champion
+had too long a start, and when he reached
+the exercise green, the knights opened to the right
+and left, leaving a broad way through which he
+rushed. He never halted or looked behind till he had
+got inside the palace gate; and the moment he had
+passed in, the knights closed their ranks, and stood
+facing Dermat with threatening looks and gestures.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing daunted, Dermat held on his pace towards
+them; and now those of the front rank started forward
+with spears and swords, intending to crush him
+at once, and hew his body to mincemeat. But it was
+not terror nor weakness nor a desire of flight that this
+produced in Dermat, for his battle-fury was on him;
+and he rushed through them and under them and
+over them, as a hawk rushes among a flight of sparrows,
+or like a whale through a shoal of little fishes,
+or like a raging wolf among a flock of sheep, or like
+a vast billow among a fleet of small vessels, or like a
+great brown torrent rushing down the steep side of
+a mountain, that sweeps everything headlong before it.
+So did Dermat cleave a wide laneway through the
+hosts, till, from a solid band of warriors, he turned
+them into a scattered crowd, flying in all directions.
+And those that did not fall by his hand, ran hither
+and thither, some to hide themselves in the thick
+forests and remote, wooded glens of the surrounding
+country; while others rushed in through the outer
+gate of the palace, and shut themselves up in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+strongest part of the fortress, neither did they deem
+themselves safe till they had shot home every bolt,
+and securely fastened every strong iron lock.</p>
+
+<p>At last not a living soul remained on the green,
+and Dermat sat down, weary after his battle-toil, and
+smarting all over with wounds. He was grieved and
+downcast also, for he knew not where he was, and he
+saw no chance that he should be able either to find any
+tidings of the friends he was in search of, or to return
+to his companions in the ship.</p>
+
+<p>At length, being quite overcome with weariness, he
+fell into a deep sleep. After sleeping for some time, he
+was awakened by a smart blow. He started up, and
+saw a young man standing over him, tall, and of a
+commanding appearance, with long, golden hair, and a
+manly, open countenance. Now this young man had
+come to Dermat, and finding him asleep in such a dangerous
+place, he struck him with the flat of his sword
+to awaken him. In an instant Dermat sprang to his
+feet and seized his arms; but the youth addressed him
+in a friendly voice, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dermat O'Dyna, put up your arms; I am no
+enemy, and I have come, not to harm, but to serve
+you. This, indeed, is a strange place for you to fall
+asleep, before the very door of the castle, and within
+sight of your enemies. Come now with me, and I will
+give you a better place to sleep in, where you will also
+get a welcome and kindly entertainment."</p>
+
+<p>This speech pleased Dermat very much; and he
+thanked the young man and went with him. After<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+walking for some time, they came to a large splendid
+house, and passing through the outer gate they entered
+the banqueting hall. There they found a noble company
+of twelve score and ten knights, and almost as
+many beautiful ladies, with their long hair falling on
+their shoulders, shining like the golden flower of the
+marsh-flag, and gentle and modest in their looks and
+conversation. They wore mantles of scarlet satin,
+and each mantle was fastened in front by a brooch
+of burnished gold.</p>
+
+<p>The company sat at tables round the walls of the
+banquet hall, some feasting, some playing chess, and
+some listening to the music of harps. When the two
+heroes entered, all the knights and ladies rose and
+received them with much respect, and they welcomed
+Dermat and invited him to join their entertainment.
+But the young prince&mdash;for he was in truth a prince&mdash;pointing
+to Dermat's clothes and arms, all soiled
+and stained, told them that he had endured much
+toil that day, and that he wanted rest and refreshment.</p>
+
+<p>He then brought Dermat away, and ordered the
+attendants to prepare a bath in a great caldron. He
+put soothing balsams and healing herbs into it with
+his own hands, and when Dermat had bathed he was
+immediately healed of his wounds, and he came forth
+refreshed and cheerful. The prince then directed that
+his clothes should be put aside, and had him clad in
+rich garments like the others.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat now joined the company, and ate and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+drank, for he had taken neither food nor drink since
+he had made his meal on the deer early that morning
+near the well; after which he talked and was cheerful
+with the others. Then rose up the harpers, and the
+professors of divers arts and sciences, and one after
+another they played their sweet music, and recited
+their poems and their tales of the heroes of the olden
+time. And when they had ended, the knights gave
+them gifts of gold and silver and jewels. At last the
+company broke up, and Dermat was shown to a bed
+richly ornamented, and soft with the red feathers of
+wild fowl, and soon he fell into a sound sleep after his
+long day's adventures.</p>
+
+<p>Now Dermat marvelled much at all he saw and
+heard; and he knew not what place he was in, or who
+the people were, that had treated him with such kindness.
+So next morning, when the company had again
+assembled, he stood up, and addressed the prince with
+gentle words and modest demeanour; and this is what
+he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am much surprised, O prince, at what I have
+seen, and at all that has befallen me in this land.
+Though I am here a stranger, thou hast shown me
+much kindness, and these noble knights and ladies
+have permitted me to join their sports, and have
+treated me with much gentleness and consideration.
+I wish to know, then, who thou art, O prince, and what
+country this is, of which I have never before heard,
+and who is the king thereof. Tell me also, I pray
+thee, the name of the champion who fought with me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+for four days at the well, till at last he escaped from
+me at the palace."</p>
+
+<p>The prince replied, "I will tell you all, Dermat, as
+you have asked, concealing nothing. This country is
+Tir-fa-tonn; the champion who fought with you is
+called the Knight of the Fountain, and that very
+champion is king of this land. I am the brother of
+the king, and my name is the Knight of Valour.
+Good reason indeed have I to be kind to you, Dermat
+O'Dyna, for though you do not remember me, I spent
+a year and a day in the household of Finn the son of
+Cumal.</p>
+
+<p>"A part of this kingdom belongs by right to me.
+But the king and his son have seized on my patrimony,
+and have banished me from the palace, forcing me to
+live here in exile with a few of my faithful followers.</p>
+
+<p>"It is my intention, however, to make war on the
+king for my part of the kingdom; and right glad I am
+that you have come hither, for I would rather have
+you on my side than all the other Fena put together,
+for your nobleness of mind and your valour in battle.</p>
+
+<p>"I have here in my household seven score and ten
+heroes, all champions of great deeds; and if you consent
+to aid me, these shall be placed under your command.
+By day you shall fight against the king of
+Tir-fa-tonn and his son, and by night you shall feast
+and rest and sleep with me in this palace. If you
+enter into friendship with me and fight on my side,
+well I know that I shall win back my right without
+delay."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Dermat agreed to this. So he and the Knight of
+Valour made a covenant; and, placing hand in hand,
+they pledged themselves to observe faithfully the
+conditions of the league of friendship.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_VI" id="ECHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FINN, IN QUEST OF DERMAT, FIGHTS MANY BATTLES.</p>
+
+
+<p>As to Finn Mac Cumal and those that remained behind
+with him in the ship, I will now relate what befell
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It was now many days since Dermat had left them,
+and they marvelled much that he did not return with
+tidings of the Gilla Dacker. At length, when they
+began to be alarmed, the two sons of the king of Innia
+offered to go in search of him; but Finn said no,
+for that they should all go together.</p>
+
+<p>So Feradach and Foltlebar took all the cables and
+ropes they could find in the ship, and tied them end
+to end in hard, sure knots, till they had a rope long
+enough to reach from the top of the rock to the
+bottom. Then they clambered up the steep face of
+the cliff, bringing with them the end of the rope; and
+one by one they drew up Finn and the rest. And
+when they looked round, they were as much surprised
+and delighted as Dermat was at the look of the
+country.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Foltlebar now made a search, and soon found the
+track of Dermat; and the whole party set out to walk
+across the plain, Foltlebar leading the way. Having
+travelled some distance, they saw the great fruit tree
+afar off; and, turning to the left, they found a place
+where a fire had been lighted, and near it the remains
+of several meals of deer's flesh. By this they knew
+that it was here Dermat had slept, for all were well
+aware of his custom not to eat of what was left from
+a meal.</p>
+
+<p>They then went towards the tree, and there they
+found the traces of deadly combat&mdash;the ground all
+trampled and ploughed up, and a broken spear handle
+lying at the brink of the well. While they stood
+pondering on these things, with anxious hearts, they
+saw a horseman at a distance, speeding towards them
+across the plain. In a little while he came up and
+reined in.</p>
+
+<p>He was a young man of majestic mien, fair and
+noble of countenance; and he rode a beautiful chestnut
+steed, with a bridle of twisted gold, and a saddle
+of surpassing splendour, ornamented all over with
+gold and jewels.</p>
+
+<p>He alighted and saluted Finn and the Fena, and
+told them they were welcome to his country, for that
+he was king; and he put his hand on Finn's neck and
+kissed his cheek three times. Then he invited them
+to go with him, saying that the Plain of the Fountain
+was a comfortless resting-place after a long journey.</p>
+
+<p>Finn's heart was glad at this, for he and his companions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+were weary; and they set out to walk across
+the plain with the young king. Having walked a
+good distance, they came in sight of a noble palace,
+with tall towers and carved front. As they came near,
+they were met by a company of knights on the level
+green in front, who welcomed them with gentle words.
+And so they passed into the palace. A bath was prepared,
+and they bathed and were refreshed after their
+toils. Then they sat down to supper; and while they
+ate and drank, the harpers played for them, and the
+poets told their tales and sang their songs.</p>
+
+<p>They slept that night in the palace; and next
+day they mingled with the knights on the green,
+and took part in their games and pastimes. In the
+evening they sat down to a feast. The people of the
+palace were ranged at tables according to rank and
+inheritance, every man in his proper place.</p>
+
+<p>Then the feast went on; and abundance of the
+newest food and of the oldest drink was served out;
+and they ate of the savoury food, and drank of the
+sparkling wines and of the strong ales, till they
+became merry and gently intoxicated. And Finn
+could not call to mind that he ever saw an entertainment
+in the house of either king or chief better
+ordered. In this manner they were feasted and
+entertained for three days and three nights.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of that time a meeting was held by
+the king on the palace green. And Finn stood up
+and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, I pray thee, thy name and the name of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+this country, which I have never seen before, or even
+heard of."</p>
+
+<p>"This country," replied the king, "is called Sorca,
+of which I am king; and although you know us not,
+we know you well, for the fame of your deeds has
+reached even to this land. But now I wish to know
+why you have come hither; also the reason why you
+have brought so few companions, and where the rest
+have tarried."</p>
+
+<p>Then Finn told him the whole story from beginning
+to end; how the Gilla Dacker and his great
+horse had carried off sixteen of their chief men; "And,"
+added Finn, "I and these fifteen companions of mine
+are now in quest of them."</p>
+
+<p>The king replied, "This is a dangerous undertaking;
+and you and your fifteen men, valiant even
+as you are, are too few to venture into unknown lands,
+where you may meet with many enemies. Now my
+knights are brave and generous, and they love battle
+and adventure. Wherefore I will place a band of them
+under your command, who will follow you whithersoever
+you go, and who will not be behindhand even
+with the Fena in facing hardship and danger."</p>
+
+<p>Finn stood up to thank the king; but before he
+had time to speak, they saw a messenger speeding
+towards them across the plain from the north-west,
+breathless, and begrimed all over with mud and dust.
+When he had come in presence of the company, he
+bowed low to the king, and, standing up, waited
+impatient for leave to speak.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The king asked him what news he had brought
+and he replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Bad and direful news I have for thee, O king. A
+foreign fleet has come to our shores, which seems to
+cover all the sea, even as far as the eye can reach;
+and until the stars of heaven are counted, and the
+sands of the sea, and the leaves of the woods, the hosts
+that are landing from their black ships shall not be
+numbered. Even already they have let loose their
+plunderers over the country, who are burning and
+spoiling the farmsteads and the great mansions; and
+many noble heroes and keepers of houses of hospitality,
+and many people of the common sort, have
+been slain by them. Some say that it is the King
+of the World and his host, who, after conquering every
+country he has yet visited, has come now to ravage
+this land with fire and sword and spear, and bring it
+under his power; but I know not if this be true.
+And this, O king, is the news I bring thee."</p>
+
+<p>When the messenger had ended, the king spoke
+nought, though his countenance, indeed, showed
+trouble; but he looked earnestly at Finn. Finn
+understood this to mean that the king sought his
+help; and, with clear voice, he spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thou hast been generous to me and my people
+in our day of need, O king of Sorca; and now thou
+shalt not find the Fena lacking in grateful memory
+of thy kindness. We will, for a time, give up the
+pursuit of the Gilla Dacker, and we will place ourselves
+under thy command, and help thee against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+these marauders. Neither do I fear the outcome of
+this war; for many a time have we met these
+foreigners on the shores of Erin and elsewhere, and
+they have always yielded to us in the battle-field."</p>
+
+<p>The king of Sorca was glad of heart when he
+heard these words; and he sent his swift scouts all
+over the country to gather his fighting men. And
+when all had come together, he arranged them in
+fighting order, and marched towards the shore where
+the foreigners were spoiling the land. And they met
+the plundering parties, and drove them with great
+slaughter back to their ships, retaking all the spoils.</p>
+
+<p>Then they formed an encampment on the shore,
+with ramparts and deep ditches and long rows of
+pointed stakes all round. And each day a party of
+the foreigners landed, led by one of their captains,
+who were met by an equal number of the men of
+Sorca, led by one of the Fena; and each time they
+were driven back to their ships, after losing their best
+men.</p>
+
+<p>When, now, this had continued for many days,
+the King of the World called a meeting of the chiefs
+of his army, and asked their counsel as to what should
+be done. And they spoke as one man, that their best
+chiefs had fallen, and that they were in worse case
+now for overcoming the men of Sorca than they were
+at first; that their sages and prophets had declared
+against them; and that they had met with ill luck
+from the day of their arrival. And the advice they
+gave the king was to depart from the shores of Sorca,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+for there seemed no chance of conquering the country
+as long as the Fena were there to help the king.</p>
+
+<p>So the king ordered the sails to be set, and he left
+the harbour in the night with his whole fleet, without
+bringing the king of Sorca under subjection, and
+without imposing tribute on the people.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_VII" id="ECHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FINN AND DERMAT MEET.</p>
+
+
+<p>When the people of Sorca and the Fena arose next
+morning, not a ship was in sight; and they began
+to rejoice greatly, finding themselves freed from this
+invasion. And while the king and Finn, with the
+chiefs and people, stood eagerly conversing on all these
+matters, they saw a troop at a distance coming towards
+them, with banners and standards and arms glittering
+in the morning sun. Now they wondered much who
+these might be; and Finn desired that some one might
+go and bring back tidings.</p>
+
+<p>So Fergus Finnvel went with a few followers, and
+when he was yet a good way off, he knew Dermat
+O'Dyna at the head of the troop, and ran forward
+with joy to meet him. And they embraced, even as
+brothers embrace who meet after being long parted.
+Then they came towards the assembly; and when the
+Fena saw Dermat they shouted with joy and welcome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+And Dermat, on his part, could scarce restrain the
+excess of his joyfulness; for, indeed, he did not expect
+to meet his friends so soon; and he embraced them
+one by one, with glad heart, beginning with Finn.</p>
+
+<p>Then Finn inquired from Dermat all particulars,
+what places he had visited since the day he had
+climbed up the rock, and whether he had heard any
+news of their lost companions; and he asked him also
+who were they&mdash;those valiant-looking fighting men&mdash;he
+had brought with him.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat told him of all his adventures from first to
+last&mdash;of his long combat at the well with the Knight
+of the Fountain, of his descent to Tir-fa-tonn, and how
+the Knight of Valour had entertained him hospitably
+in his palace. He related also how he headed the men
+of the Knight of Valour, and made war on the king
+of Tir-fa-tonn (who was also called the Knight of the
+Fountain, the wizard-champion who fought with
+Dermat at the well), whom he slew, and defeated his
+army.</p>
+
+<p>"And now," continued he, bringing forth the Knight
+of Valour from among the strange host, "this is he
+who was formerly called the Knight of Valour, but
+who is now the king of Tir-fa-tonn. Moreover, this
+king has told me, having himself found it out by his
+druidical art, that it was Avarta the Dedannan (the
+son of Illahan of the Many-coloured Raiment) who
+took the form of the Gilla Dacker, and who brought
+the sixteen Fena away to the Land of Promise,<a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> where
+he now holds them in bondage."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Finn and the young king then put hand in hand
+and made covenants of lasting friendship with each
+other. And the Fena were much rejoiced that they
+had at last got some tidings of their lost companions.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="ECHAPTER_VIII" id="ECHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">CONAN AND HIS COMPANIONS FOUND AND RESCUED.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now after they had rested some days in the palace of
+the king of Sorca, Fergus Finnvel told Finn that it
+was time to begin once more their quest after Conan
+and the others. They held council, therefore; and the
+resolution they came to was to return to the rock at
+the spot where they had turned aside from the track
+of the Gilla Dacker, and to begin their search anew
+from that. And when both the king of Sorca and
+the king of Tir-fa-tonn would have sent men with
+them, Finn thanked them, but said that the small
+party of Fena he had with him were quite enough for
+that adventure.</p>
+
+<p>So they took leave of the two kings, and went
+back to the rock, and Foltlebar at once found the
+track. He traced it from the very edge of the rock
+across the plain to the sea at the other side; and they
+brought round their ship and began their voyage.
+But this time Foltlebar found it very hard to keep on
+the track; for the Gilla Dacker, knowing that there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+were not in the world men more skilled in following
+up a quest than the Fena, took great pains to hide
+all traces of the flight of himself and his horse; so
+that Foltlebar was often thrown out; but he always
+recovered the track after a little time.</p>
+
+<p>And so they sailed from island to island, and from
+bay to bay, over many seas and by many shores, ever
+following the track, till at length they arrived at the
+Land of Promise. And when they had made the land,
+and knew for a certainty that this was indeed the
+Land of Promise, they rejoiced greatly; for in this
+land Dermat O'Dyna had been nurtured by Mannanan
+Mac Lir of the Yellow Hair.</p>
+
+<p>Then they held council as to what was best to be
+done; and Finn's advice was that they should burn
+and spoil the country, in revenge of the outrage that
+had been done to his people. Dermat, however, would
+not hear of this. And he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, O king. The people of this land are of all
+men the most skilled in druidic art; and it is not well
+that they should be at feud with us. Let us rather
+send to Avarta a trusty herald, to demand that he
+should set our companions at liberty. If he does so,
+then we shall be at peace; if he refuse, then shall we
+proclaim war against him and his people, and waste
+this land with fire and sword, till he be forced, even
+by his own people, to give us back our friends."</p>
+
+<p>This advice was approved by all. And then Finn
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"But how shall heralds reach the dwelling of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+enchanter; for the ways are not open and straight, as
+in other lands, but crooked and made for concealment,
+and the valleys and plains are dim and shadowy, and
+hard to be traversed?"</p>
+
+<p>But Foltlebar, nothing daunted by the dangers
+and the obscurity of the way, offered to go with a
+single trusty companion; and they took up the track
+and followed it without being once thrown out, till
+they reached the mansion of Avarta. There they
+found their friends amusing themselves on the green
+outside the palace walls; for, though kept captive in
+the island, yet were they in no wise restrained, but
+were treated by Avarta with much kindness. When
+they saw the heralds coming towards them, their joy
+knew no bounds; they crowded round to embrace
+them, and asked them many questions regarding their
+home and their friends.</p>
+
+<p>At last Avarta himself came forth, and asked who
+these strangers were; and Foltlebar replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We are of the people of Finn Mac Cumal, who
+has sent us as heralds to thee. He and his heroes
+have landed on this island, guided hither by me; and
+he bade us tell thee that he has come to wage war
+and to waste this land with fire and sword, as a
+punishment for that thou hast brought away his
+people by foul spells, and even now keepest them in
+bondage."</p>
+
+<p>When Avarta heard this, he made no reply, but
+called a council of his chief men, to consider whether
+they should send back to Finn an answer of war or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+of peace. And they, having much fear of the Fena,
+were minded to restore Finn's people, and to give him
+his own award in satisfaction for the injury done to
+him; and to invite Finn himself and those who had
+come with him to a feast of joy and friendship in the
+house of Avarta.</p>
+
+<p>Avarta himself went with Foltlebar to give this
+message. And after he and Finn had exchanged
+friendly greetings, he told them what the council had
+resolved; and Finn and Dermat and the others were
+glad at heart. And Finn and Avarta put hand in
+hand, and made a league of friendship.</p>
+
+<p>So they went with Avarta to his house, where
+they found their lost friends; and, being full of gladness,
+they saluted and embraced each other. Then a
+feast was prepared; and they were feasted for three
+days, and they ate and drank and made merry.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth day, a meeting was called on the
+green to hear the award. Now it was resolved to
+make amends on the one hand to Finn, as king of the
+Fena, and on the other, to those who had been brought
+away by the Gilla Dacker. And when all were
+gathered together, Finn was first asked to name his
+award; and this is what he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not name an award, O Avarta; neither
+shall I accept an eric from thee. But the wages I
+promised thee when we made our covenant at Knockainy,
+that I will give thee. For I am thankful for the
+welcome thou hast given us here; and I wish that
+there should be peace and friendship between us for
+ever."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Conan, on his part, was not so easily satisfied;
+and he said to Finn&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Little hast thou endured, O Finn, in all this
+matter; and thou mayst well waive thy award. But
+hadst thou, like us, suffered from the sharp bones and
+the rough carcase of the Gilla Dacker's monstrous
+horse, in a long journey from Erin to the Land of
+Promise, across wide seas, through tangled woods, and
+over rough-headed rocks, thou wouldst then, methinks,
+name an award."</p>
+
+<p>At this, Avarta, and the others who had seen
+Conan and his companions carried off on the back of
+the big horse, could scarce keep from laughing; and
+Avarta said to Conan&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Name thy award, and I will fulfil it every jot:
+for I have heard of thee, Conan, and I dread to bring
+the gibes and taunts of thy foul tongue on myself and
+my people."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," said Conan, "my award is this: that
+you choose fifteen of the best and noblest men in the
+Land of Promise, among whom are to be your own
+best beloved friends; and that you cause them to
+mount on the back of the big horse, and that you
+yourself take hold of his tail. In this manner you
+shall fare to Erin, back again by the selfsame track
+the horse took when he brought us hither&mdash;through
+the same surging seas, through the same thick thorny
+woods, and over the same islands and rough rocks and
+dark glens. And this, O Avarta, is my award," said
+Conan.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Now Finn and his people were rejoiced exceedingly
+when they heard Conan's award&mdash;that he asked from
+Avarta nothing more than like for like. For they
+feared much that he might claim treasure of gold and
+silver, and thus bring reproach on the Fena.</p>
+
+<p>Avarta promised that everything required by
+Conan should be done, binding himself in solemn
+pledges. Then the heroes took their leave; and
+having launched their ship on the broad, green sea,
+they sailed back by the same course to Erin. And
+they marched to their camping-place at Knockainy,
+where they rested in their tents.</p>
+
+<p>Avarta then chose his men. And he placed them
+on the horse's back, and he himself caught hold of
+the tail; and it is not told how they fared till they
+made harbour and landing-place at Cloghan Kincat.
+They delayed not, but straightway journeyed over the
+selfsame track as before, till they reached Knockainy.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and his people saw them afar off coming
+towards the hill with great speed; the Gilla Dacker,
+quite as large and as ugly as ever, running before the
+horse; for he had let go the tail at Cloghan Kincat.
+And the Fena could not help laughing heartily when
+they saw the plight of the fifteen chiefs on the great
+horse's back; and they said with one voice that
+Conan had made a good award that time.</p>
+
+<p>When the horse reached the spot from which he
+had at first set out, the men began to dismount. Then
+the Gilla Dacker, suddenly stepping forward, held up
+his arm and pointed earnestly over the heads of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+Fena towards the field where the horses were standing;
+so that the heroes were startled, and turned round
+every man to look. But nothing was to be seen
+except the horses grazing quietly inside the fence.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and the others now turned round again, with
+intent to speak to the Gilla Dacker and bring him
+and his people into the tents; but much did they
+marvel to find them all gone. The Gilla Dacker and
+his great horse and the fifteen nobles of the Land of
+Promise had disappeared in an instant; and neither
+Finn himself nor any of his chiefs ever saw them
+afterwards.</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">So far we have related the story of the pursuit of
+the Gilla Dacker and his horse.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_PURSUIT_OF_DERMAT_AND_GRANIA" id="THE_PURSUIT_OF_DERMAT_AND_GRANIA"></a>THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_I" id="FCHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FINN, THE SON OF CUMAL, SEEKS THE PRINCESS
+GRANIA TO WIFE.</p>
+
+
+<p>On a certain day, Finn, the son of Cumal, rose at early
+morn in Allen of the broad hill-slopes, and, going forth,
+sat him down on the green lawn before the palace,
+without companion or attendant. And two of his
+people followed him, namely, Oisin his son, and Dering
+the son of Dobar O'Baskin.</p>
+
+<p>Oisin spoke to him and asked, "Why, O king,
+hast thou come forth so early?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cause enough have I indeed," replied Finn; "for
+I am without a wife since Manissa, the daughter of
+Garad of the Black Knee, died; and who can enjoy
+sweet sleep when his life is lonely like mine, with no
+wife to comfort and cheer him? This, my friends, is
+the cause of my early rising."</p>
+
+<p>And Oisin said, "Why should you be without a
+wife if you desire one? For there is not, within the
+sea-circle of green Erin, a maiden that we will not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+bring you, either by consent or by force, if you only
+turn the light of your eyes on her."</p>
+
+<p>Then Dering spoke and said, "I know where there
+is a maiden, who in all respects is worthy to be thy
+wife."</p>
+
+<p>And when Finn asked who she was, Dering
+replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The maiden is Grania, daughter of king Cormac,<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
+the son of Art, the son of Conn the Hundred-fighter;
+the most beautiful, the best instructed, and
+the most discreet in speech and manner of all the
+maidens of Erin."</p>
+
+<p>"There has been strife between me and Cormac for
+a long time," said Finn, "and it may happen that he
+will not give me his daughter in marriage. But go ye
+to Tara in my name, you and Oisin, and ask the
+maiden for me: if the king should refuse, so let it be;
+but I can better bear a refusal to you than to myself."</p>
+
+<p>"We will go," said Oisin; "but it is better that no
+man know of our journey till we return."</p>
+
+<p>So the two heroes took leave of Finn and went
+their way; and nothing is told of what befell them till
+they reached Tara. It chanced that the king was at
+this time holding a meeting; and the chiefs and great
+nobles of Tara were assembled round him. And when
+the two warriors arrived, they were welcomed, and
+the meeting was put off for that day; for the king
+felt sure that it was on some business of weight they
+had come.</p>
+
+<p>After they had eaten and drunk, the king, sending<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+away all others from his presence, bade the two chiefs
+tell their errand. So Oisin told him they had come
+to seek his daughter Grania in marriage for Finn the
+son of Cumal.</p>
+
+<p>Then the king said, "In all Erin there is scarce a
+young prince or noble who has not sought my daughter
+in marriage; and she has refused them all. And it is
+on me that the ill feeling and reproach caused by her
+refusals have fallen; for she has ever made me the
+bearer of her answers. Wherefore now you shall
+come to my daughter's presence, and I will not mention
+the matter to her till she give you an answer
+from her own lips: so shall I be blameless if she refuse."</p>
+
+<p>So they went to the apartments of the women, at
+the sunny side of the palace. And when they had
+entered the princess's chamber, the king sat with her
+on the couch and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here, my daughter, are two of the people of Finn
+the son of Cumal, who have come to ask thee as a wife
+for him."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania, giving, indeed, not much thought to
+the matter, answered, "I know not whether he is
+worthy to be thy son-in-law; but if he be, why should
+he not be a fitting husband for me?"</p>
+
+<p>The two messengers were satisfied with this answer,
+and retired. And Cormac made a feast for them; and
+they ate and drank and made merry with the chiefs
+and nobles of the palace; after which the king bade
+them tell Finn to come at the end of a fortnight to
+claim his bride.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So the two heroes returned to Allen, and told how
+they had fared in their quest. And as all things come
+at last to an end, so this fortnight wore slowly away;
+and at the end of the time, Finn, having collected
+round him the chief men of the seven standing
+battalions of the Fena to be his guard, marched to
+Tara. The king received him with great honour,
+and welcomed the Fena, and they were feasted with
+the nobles of Erin in the great banquet hall of
+Micorta.<a name="FNanchor_CVII._135" id="FNanchor_CVII._135"></a><a href="#Footnote_CVII._135" class="fnanchor">[CVII.]</a> And the king sat on his throne to enjoy
+the feast with his guests, having Finn on his right
+hand, and on his left the queen, Etta, the daughter
+of Atan of Corca; and Grania sat next the queen,
+her mother, on the left. And all the others sat
+according to their rank and patrimony.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_II" id="FCHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DERMAT O'DYNA SECRETLY ESPOUSES THE
+PRINCESS GRANIA.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now while the feast went on, it chanced that Dara of
+the Poems, one of Finn's druids, sat near Grania. And
+he recited for her many lays about the deeds of her
+forefathers; after which a pleasant conversation arose
+between them. And when they had talked for some
+time, she asked him&mdash;</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span></p>
+<p>"What means all this feasting? And why has
+Finn come with his people on this visit to my father
+the king?"</p>
+
+<p>Dara was surprised at this question, and answered,
+"If thou dost not know, it is hard for me to know."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania answered, "I wish, indeed, to learn
+from you what has brought Finn to Tara."</p>
+
+<p>"It is strange to hear thee ask this question," said
+the druid. "Knowest thou not that he has come to
+claim thee for his wife?"</p>
+
+<p>Grania was silent for a long time after hearing
+this. And again she spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If, indeed, Finn had sought me for his son Oisin,
+or for the youthful Oscar, there would be nothing to
+wonder at; but I marvel much that he seeks me for
+himself, seeing that he is older than my father."</p>
+
+<p>Then Grania meditated in silence; and after a time
+she said to the druid&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is a goodly company, but I know not one
+among them, except only Oisin, the son of Finn. Tell
+me now who is that warrior on the right of Oisin."</p>
+
+<p>"That knightly warrior," answered the druid, "is
+Gaul Mac Morna the Terrible in Battle."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the youthful champion to the right of
+Gaul?" asked Grania.</p>
+
+<p>"That is Oscar, the son of Oisin," said the druid.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the graceful and active-looking chief sitting
+next Oscar?" asked the princess.</p>
+
+<p>"That is Kylta Mac Ronan the Swift-footed," said
+the druid.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Next to Kylta Mac Ronan sits a champion with
+fair, freckled skin, raven-black curls, a gentle, handsome,
+manly countenance, and soft voice: pray who is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face, the
+favourite of maidens, and beloved of all the Fena for
+his high-mindedness, his bravery, and his generous
+disposition."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is he sitting at Dermat's shoulder?" asked
+Grania.</p>
+
+<p>"That is Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin,"
+replied the druid; "a valiant champion, and also a
+druid and a man of science."</p>
+
+<p>Then Grania called her handmaid, and said to her,
+"Bring me the large jewelled, gold-chased drinking-horn
+that lies in my chamber."</p>
+
+<p>The handmaid brought the drinking-horn; and
+Grania, having filled it to the brim, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Take it now to Finn from me, and tell him that I
+desire him to drink from it."</p>
+
+<p>The handmaiden did so, and Finn took a full
+draught. He passed the drinking-horn to the king,
+and the king drank; and after him the queen. Then
+again Grania bade the handmaid bring it to Carbri of
+the Liffey, the king's son; and she ceased not till all
+she wished to drink had drunk from the gold-chased
+horn. And after a little time, those who had drunk
+fell into a deep sleep, like the sleep of death.</p>
+
+<p>Then the princess rose from her seat, and, walking
+softly across the hall, sat down near Dermat O'Dyna;
+and with downcast eyes and low voice, she said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Wilt thou, Dermat, return my love if I give it
+to thee?"</p>
+
+<p>Dermat heard her at first with amazement and
+alarm. Then for a moment, even before he was aware,
+his heart leaped with joy; but when he bethought him
+of his duty to his chief, he hardened his mind, and
+answered with cold looks and words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The maiden who is betrothed to Finn, I will not
+love; and even if I were so minded, I dare not."</p>
+
+<p>And with eyes still cast down, Grania said, "I
+know well it is thy duty, and not thy heart, that
+prompts thee to speak so. Thou seest how it is with
+me; and I am forced to speak more boldly than a
+maiden should. Finn has come to ask me for his
+wife; but he is an old man, even older than my father,
+and I love him not. But I love thee, Dermat, and I
+beseech thee to save me from this hateful marriage.
+And, lest thou think that my love for thee is only a
+passing fancy, hear now what befell.</p>
+
+<p>"Of a day when a hurling match was played on the
+green of Tara, between Mac Luga and the Fena on the
+one side, and Carbri of the Liffey and the men of Tara
+on the other, I sat high up at the window of my sunny
+chamber to see the game. Thou didst remain sitting
+with some others that day, not meaning to take part
+in the play. But at last, when the game began to go
+against thy friends, I saw thee start up; and, snatching
+the hurlet from the man nearest to thee, thou didst
+rush into the thick of the crowd; and before sitting
+down thou didst win the goal three times on the men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+of Tara. At that hour my eyes and my heart were
+turned to thee; and well I knew thee to-day in this
+banquet hall, though I knew not thy name till the
+druid told me. At that same hour, too, I gave thee
+my love&mdash;what I never gave, and never will give, to
+any other."</p>
+
+<p>Then was Dermat sore troubled. He strove with
+himself, but strove in vain; for he could not help
+loving the princess with his whole heart. Yet none
+the less did he hide his thoughts; for his duty to his
+chief prevailed. And with looks and words cold and
+stern, he replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I marvel greatly that thou hast not given thy love
+to Finn, who deserves it much better than any other
+man alive. And still more do I marvel that thou hast
+lighted on me beyond all the princes and nobles of
+Tara; for truly there is not one among them less worthy
+of thy love than I. But that thou shouldst be my
+wife, by no means can this be; for even were I to
+consent, there is not in Erin a fastness or a wilderness,
+however strong or remote, that could shelter us from
+Finn's vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>Then Grania said, "I read thy thoughts; and
+I know thou art striving against what thy heart
+prompts. And now, O Dermat, I place thee under
+gesa,<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> and under the bonds of heavy druidical spells&mdash;bonds
+that true heroes never break through, that
+thou take me for thy wife before Finn and the others
+awaken from their sleep; and save me from this
+hateful marriage."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And Dermat, still unyielding, replied, "Evil are
+those gesa thou hast put on me; and evil, I fear, will
+come of them. But dost thou not know, princess, that
+whenever Finn sleeps at Tara, it is one of his privileges
+to have in his own keeping the keys of the great gates;
+so that even if we so willed it, we should not be able
+to leave the fortress?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is a wicket gate leading out from my apartments,"
+said Grania, "and through that we shall pass
+forth."</p>
+
+<p>"That I cannot do," answered Dermat; "for it is
+one of my gesa<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> never to enter a king's mansion, or
+leave it, by a wicket gate."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania answered, "I have heard it said that
+every true champion, who has been instructed in all
+the feats that a warrior should learn, can bound over
+the highest rampart of a fort by means of the
+handles of his spears; and well I know that thou art
+the most accomplished champion among the Fena. I
+will now pass out through the wicket gate; and even if
+thou dost not follow, I will fly alone from Tara."</p>
+
+<p>And so she went forth from the banquet hall.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat, much doubting how to act, spoke to
+his friends and asked counsel of them. And first he
+addressed Oisin, the son of Finn, and asked him how he
+should deal with the heavy gesa-bonds that had been
+laid on him by the princess; and what he should do
+in the case.</p>
+
+<p>"You are blameless in regard to these bonds,"
+answered Oisin; "and I counsel you to follow Grania;
+but guard yourself well against the wiles of Finn."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"O dear friend Oscar," spoke Dermat again, "what
+think you is best for me to do, seeing that these heavy
+gesa-bonds have been put on me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I say you should follow Grania," answered Oscar;
+"for he, indeed, is but a pitiful champion who fears to
+keep his bonds."</p>
+
+<p>"What counsel do you give me, Kylta?" said
+Dermat to Kylta Mac Ronan.</p>
+
+<p>"I say," answered Kylta, "that I would gladly give
+the world's wealth that the princess had given me her
+love; and I counsel you to follow her."</p>
+
+<p>Last of all, Dermat spoke to Dering, the son of
+Dobar O'Baskin, and said, "Give me your judgment in
+this hard matter, friend Dering."</p>
+
+<p>And Dering answered, "If you espouse Grania, I
+foresee that your death will come of it, which grieves
+me even to think of; but even so, I counsel you to
+follow the princess rather than break through your
+gesa."</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat, doubting even still, asked for the last
+time, "Is this, my friends, the counsel you all give?"</p>
+
+<p>And they all answered, "Yes," as with the voice of
+one man.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat arose and put on his armour and his
+helmet; and he took his shield, and his two heavy
+spears, and his sword. And with tears he bade farewell
+to his dear companions; for well he knew that it would
+be long before they should meet again; and he foresaw
+trouble and danger.</p>
+
+<p>Then he went forth to where the steep side of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+inner mound overlooked the outer rampart; and,
+placing his two spears point downwards, and leaning
+on them after the manner of skilful champions, with
+two light, airy bounds he cleared rampart and ditch,
+and measured the length of his two feet on the level
+green outside. And there the princess met him; and
+he said to her, with voice and manner still distant and
+stern&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Evil will certainly come of this espousal, O princess,
+both to thee and to me. Far better would it be
+for thee to choose Finn and to pass me by; for now
+we shall wander without home or rest, fleeing from
+his wrath. Return, then, princess, return even now
+through the wicket gate, for the sleepers have not yet
+awakened; and Finn shall never learn what has
+happened."</p>
+
+<p>But Grania, gentle and sad indeed, but quite
+unmoved, replied, "I will never return; and until death
+takes me I will not part from thee."</p>
+
+<p>Then at last Dermat yielded and strove no longer;
+and putting off his sternness of manner and voice, he
+spoke gently to the princess and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will hide my thoughts from thee no more,
+Grania. I will be thy husband, all unworthy of thee
+as I am; and I will guard thee and defend thee to the
+death from Finn and his hirelings."</p>
+
+<p>And they plighted their faith, and vowed solemn
+vows to be faithful to each other as man and wife for
+ever.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_III" id="FCHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">FLIGHT AND PURSUIT.</p>
+
+
+<p>Then Grania showed Dermat the fenced meadow
+where her father's horses grazed, and bade him yoke
+two horses to a chariot. And when he had done so,
+he and Grania sat in the chariot and travelled with
+all speed westward, till they reached Ath-Luan.<a name="FNanchor_CVIII._136" id="FNanchor_CVIII._136"></a><a href="#Footnote_CVIII._136" class="fnanchor">[CVIII.]</a></p>
+
+<p>And when they had come to the ford, Dermat said,
+"Finn will doubtless pursue us, and it will be all the
+easier for him to follow our track, that we have the
+horses."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania answered, "As we are now so far from
+Tara, we may leave the chariot and horses here, and
+I will fare on foot henceforward."</p>
+
+<p>So they alighted from the chariot; and Dermat,
+leading one of the horses across, left them both some
+distance above the ford, one at each side of the river.
+And he took up Grania in his strong arms, and
+brought her tenderly across the ford, so that not even
+the sole of her foot, or the skirt of her mantle was
+wetted. Then they walked against the stream for
+a mile, and turned south-west, till they reached the
+Wood of the two Tents.<a name="FNanchor_CIX._137" id="FNanchor_CIX._137"></a><a href="#Footnote_CIX._137" class="fnanchor">[CIX.]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p><p>In the midst of the wood, where it was thickest,
+Dermat lopped off branches and wove a hut, where
+they rested. And he brought Grania the wild animals
+of the wood to eat, and gave her the water of a clear
+spring to drink.</p>
+
+<p>As to Finn, the son of Cumal, I will now tell what
+befell him. When the king and his guests arose from
+their sleep at early dawn next morning, they found
+Dermat and Grania gone; and a burning jealousy seized
+on Finn, and his rage was so great that for a time
+all his strength left him. Then he sent for his tracking-men,
+namely, the Clann Navin; and he commanded
+them forthwith to follow the track of Dermat and
+Grania. This they did with much ease as far as Ath-Luan,
+while Finn and the others followed after; but
+when they had come to the ford, they lost the track.
+Whereupon Finn, being now indeed easily kindled to
+wrath, told them that unless they took up the track
+again speedily, he would hang every man of the Clann
+Navin on the edge of the ford.</p>
+
+<p>So the trackers, being sore afraid, searched upwards
+against the stream, and found the two horses where
+they had been left, one on each side of the river. And
+going on a mile further, they came to the spot where
+Dermat and Grania had turned from the river; and
+there they lighted on the south-west track, Finn and
+the Fena still following. And when the Clann Navin
+had pointed out to Finn the direction of the track, he
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well do I know now where we shall find Dermat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+and Grania; for of a certainty they have hidden themselves
+in the Wood of the two Tents."</p>
+
+<p>Now it chanced that Oisin, and Oscar, and Kylta,
+and Dering were present when Finn spoke these
+words; and they were troubled, for they loved Dermat.
+And going aside, they held council among themselves,
+and Oisin spoke&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There is much likelihood, friends, that Finn
+speaks truth; for he is far-seeing, and judges not
+hastily. It is needful, therefore, that we send Dermat
+warning, lest he be taken unawares. My counsel is
+that you, Oscar, find out Finn's hound, Bran, and tell
+him to go to the Wood of the two Tents with a
+warning to Dermat; for Bran does not love his own
+master Finn better than he loves Dermat."</p>
+
+<p>So Oscar called Bran secretly, and told him what
+he should do. Bran listened with sagacious eye and
+ears erect, and understood Oscar's words quite well.
+Then, running back to the rear of the host, so that
+Finn might not see him, he followed the track without
+once losing it, till he arrived at the Wood of the
+two Tents. There he found Dermat and Grania
+asleep in their hut, and he put his head into Dermat's
+bosom.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat started up from his sleep, and seeing Bran,
+he awakened Grania, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Here is Bran, Finn's hound; he has come to warn
+me that Finn himself is near."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania trembled and said, "Let us take the
+warning, then, and fly!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Dermat answered, "I will not leave this hut;
+for however long we fly, we cannot escape from Finn;
+and it is not worse to fall into his hands now than at
+any other time. Howbeit, they shall not come into
+this fastness unless I permit them."</p>
+
+<p>Then great fear fell on Grania; but, seeing Dermat
+gloomy and downcast, she urged the point no further.</p>
+
+<p>Again Oisin spoke to his three companions and
+said, "I fear me that Bran may not have been able to
+baffle Finn, or that some other mischance may have
+hindered him from finding Dermat; so we must needs
+send him another warning. Bring hither, therefore,
+Fergor, Kylta's errand-man."</p>
+
+<p>And Kylta brought forward Fergor.</p>
+
+<p>Now this Fergor had a voice so loud that his shout
+was heard over the three nearest cantreds.</p>
+
+<p>So they caused him to give three shouts that
+Dermat might hear. And Dermat heard Fergor's
+shouts, and, awakening Grania from her sleep, said to
+her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I hear the shout of Fergor, Kylta's errand-man.
+And he is with Kylta, and Kylta is with Finn; and I
+know that my friends have sent me this warning, as a
+sign that Finn himself is coming."</p>
+
+<p>And again Grania trembled and said, "Let us take
+this warning and fly!"</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat answered, "I will not fly; and we
+shall not leave this wood till Finn and the Fena overtake
+us. Howbeit, none shall come into this fastness
+unless I permit them."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And Grania was in great fear; but this time
+Dermat looked gloomy and stern, and she pressed the
+matter no further.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_IV" id="FCHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FASTNESS OF THE SEVEN NARROW DOORS.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now as to Finn. He and the others went forward
+till they reached the Wood of the two Tents. And he
+sent forward the Clann Navin to make search; who
+went, and having made their way to the thickest
+part of the wood, they came to a fence which they
+could not cross.</p>
+
+<p>For Dermat had cleared a space round his hut, and
+surrounded it with a fence that no man could pierce,
+with seven narrow doors of strong poles woven with
+saplings, to face seven different parts of the wood.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Clann Navin climbed up to a high tree
+branch, and looked over the fence; and they saw
+Dermat with a lady. And when they had returned,
+Finn asked them if Dermat and Grania were in the
+wood. And they answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dermat, indeed, is there, and we saw a lady with
+him; but whether she be Grania or not we cannot
+tell, for we know not the princess."</p>
+
+<p>"May ill luck attend Dermat, and all his friends for
+his sake!" said Finn. "I know he is in this wood;
+and he shall never leave it till he give me quittance
+for the injury he has done me."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And Oisin said, "Certain it is, that you, Finn, are
+blinded by jealousy; else you would never think that
+Dermat would await you on this plain, with no
+stronger fastness to shelter him from your wrath than
+the Wood of the two Tents."</p>
+
+<p>To which Finn, being angry, replied, "Your words
+will profit you nothing, Oisin; neither will your
+friendship for Dermat avail him aught. Well I knew,
+indeed, when I heard Fergor's three shouts, that it
+was ye who caused him to shout, as a warning signal
+to Dermat; and I know also that ye sent my dog
+Bran to him with another warning. But these warnings
+will not avail you; for he shall never leave this
+wood till he pay me such eric<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> as I seek for the
+injury he has done me."</p>
+
+<p>Then Oscar spoke and said, "Surely, Finn, it is
+mere folly to believe that Dermat would wait here for
+you, knowing, as he does, that you seek his head."</p>
+
+<p>As Oscar spoke these words, they arrived at the
+fence; and Finn answered, "Who then, think you,
+has cleared the wood in this manner, and fenced the
+space with this strong, sheltering enclosure, and fitted
+it with these narrow doors? But indeed," added he,
+"I will find out the truth of the matter in another
+way." So, raising his voice a little, he called out,
+"Tell us now, Dermat, which of us is telling truth,
+Oscar or I."</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat, who would not hide when called on,
+answered from within, "You never erred in your
+judgment, O king: Grania and I are here; but none
+shall come in unless I permit them."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Finn placed his men around the enclosure, a
+company at each narrow door; and he said to each
+company, "If Dermat tries to escape by this door,
+seize him and keep him securely for me."</p>
+
+<p>Now when Grania saw these preparations, and
+overheard Finn's words, she was overcome with fear,
+and wept and trembled very much. And Dermat had
+pity on his wife, and comforted her; and he kissed her
+three times, bidding her be of good cheer, for that all
+would be well with them yet.</p>
+
+<p>And when Finn saw this&mdash;for he stood with some
+others viewing the hut from a mound at a little
+way off&mdash;a flame of burning jealousy went through
+his heart; and he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Now of a certainty Dermat shall not escape
+from me; and I shall have his head for all these
+injuries!"</p>
+
+<p>Now Angus of Bruga,<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the wisest and most skilled
+in magic arts of all the Dedannan race, was Dermat's
+foster father. For he had reared him from childhood,
+and had taught him all the arts and accomplishments
+of a champion; and he loved him even as a father
+loves his only son.</p>
+
+<p>And it was revealed to Angus that Dermat was in
+deadly strait So he arose and travelled on the wings
+of the cool, east wind, neither did he halt till he
+reached the Wood of the two Tents; and he passed
+into the hut without being perceived by Finn and his
+men. And when Dermat saw the old man his heart
+leaped with joy.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Angus greeted Dermat and Grania, and said,
+"What is this thing thou hast done, my son?"</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat answered, "The princess Grania,
+daughter of the king of Tara, asked me to take her
+for my wife, putting heavy gesa-bonds on me; and I
+did so, and we fled from her father's house. And
+Finn, the son of Cumal, has pursued us with intent to
+kill me, for he sought the princess to wife for himself."</p>
+
+<p>And Angus said, "Come now, children, under my
+mantle, one under each border, and I will bring you
+both away from this place without the knowledge of
+Finn."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat answered, "Take Grania; but for me,
+I will not go with you. However, I will leave this
+place; and if I am alive I will follow you. But if
+they slay me, send the princess to her father, and tell
+him to treat her neither better nor worse on account
+of taking me for her husband."</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat kissed Grania, and bade her be of
+good cheer, for that he feared not his foes. And
+Angus placed her under his mantle, and, telling Dermat
+whither to follow, went forth from the enclosure without
+the knowledge of Finn and the Fena. They
+turned south then, and nothing is told of what befell
+them till they came to the Wood of the two Sallows,
+which is now called Limerick.</p>
+
+<p>Now as to Dermat. After Angus and Grania had
+left him, he girded on his armour, and took his sharp
+weapons in his hands; and he stood up tall and
+straight like a pillar, meditating in silence for a space.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+Then he went to one of the seven narrow doors, and
+asked who was outside.</p>
+
+<p>"No enemy of thine is here, but Oisin and Oscar,
+with the men of the Clann Baskin. Come out to us,
+and no one will dare to harm thee."</p>
+
+<p>"I must needs find the door where Finn himself
+keeps guard," answered Dermat; "so I will not go out
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>He went to the second narrow door, and asked who
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Kylta Mac Ronan with the Clann Ronan around
+him. Come out at this door, and we will fight to the
+death for thy sake."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go out to you," answered Dermat; "for
+I do not wish to bring Finn's anger on you for treating
+me with kindness."</p>
+
+<p>He went to another narrow door, and asked who
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Conan of the Grey Rushes and the Clann Morna.
+We are no friends to Finn; but thee we all love.
+Come out to us, then, and no one will dare to harm
+thee."</p>
+
+<p>"Of a certainty I will not go out at this door,"
+answered Dermat; "for well I know that Finn would
+rather see you all dead than that I should escape!"</p>
+
+<p>He went to another narrow door, and asked who
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>"A friend and a dear comrade of thine is here;
+Cuan, the chief of the Munster Fena, and his Munster
+men with him. Thou and we come from the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
+territory; and if need be we will give our lives in
+fight for thy sake."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go out to you," said Dermat; "for it
+would bring Finn's sure displeasure on you to act
+kindly towards me."</p>
+
+<p>He went to another narrow door, and asked who
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Finn, the son of Glore of the Loud Voice, chief of
+the Fena of Ulster, and the Ulster men around him.
+Thou and we come not from the same territory; but
+we all love thee, Dermat; and now come forth to us,
+and who will dare to wound or harm thee?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go out to you," replied Dermat; "you
+are a faithful friend of mine, and your father in like
+manner; and I do not wish you to earn the enmity of
+Finn on my account."</p>
+
+<p>He went to another narrow door, and asked who
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>"No friend of thine! Here stand the Clann Navin
+watching for thee; namely, Aed the Lesser, and Aed
+the Tall, and Gonna the Wounder, and Gothan the
+Loud-voiced, and Cuan the Tracker, with all their men.
+We bear thee no love; and if thou come out at this
+door, we shall make thee a mark for our swords
+and spears!"</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat answered, "Lying and mean-faced
+dogs! It is not fear of you that keeps me from going
+forth at this door; but I do not wish to defile my
+spear with the blood of your shoeless, tracking vagabonds!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And he went to another narrow door, and asked
+who was there.</p>
+
+<p>"Finn, the son of Cumal, the son of Art, the son of
+Trenmore O'Baskin, and with him the Leinster Fena.
+No love awaits thee here; and if thou come forth we
+will cleave thee, flesh and bones!"</p>
+
+<p>"The door I have sought I have found at last!"
+cried Dermat; "for the door where thou, Finn,
+standest, that, of a certainty, is the very door by
+which I shall pass out!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Finn charged his men, under pain of death,
+not to let Dermat pass. But Dermat, watching an
+unguarded place, rose by means of his two spears
+with a light, airy bound over the fence, and alighted
+on the clear space outside; and running swiftly forward,
+was in a moment beyond the reach of sword and
+spear. And so dismayed were they by his threatening
+look, that not a man attempted to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>Then, turning southward, he never halted till he
+came to the Wood of the two Sallows, where he found
+Angus and Grania in a warm hut, with a boar fixed on
+hazel spits roasting before a great flaming fire. Dermat
+greeted them; and the spark of life all but leaped
+from Grania's heart with joy when she saw him.<a name="FNanchor_CX._138" id="FNanchor_CX._138"></a><a href="#Footnote_CX._138" class="fnanchor">[CX.]</a> So
+he told them all that had befallen him; and they ate
+their meal and slept in peace that night, till the morning
+of next day filled the world with light.</p>
+
+<p>Then Angus arose with the dawn, and said to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+Dermat, "I will now depart, my son; but Finn will
+still pursue you, and I leave you this counsel to
+guide you when I am gone. Go not into a tree having
+only one trunk; never enter a cave that has only one
+opening; never land on an island of the sea that has
+only one channel of approach; where you cook your
+food, there eat it not; where you eat, sleep not there;
+and where you sleep to-night, sleep not there to-morrow
+night!"</p>
+
+<p>So Angus bade them farewell; and they were sad
+after him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_V" id="FCHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR THREE VENOMOUS
+HOUNDS ON THE TRACK OF DERMAT AND
+GRANIA.</p>
+
+
+<p>After Angus was gone, Dermat and Grania journeyed
+westward, keeping the Shannon on their right, till they
+reached the Rough Stream of the Champions, which
+is now called the Laune.<a name="FNanchor_CXI._139" id="FNanchor_CXI._139"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXI._139" class="fnanchor">[CXI.]</a> They rested there; and
+Dermat killed a salmon with his spear, and fixed it on
+a hazel spit to broil on the near bank; and he crossed
+the river with Grania, to eat it on the further bank, as
+Angus had told him. And after they had eaten, they
+sought a sleeping-place further west.</p>
+
+<p>They rose early next morning, and journeyed still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+west, till they reached the Grey Moor of Finnlia.<a name="FNanchor_CXII._140" id="FNanchor_CXII._140"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXII._140" class="fnanchor">[CXII.]</a>
+There they met a man of great size, noble in gait and
+feature, but with arms and armour not befitting his
+appearance. Dermat greeted him, and asked who he
+was; and he replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My name is Modan, and I am seeking a lord
+whom I may serve for pay."</p>
+
+<p>"If I take you into my service," asked Dermat,
+"what can you do for us?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will serve you by day and watch for you by
+night," answered Modan.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon they entered into bonds of agreement
+with one another, Modan to serve by day and watch
+by night, and Dermat to pay him wages.</p>
+
+<p>Then the three went westward till they reached
+the river of Carra,<a name="FNanchor_CXIII._141" id="FNanchor_CXIII._141"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXIII._141" class="fnanchor">[CXIII.]</a> and Modan lifted Dermat and
+Grania with the greatest ease, and bore them dry
+across the stream. From that further west to Beha,<a name="FNanchor_CXIV._142" id="FNanchor_CXIV._142"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXIV._142" class="fnanchor">[CXIV.]</a>
+and Modan bore them over this stream in like manner.
+Here they found a cave, on the side of the hill over
+that part of the sea called Tonn Toma,<a name="FNanchor_CXV._143" id="FNanchor_CXV._143"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXV._143" class="fnanchor">[CXV.]</a> namely, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
+hill of Curra-Kenn-Ammid; and Modan prepared a
+couch of soft rushes and birch tops in the innermost
+part of the cave, for Dermat and Grania. After this
+he went to the nearest wood and cut him a long,
+straight quicken tree rod; and, having put a hair and
+a hook on the rod, and a holly berry on the hook, he
+stood on the brink of the stream, and with three casts
+he hooked three salmon. Then he put the rod by for
+next day; and, putting the hook and the hair under
+his girdle, he returned to Dermat and Grania. And
+he broiled the fish, and they ate their meal, Modan
+giving the largest salmon to Dermat, the second in
+size to Grania, and keeping the smallest for himself.
+After which Dermat and Grania went to sleep in the
+cave, and Modan kept watch and ward at the mouth,
+till morning arose with its abundant light.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat rose early and set out for the nearest high
+hill, to look round the country, telling Grania to keep
+watch at the mouth of the cave while Modan slept.
+Having come to the top of the hill, he viewed the country
+all round to the four points of the sky; and after a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
+little while, he saw a fleet of black ships approaching
+from the west. When they had come near enough to
+the shore, a company of nine nines landed at the very
+foot of the hill where Dermat stood. He went to
+them, and, after greeting them, asked who they were,
+and from what country they had come.</p>
+
+<p>"We are three sea-champions from the Iccian Sea,<a name="FNanchor_CXVI._144" id="FNanchor_CXVI._144"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXVI._144" class="fnanchor">[CXVI.]</a>
+who are at the head of this troop," replied they, "and
+our names are Ducoss, Fincoss, and Trencoss;<a name="FNanchor_CXVII._145" id="FNanchor_CXVII._145"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXVII._145" class="fnanchor">[CXVII.]</a> and we
+have come hither at the suit of Finn the son of Cumal.
+For a certain chief named Dermat O'Dyna has rebelled
+against him, and is now an outlaw, flying through the
+country from one fastness to another. And Finn has
+asked us to come with our fleet to watch the coast,
+while he himself watches inland, so that this marauder
+may no longer escape punishment. We hear, moreover,
+that this Dermat is valiant and dangerous to attack,
+and we have brought hither three venomous hounds to
+loose them on his track, and scent him to his hiding-place:
+fire cannot burn them, water cannot drown
+them, and weapons cannot wound them. And now
+tell us who thou art, and whether thou hast heard any
+tidings of this Dermat O'Dyna."</p>
+
+<p>"I saw him, indeed, yesterday," answered Dermat.
+"I know him well too, and I counsel you to follow
+your quest warily; for if you meet with Dermat O'Dyna
+you will have no common man to deal with."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p><p>Then he asked if they had got any wine in their
+ships. They replied that they had; so he asked that
+a tun might be brought, as he wished to drink; and he
+told them he would show them a champion-feat after
+he had drunk. Two men were accordingly sent on
+board for a tun of wine. When they had brought it,
+Dermat raised it in his arms and drank; and the
+others drank in like manner till the tun was empty.</p>
+
+<p>Then he said, "I will now show you a champion-feat
+that Dermat O'Dyna taught me; and I challenge
+any man among you to do it after me. And from this
+you may learn what manner of man you will have to
+deal with, should you have the ill luck to meet with
+Dermat himself."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he brought the tun to the crest of the
+hill, and set it down at the edge of a steep cliff. Then,
+leaping up on it, he turned it cunningly aside from
+the cliff, and let it roll down the smooth slope of the
+hill till it reached the very bottom, while he himself
+remained standing on it the whole time. And three
+times did he do this while the strangers looked on.</p>
+
+<p>But they laughed, mocking him, and said, "Do
+you call that a champion-feat indeed? Truly, you
+have never in your life seen a good champion-feat!"</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon one among them started up and brought
+the tun to the top of the hill, intending to do the same
+feat; and, placing it on the edge of the cliff, he leaped
+up on it. And while he stood on it, Dermat pushed it
+with his foot to set it going. But the moment it
+moved, the man lost his balance, and while the tun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+went rolling down the face of the hill, he himself fell
+over the cliff, and was dashed to pieces on the sharp
+edges and points of the rocks.</p>
+
+<p>Another man tried the same thing, and he in like
+manner fell down and was killed among the rocks.
+And the end of the matter was, that before they would
+acknowledge themselves beaten, fifty of their men
+attempted the feat, and every man of the fifty fell over
+the cliff and was killed. So the others went on board
+their ships, gloomy and heart-sore.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat returned to the cave, and Grania's heart
+was glad when she saw him. Modan went then, and
+putting the hair and the hook on the rod as before, he
+hooked three salmon; and he went back to the cave and
+broiled them on hazel spits. And they ate their meal;
+and Modan kept watch and ward, while Dermat and
+Grania slept in the cave, till the pleasant morning
+filled the world with light.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat rose up with the dawn, and telling Grania
+to keep watch while Modan slept, he went to the same
+hill, and found the three sea-champions with their
+men on the shore before him. He greeted them, and
+asked whether they wished for any more champion-feats.
+But they answered that they would much
+rather he would give them some tidings of Dermat
+O'Dyna. Whereupon he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen a man who saw him this very morning.
+And now I will show you a champion-feat he
+taught me, in order that you may know what is before
+you, should you meet with Dermat O'Dyna himself."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When he had said this, he threw off helmet and
+tunic and armour, till only his shirt remained over his
+brawny shoulders; and, taking the Ga-boi,<a name="FNanchor_CXVIII._146" id="FNanchor_CXVIII._146"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXVIII._146" class="fnanchor">[CXVIII.]</a> the spear
+of Mannanan Mac Lir, he fixed it firmly in the earth,
+standing point upwards. Then, walking back some
+little way, he ran towards the spear, and, rising from
+the earth with a bird-like bound, he alighted softly on
+the very point; and, again leaping off it, he came to the
+ground on his feet without wound or hurt of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>Then arose one of the strange warriors and said,
+"If you call that a champion-feat, it is plain that you
+have never seen a good champion-feat in your life!"</p>
+
+<p>And so saying, he ran swiftly towards the spear
+and made a great bound; but he fell heavily on the
+sharp point, so that it pierced him through the heart,
+and he was taken down dead. Another man attempted
+the feat, and was killed in like manner; and before
+they ceased, fifty of their men were slain by Dermat's
+spear. Then they bade him draw his spear from the
+earth, saying that no more should try that feat; and
+they went on board their ships.</p>
+
+<p>So Dermat returned to the cave; and Modan
+hooked three salmon; and Dermat and Grania ate
+their meal and slept till morning, Modan keeping watch.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span></p>
+<p>Next morning, Dermat went to the hill, bringing
+two strong forked poles cut from the wood. He found
+the three sea-champions with their men on the shore;
+and he greeted them, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have come to-day to show you a champion-feat I
+learned from Dermat O'Dyna, that you may know what
+to expect if you should meet with Dermat himself."</p>
+
+<p>He then fixed the poles standing firmly in the
+earth; and he placed the Morallta, that is, the long
+sword of Angus of the Bruga, in the forks, edge upwards,
+the hilt on one, and the point on the other,
+binding it firmly with withes. Then, rising up with a
+bound, he alighted gently on the edge; and he walked
+cunningly three times from hilt to point, and from
+point to hilt, and then leaped lightly to the earth
+without wound or hurt. And he challenged the
+strangers to do that feat.</p>
+
+<p>Then one arose and said, "There never yet was
+done a champion-feat by a man of Erin, that one
+among us will not do likewise."</p>
+
+<p>And he leaped up, intending to alight on his feet;
+but he came down heavily on the sharp edge, so that
+the sword cut him clean in two. Another tried the
+same, and was killed also; and, they ceased not till as
+many were killed that day by Dermat's sword as were
+killed on each of the two days before.</p>
+
+<p>When they were about to return to their ships,
+they asked him had he got any tidings of Dermat
+O'Dyna; and he answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen him this day: I will now go to seek<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+him, and methinks I shall bring him to you in the
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>Then he returned to the cave; and he and Grania
+ate their meal, and slept that night, while Modan kept
+watch.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, Dermat arose with the dawn, and
+this time he arrayed himself for battle. He put on
+his heavy armour&mdash;no man who wore it could be
+wounded through it, or above it, or beneath it. He
+hung the Morallta at his left hip, the sword of Angus
+of the Bruga, which never left anything for a second
+blow; and he took his two thick-handled spears, the
+Ga-derg and the Ga-boi, whose wounds no one ever
+recovered.</p>
+
+<p>Then he awakened Grania, telling her to keep
+watch till he returned, that Modan might sleep. And
+when she saw him so arrayed, she trembled with fear,
+for she well knew that this was his manner of preparing
+for battle. And she asked him what he meant
+to do to-day, and whether Finn's pursuers had found
+them. But he, to quiet her fears, put off the matter
+lightly, and said, "It is better to be prepared, lest the
+enemy come in my way;" and this soothed her.</p>
+
+<p>So he went to the hill, and met the strangers on
+the shore as before. And they asked him had he any
+tidings to give them of Dermat O'Dyna.</p>
+
+<p>He answered, "He is not very far off, for I have
+seen him just now."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said they, "lead us to his hiding-place, that
+we may bring his head to Finn the son of Cumal."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That would, indeed, be an ill way of repaying
+friendship," answered he. "Dermat O'Dyna is my
+friend; and he is now under the protection of my
+valour: so of this be sure, I will do him no
+treachery."</p>
+
+<p>And they replied wrathfully, "If thou art a friend
+to Dermat O'Dyna, thou art a foe to Finn; and now
+we will take thy head and bring it to him along with
+the head of Dermat."</p>
+
+<p>"You might indeed do that with much ease,"
+answered Dermat, "if I were bound hand and foot;
+but being as I am, free, I shall defend myself after my
+usual custom."</p>
+
+<p>Then he drew the Morallta from its sheath, and,
+springing forward to meet them as they closed on him,
+he clove the body of the foremost in two with one
+blow. Then he rushed through them and under them
+and over them, like a wolf among sheep, or a hawk
+among sparrows, cleaving and slaughtering them, till
+only a few were left, who hardly escaped to their ships.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_VI" id="FCHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">WHAT BEFELL THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR
+THREE VENOMOUS HOUNDS.</p>
+
+
+<p>After this Dermat returned to the cave without
+wound or hurt; and he and Grania ate and slept, and
+Modan watched till morning. Then he repaired to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
+hill, fully armed as before, and standing right over the
+ships, he struck his hollow-sounding shield<a name="FNanchor_CXIX._147" id="FNanchor_CXIX._147"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXIX._147" class="fnanchor">[CXIX.]</a> with his
+spear for a challenge, till the whole shore and the surrounding
+hills re-echoed. And Ducoss straightway
+armed himself and came ashore to fight Dermat single
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Now Dermat by no means wished to slay his foe
+immediately, being, indeed, intent on worse punishment.
+So he closed with Ducoss; and the two champions,
+throwing aside their weapons, seized each other round
+the waists with their sinewy arms. Then they twisted
+and tugged and wrestled in deadly silence; and their
+swollen sinews strained and crackled; and the earth
+trembled beneath their feet; like two great writhing
+serpents, or like two raging lions, or like two savage
+bulls that strive and struggle to heave each other with
+horns interlocked. Thus did the heroes contend; till
+at last Dermat, heaving Ducoss on his shoulder, dashed
+him helpless and groaning to the ground; and instantly
+seizing him, he bound him in hard iron bonds.</p>
+
+<p>Fincoss came next against Dermat, and after him
+Trencoss; but he overcame them both, and bound them
+with like bonds; and then, leaving the three writhing
+with pain, he said to them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I would strike off your heads, but that I wish to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+prolong your torment; for none can release you from
+these bonds till you die!"</p>
+
+<p>Dermat then returned to the cave; and he and
+Grania ate their meal and slept that night, Modan
+watching. In the morning, Dermat told Grania all
+that had happened from beginning to end; how fifty
+of the foreigners had been killed each day for the first
+three days; how he had slain a much greater number
+on the fourth day; and how he had overcome and
+bound the three sea-champions in hard iron bonds.</p>
+
+<p>"I have left them bound on the hill," continued
+he, "instead of killing them; because I would rather
+their torment to be long than short. For there are
+only four men in Erin that can loosen the bonds I tie;
+that is to say, Oisin, and Oscar, and Mac Luga, and
+Conan Mail; and I think no one of these will free
+them. Finn will doubtless hear of their state, and the
+news will sting him to the heart. But he will know
+that we are here; so we must now leave this cave, to
+escape him, and also to escape the three venomous
+dogs."</p>
+
+<p>So they came forth from the cave, and travelled
+eastward till they came to the Grey Moor of Finnlia;
+and whenever Grania was tired, or when they had to
+walk over rugged places, Modan lifted her tenderly
+and carried her, without ever being in the least tired
+himself. And so they journeyed, till they reached the
+broad, heathery slopes of Slieve Lougher;<a name="FNanchor_CXX._148" id="FNanchor_CXX._148"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXX._148" class="fnanchor">[CXX.]</a> and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
+sat down to rest on the green bank of a stream that
+wound through the heart of the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Now as to the sea-strangers. Those of them that
+were left alive landed from their ships, and coming to
+the hill, found their three chiefs bound tightly, hand
+and foot and neck. And they tried to loose them, but
+only made their bonds the tighter. While they were
+so engaged, they saw Finn's errand-woman coming
+towards them, with the speed of a swallow, or of a
+weasel, or of the swift, cold wind blowing over a
+mountain-side. When she had come near, she greeted
+them, and, seeing the bodies of the slain, she asked
+who it was that had made that fearful slaughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us first," said they, "who art thou that
+makest this inquiry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am Derdri of the Black Mountain, the errand-woman
+of Finn the son of Cumal," she replied; "and
+he has sent me hither to look for you."</p>
+
+<p>And they said, "We know not who made this
+slaughter; but we can tell thee his appearance, for
+that we know well. He was a tall warrior, with a
+fair, handsome, open countenance, and jet-black, curly
+hair. He has been three days fighting against us;
+and what grieves us even more than the slaughter of
+our men is that our three chiefs lie here bound by
+him so firmly that we are not able to loose them from
+their bonds."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, friends!" said Derdri; "you have sped but
+badly at the very beginning of your quest; for this
+man was Dermat O'Dyna himself. And now loose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+your three venomous dogs on his track without delay;
+and I will return and send Finn to meet you."</p>
+
+<p>Then they brought forth the three hounds, and
+loosed them on the track of Dermat; and leaving one
+of their druids to attend to the three fettered chiefs,
+they followed the hounds till they came to the cave,
+where they found the soft, rushy bed of Dermat and
+Grania. From that they fared east, and crossing the
+Carra, and the Grey Moor of Finnlia, and the Laune,
+they reached at length the broad, heathy Slieve
+Lougher.</p>
+
+<p>As Dermat sat by the mountain stream with
+Grania and Modan, looking westward, he saw the
+silken banners of the foreigners at a distance as they
+approached the hill. In front of all marched three
+warriors with mantles of green, who held the three
+fierce hounds by three chains. And Dermat, when he
+saw the hounds, was filled with loathing and hatred
+of them. Then Modan lifted Grania, and walked a
+mile with Dermat up the stream into the heart of
+the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>When the green-clad warriors saw them, they
+loosed one of the three hounds; and when Grania
+heard his hoarse yelps down the valley, she was in
+great dread. But Modan bade her not fear, for that
+he would deal with this hound; and then, turning
+round, he drew forth from beneath his girdle a small
+hound-whelp, and placed it on the palm of his hand.
+There it stood till the great hound came up raging,
+with jaws wide open; when the little whelp leaped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
+from Modan's hand down the dog's throat, and broke
+his heart, so that he fell dead. And after that the
+whelp leaped back again on Modan's hand; and Modan
+put him under his girdle.</p>
+
+<p>Then they walked another mile up the stream
+through the mountain, Modan bringing Grania. But
+the second hound was loosed, and soon overtook them;
+and Dermat said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will try the Ga-derg on this hound. For no
+spell can guard against the magic spear of Angus of
+the Bruga; and I have heard it said also that there
+is no charm that can shield the throat of an animal
+from being wounded."</p>
+
+<p>Then, while Modan and Grania stood to look,
+Dermat, putting his finger into the silken loop of the
+spear, threw a cast, and drove the spear-head down
+the hound's throat, so that the entrails of the brute
+were scattered about; and Dermat, leaping forward,
+drew the spear, and followed Modan and Grania.</p>
+
+<p>After they had walked yet another mile, the third
+hound was loosed; and Grania, seeing him coming on,
+said, trembling&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is the fiercest of the three, and I greatly fear
+him; guard yourself, Dermat, guard yourself well
+against this hound!"</p>
+
+<p>Even while she spoke, the hound overtook them
+at the place called Duban's Pillar-stone; and as they
+stood looking back at him, Dermat stepped in front
+of Grania to shield her. The hound rose with a great
+spring over Dermat's head to seize Grania; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
+Dermat grasped him by the two hind legs as he
+passed, and, swinging him round, he struck his carcase
+against a rock and dashed out his brains.</p>
+
+<p>Then, putting his tapering finger into the silken
+string of the Ga-derg, he threw the spear at the foremost
+of the green-clad knights, and slew him. He
+made another cast of the Ga-boi and brought down
+the second warrior; and, drawing the Morallta, he
+sprang on the third, and swept off his head.</p>
+
+<p>When the foreigners saw their leaders slain, they
+fled hither and thither in utter rout. And Dermat
+fell upon them with sword and spear, scattering and
+slaughtering them, so that there seemed no escape for
+them, unless, indeed, they could fly over the tops of
+the trees, or hide themselves under the earth, or dive
+beneath the water. And when Derdri of the Black
+Mountain saw this havoc, she ran, panic-stricken and
+crazed with fright, off the field towards the hill where
+the three kings lay bound.</p>
+
+<p>Now as to Finn. Tidings were brought to him of
+what happened to the three sea-kings, and how they
+were lying bound in hard bonds on the hill over Tonn-Toma.
+So he set out straightway from Allen, and
+travelled by the shortest ways till he reached the hill.
+And when he saw the three champions, he was grieved
+to the heart; for he knew of old that the iron fetters
+bound by Dermat slew by slow torment, and that
+none could loose them except Oisin, or Oscar, or Mac
+Luga, or Conan Mail.</p>
+
+<p>And Finn asked Oisin to loose the bonds and
+relieve the kings.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I cannot do so," answered Oisin, "for Dermat
+bound me under gesa<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> never to loose any warrior
+that he should bind."</p>
+
+<p>He next asked Oscar; but the young warrior
+answered, "None shall be released by me who seeks to
+harm Dermat O'Dyna. Fain would I indeed put
+heavier bonds on them."</p>
+
+<p>And when he asked Mac Luga and Conan, they
+refused in like manner.</p>
+
+<p>Now while they were speaking in this wise, they
+saw the errand-woman, Derdri of the Black Mountain,
+running towards them, breathless and with failing
+steps, and her eyes starting from the sockets with
+terror. And Finn asked her what tidings she had
+brought.</p>
+
+<p>"Tidings indeed, O king, tidings of grievous
+mishap and woe!" Whereupon she told him all that
+she had seen&mdash;how Dermat O'Dyna had killed the
+three fierce hounds, and had made a slaughter of the
+foreigners. "And hardly, indeed," she cried, "hardly
+have I myself got off scathless with the news!"</p>
+
+<p>The three kings, hearing this, and being worn out
+with the straitness and torment of their bonds, died at
+the same moment. And Finn caused them to be
+buried in three wide graves; and flagstones were
+placed over them with their names graved in Ogam;<a name="FNanchor_CXXI._149" id="FNanchor_CXXI._149"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXI._149" class="fnanchor">[CXXI.]</a>
+and their funeral rites were performed. Then, with
+heart full of grief and gall, Finn marched northwards
+with his men to Allen of the green hill-slopes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_VII" id="FCHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">SHARVAN, THE SURLY GIANT, AND THE FAIRY QUICKEN
+TREE OF DOOROS.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now touching Dermat and Grania. They travelled
+eastward from Slieve Lougher, through Hy Conall
+Gavra, keeping the Shannon on their left, till they
+reached the Wood of the two Sallow Trees, which is
+now called Limerick. Here they rested; and Dermat
+killed a wild deer, and they ate of its flesh, and drank
+pure spring water, and slept that night. Next morning
+Modan bade them farewell, and left them. And
+Dermat and Grania were sad after him, for he was very
+gentle, and had served them faithfully.</p>
+
+<p>On that same day they departed from the Wood of
+the two Sallows; and nothing is related of what befell
+them till they arrived at the Forest of Dooros, in the
+district of Hy Ficra<a name="FNanchor_CXXII._150" id="FNanchor_CXXII._150"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXII._150" class="fnanchor">[CXXII.]</a> of the Moy, which was at that
+time guarded by Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann.</p>
+
+<p>Now this is the history of Sharvan the Surly, of
+Lochlann. On a certain occasion, a game of hurley
+was played by the Dedannans against the Fena, on the
+plain beside the Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth.<a name="FNanchor_CXXIII._151" id="FNanchor_CXXIII._151"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXIII._151" class="fnanchor">[CXXIII.]</a>
+They played for three days and three nights, neither
+side being able to win a single goal from the other
+during the whole time. And when the Dedannans<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+found that they could not overcome the Fena, they
+suddenly withdrew from the contest, and departed
+from the lake, journeying in a body northwards.</p>
+
+<p>The Dedannans had for food during the game, and
+for their journey afterwards, crimson nuts and arbutus
+apples and scarlet quicken berries, which they had
+brought from the Land of Promise.<a name="FNanchor_CXXIV._152" id="FNanchor_CXXIV._152"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXIV._152" class="fnanchor">[CXXIV.]</a> These fruits
+were gifted with many secret virtues; and the Dedannans
+were careful that neither apple nor nut nor
+berry should touch the soil of Erin. But as they
+passed through the Wood of Dooros, in Hy Ficra of
+the Moy, one of the scarlet quicken berries dropped on
+the earth; and the Dedannans passed on, not heeding.</p>
+
+<p>From this berry a great quicken tree<a name="FNanchor_CXXV._153" id="FNanchor_CXXV._153"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXV._153" class="fnanchor">[CXXV.]</a> sprang up,
+which had the virtues of the quicken trees that grow
+in Fairyland. For its berries had the taste of honey,
+and those who ate of them felt a cheerful flow of
+spirits, as if they had drunk of wine or old mead; and
+if a man were even a hundred years old, he returned
+to the age of thirty, as soon as he had eaten three of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Now when the Dedannans heard of this tree, and
+knew of its many virtues, they would not that any
+one should eat of the berries but themselves; and they
+sent a Fomor<a name="FNanchor_CXXVI._154" id="FNanchor_CXXVI._154"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXVI._154" class="fnanchor">[CXXVI.]</a> of their own people to guard it, namely,
+Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann; so that no man dared
+even to approach it. For this Sharvan was a giant of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+the race of the wicked Cain, burly and strong; with
+heavy bones, large, thick nose, crooked teeth, and one
+broad, red, fiery eye in the middle of his black forehead.
+And he had a great club tied by a chain to an iron
+girdle which was round his body. He was, moreover,
+so skilled in magic that fire could not burn him, water
+could not drown him, and weapons could not wound
+him; and there was no way to kill him but by giving
+him three blows of his own club. By day he sat at
+the foot of the tree, watching; and at night he slept
+in a hut he had made for himself, high up among the
+branches.</p>
+
+<p>Into this land Dermat came, knowing well that he
+should be safe there from the pursuit of Finn. For
+Sharvan did not let any of the Fena hunt in Hy Ficra.
+And neither they nor any others dared to come near
+the great Wood of Dooros, for dread of the giant; so
+that the land around the quicken tree for many miles
+was a wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat, leaving Grania behind in safe shelter, went
+boldly to the giant, where he sat at the foot of the
+tree, and told him he wished to live amidst the woods
+of Hy Ficra, and chase its wild animals for food.
+Whereupon the giant, bending his red eye on him, told
+him, in words few and surly, that he might live and
+hunt where he pleased, as long as he did not take
+and eat the berries of the quicken tree.</p>
+
+<p>So Dermat built him a hunting-booth near a spring,
+in the thick of the Forest of Dooros; and, clearing a
+space all round, fenced it with strong stakes interwoven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
+with tough withes, leaving one narrow door
+well barred and secured. And they lived in peace for
+a time, eating the flesh of the wild animals of Dooros,
+which Dermat brought down each day in the chase,
+and drinking the water of the well.</p>
+
+<p>Now let us speak of Finn, the son of Cumal. One
+day, soon after his return to Allen, as he and his
+household troops were on the exercise green before the
+palace, a company of fifty horsemen were seen approaching
+from the east, led by two taller and nobler
+looking than the others. Having come near, they
+bowed low and greeted the king; and when he asked
+them who they were, and from whence they had come,
+they answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We are enemies of thine, who now desire to make
+peace; and our names are Angus, the son of Art Mac
+Morna, and Aed, the son of Andala Mac Morna. Our
+fathers were present at the battle of Knocka,<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> aiding
+those who fought against thy father, Cumal, when he
+was slain; for which thou didst afterwards slay them
+both, and didst outlaw us, their sons, though indeed
+we were blameless in the matter, seeing that we were
+not born till after the death of Cumal. However, we
+have come now to ask this boon of thee: that thou
+make peace with us, and give us the places our fathers
+held in the ranks of the Fena."</p>
+
+<p>"I will grant your request," answered Finn, "provided
+you pay me eric for the death of my father."</p>
+
+<p>"We would indeed pay thee eric willingly if we
+could," answered they; "but we have neither gold,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
+nor silver, nor cattle, nor wealth of any kind to
+give."</p>
+
+<p>And then Oisin spoke and said, "Ask them not for
+eric, O king; surely the death of their fathers should
+be eric enough."</p>
+
+<p>But Finn replied, "Of a truth, I think, Oisin, that
+if any one should slay me, it would not be hard to
+satisfy you in the matter of an eric. But, indeed, none
+of those who fought at Knocka against my father, and
+none of their sons, shall ever get peace from me, or join
+the Fena, without such eric as I demand."</p>
+
+<p>Then Angus, one of the two, asked, "What eric
+dost thou require, O king?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ask only one or the other of two things,"
+answered Finn; "namely, the head of a warrior, or
+the full of my hand of the berries of a quicken tree."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give you counsel, ye sons of Morna, that
+will stand you in good stead, if you follow it," said
+Oisin, addressing the two strange chiefs; "and my
+counsel is, that you return to the place from whence
+you came, and seek this peace no longer. Know that
+the head the king seeks from you is the head of
+Dermat O'Dyna, the most dangerous of all the Fena to
+meddle with, who is well able to defend himself, even
+if you were twenty times as many as you are; and
+who will certainly take your heads if you attempt to
+take his. Know also that the berries Finn seeks from
+you are the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros.
+And it is hard to say if this be not a more perilous
+quest than the other; for the quicken tree belongs to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+the Dedannans, who have sent Sharvan, the surly
+giant of Lochlann, to guard it day and night."</p>
+
+<p>But the two chiefs, unmoved by what they had
+heard from Oisin, said that they would rather perish
+in seeking out the eric than return to their mother's
+country. So, leaving their people in the care of Oisin,
+they set out on their quest. They travelled through
+the Wood of the two Sallows, and from that to Dooros
+of the Moy, where they found the track of Dermat
+and Grania, and followed it till they came to the
+hunting-booth. Dermat heard their voices and footsteps
+outside, and, snatching up his weapons, went to
+the door and asked who was there.</p>
+
+<p>"We are Aed, the son of Andala Mac Morna, and
+Angus, the son of Art Mac Morna," they replied. "We
+have come hither from Allen of Leinster, to get either
+the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or a handful of the
+berries of the quicken tree of Dooros; for Finn, the
+son of Cumal, has demanded of us that we bring him
+either the one or the other, as an eric for the killing
+of his father."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat laughed when he heard this, and said,
+"Truly this is not pleasant news for me to hear, for
+I am Dermat O'Dyna. But however, friends, I am
+not willing to give you my head, and you will find it
+no easy matter to take it. And as for the berries,
+these are quite as hard to get; for you will have to
+fight the surly giant Sharvan, who cannot be burned
+with fire, or drowned with water, or wounded with
+weapons. But woe to the man who falls under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
+power of Finn, the son of Cumal. And you have come,
+methinks, on a bootless quest; for even if you should
+be able to bring him either of the two things he asks
+for, he will not grant you the place or the rank ye
+seek after all. And now," asked Dermat, "which of
+the two do ye wish to strive for first, my head or the
+quicken berries?"</p>
+
+<p>And they answered, "We will do battle with thee
+first."</p>
+
+<p>So Dermat opened the door, and they made ready
+for the combat. Now this is the manner in which
+they agreed to fight: to throw aside their weapons,
+and to use the strength of their hands alone. And if
+the sons of Morna were able to overcome Dermat, they
+should take his head to Finn; but if, on the other
+hand, they were overpowered and bound by Dermat,
+their heads should be in like manner forfeit to him.
+But the fight was, indeed, a short one; for these two
+chiefs were even as children in Dermat's hands, and
+he bound them in close and bitter bonds.</p>
+
+<p>Now when Grania heard of the berries of the
+quicken tree, she was seized with a longing desire to
+taste them. At first she strove against it and was
+silent, knowing the danger; but now she was not able
+to hide it any longer, and she told Dermat that she
+should certainly die if she did not get some of the
+berries to eat. This troubled Dermat, for he did not
+wish to quarrel with the giant Sharvan; but, seeing
+that harm might come to Grania if she did not get the
+berries, he told her he would go and get some for her,
+either by good will or by force.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the sons of Morna heard this, they said,
+"Loose these bonds, and we will go with thee and help
+thee to fight the giant."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat answered, "Not much help, indeed,
+could ye give me, as I think, for the mere sight of this
+giant would be enough to unman you. But even were
+it otherwise, I would not seek your help, for if I fight
+at all I shall fight unaided."</p>
+
+<p>And they said, "Even so, let us go. Our lives are
+now forfeit to thee, but grant us this request before we
+die, to let us see thee fight this giant."</p>
+
+<p>And he consented to this.</p>
+
+<p>So Dermat went straightway to the quicken tree,
+followed by the two sons of Morna; and he found the
+giant lying asleep at the foot of the tree. He dealt
+him a heavy blow to awaken him, and the giant,
+raising his head, glared at him with his great red eye,
+and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There has been peace between us hitherto; do
+you now wish for strife?"</p>
+
+<p>"I seek not strife," answered Dermat; "but the
+Princess Grania, my wife, the daughter of king
+Cormac Mac Art, longs to taste of these quicken
+berries; and if she does not get them she will die.
+This is why I have come; and now I pray you give
+me a few of the berries for the princess."</p>
+
+<p>But the giant answered, "I swear that if the
+princess and her child were now dying, and that one
+of my berries would save them, I would not give it!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat said, "I do not wish to deal unfairly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+with you; and I have accordingly awakened you from
+your sleep, and made my request openly, wishing for
+peace. But now understand that before I leave this
+spot, I will have some of these quicken berries, whether
+you will or no."</p>
+
+<p>When the giant heard this, he rose up, and, seizing
+his club, dealt Dermat three great blows, which the
+hero had much ado to ward off; nor did he escape
+without some hurt, even though his shield was tough
+and his arm strong. But now, watching narrowly,
+and seeing that the giant expected to be attacked with
+sword and spear, he suddenly threw down his weapons
+and sprang upon him, taking him unguarded. He
+threw his arms round his body, and, heaving him
+with his shoulder, hurled him with mighty shock to
+the earth; and then, seizing the heavy club, he dealt
+him three blows, dashing out his brains with the
+last.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat sat down to rest, weary and breathless.
+And the sons of Morna, having witnessed the fight
+from beginning to end, came forth rejoiced when they
+saw the giant slain. Dermat told them to drag the
+body into the wood and bury it out of sight, lest
+Grania might see it and be affrighted; and when they
+had done so, he sent them for the princess. When she
+had come, Dermat said to her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Behold the quicken berries, Grania: take now
+and eat."</p>
+
+<p>But she answered, "I will eat no berries except
+those that are plucked by the hands of my husband."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So Dermat stood up and plucked the berries; and
+Grania ate till she was satisfied. And he also plucked
+some for the sons of Morna, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Take these berries now, friends, as much as you
+please, and pay your eric to Finn; and you may, if
+you are so minded, tell him that it was you who slew
+Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann."</p>
+
+<p>They answered, "We will bring to Finn as much
+as he demanded, one handful and no more; and we
+grudge even so much."</p>
+
+<p>Then they thanked Dermat very much; for he
+had given them the berries, what they should never
+have been able to get for themselves; and though
+their lives were forfeit to him, he had not so much as
+mentioned the matter, but had allowed them to return
+freely. And after bidding Dermat and Grania farewell,
+they went their ways.</p>
+
+<p>After that Dermat left his hunting-booth, and he
+and Grania lived thenceforth in Sharvan's hut among
+the branches. And they found the berries on the top
+of the tree the most delicious of all; those on the
+lower branches being as it were bitter in comparison.</p>
+
+<p>When the sons of Morna reached Allen, Finn
+asked them how they had fared, and whether they
+had brought him the eric: and they answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann, is slain; and
+here we have brought thee the berries of the quicken
+tree of Dooros as eric for the death of thy father,
+Cumal, that we may have peace from thee, and be
+placed in our due rank among the Fena."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Finn took the berries and knew them; and he
+smelled them three times, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"These, indeed, are the berries of the quicken tree
+of Dooros; but they have passed through the hands of
+Dermat O'Dyna, for I smell his touch. And sure I
+am that it was Dermat, and not you, who slew
+Sharvan, the surly giant. It shall profit you nothing,
+indeed, to have brought me these berries; neither will
+you get from me the peace you seek, nor your place
+among the Fena, till you pay me fair eric for my
+father's death. For you have gotten the berries not
+by your own strength; and you have, besides, made
+peace with my enemy. And now I shall go to the
+Wood of Dooros, to learn if Dermat abides near the
+quicken tree."</p>
+
+<p>After this he gathered together the choice men
+of the seven battalions of the Fena, and marched with
+them to Dooros of Hy Ficra. They followed Dermat's
+track to the foot of the quicken tree, and found the
+berries without any one to guard them; and they ate
+of them as much as they pleased.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was noon when they had come to the
+tree; and the sun shone hot, and Finn said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We shall rest under this tree till evening come,
+and the heat pass away; for well I know that Dermat
+O'Dyna is on the tree among the branches."</p>
+
+<p>And Oisin said, "Truly your mind must be
+blinded by jealousy, if you think that Dermat O'Dyna
+has waited for you on that tree, since he knows well
+that you seek his head."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Finn answered nothing to this speech, but called
+for a chess-board and men.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> And he and Oisin sat
+down to a game; while Oscar and Mac Luga and
+Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, sat near Oisin
+to advise him; for Finn played against them all.
+They played on for a time warily and skilfully, till
+at last Oisin had only one move to make; and Finn
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"One move more would win you the game, Oisin,
+but I challenge all your helpers to show you that
+move." And Oisin was puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat had been viewing the game from the
+beginning, where he sat among the branches; and he
+said, speaking to himself&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Pity that you should be in a strait, Oisin, and I
+not near to advise your move."</p>
+
+<p>Grania, sitting near, overheard him, and said, "It
+is a small matter whether Oisin win or lose a game;
+far worse is it for you to be in this hut, while the
+men of the seven battalions of the Fena are round
+about you, waiting to kill you."</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat, not giving heed to Grania's words,
+plucked a berry, and, flinging it down with true aim,
+struck Oisin's chess-man&mdash;the man that should be
+moved. And Oisin moved the man, and won the
+game against Finn.</p>
+
+<p>The game was begun again, and it went on till it
+came to the same pass as before, Oisin having to make
+only one move to win, but that move hard to make
+out. And again Dermat threw a berry and struck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+the right man; and Oisin made the move, and won
+the game.</p>
+
+<p>A third time the game went on, and Dermat struck
+the chess-man as before; and Oisin won the game the
+third time. Whereupon the Fena raised a mighty shout.</p>
+
+<p>"I marvel not that you should win the game,
+Oisin," said Finn, "seeing that you have the best
+help of Oscar, and the zeal of Dering, and the skill
+of Mac Luga; and that, along with all, you have been
+prompted by Dermat O'Dyna."</p>
+
+<p>"It shows a mind clouded by great jealousy," said
+Oscar, "that you should think that Dermat O'Dyna
+is in that tree waiting for you to kill him."</p>
+
+<p>"Which of us tells truth, Dermat," said Finn,
+looking up, "Oscar or I?"</p>
+
+<p>"You, Finn, have never yet erred in your judgment,"
+answered Dermat from the tree; "for indeed
+I am here with the princess Grania, in the hut of
+Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann."</p>
+
+<p>And, looking up, Finn and the others saw them
+plainly through an opening in the branches.</p>
+
+<p>But now Grania, seeing the danger, began to
+tremble with great fear, and to weep; and Dermat,
+taking pity on her, comforted her and kissed her
+three times.</p>
+
+<p>And Finn, seeing this, said, "Much more than this
+did it grieve me the night you espoused Grania, and
+brought her away from Tara before all the men of
+Erin; but even for these kisses you shall certainly
+pay quittance with your head!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Finn, being now bent on killing
+Dermat, arose, and ordered his hirelings to surround
+the tree, catching hand in hand, so as to leave no gap;
+and he warned them, on pain of death, not to let
+Dermat pass out. Having done this, he offered a suit
+of armour and arms, and a high place of honour among
+the Fena, to any man who would go up into the tree,
+and either bring him the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or
+force him to come down.</p>
+
+<p>Garva of Slieve Cua<a name="FNanchor_CXXVII._155" id="FNanchor_CXXVII._155"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXVII._155" class="fnanchor">[CXXVII.]</a> started up and said, "Lo,
+I am the man! For it was Dermat's father, Donn,
+that slew my father; and I will now avenge the deed."</p>
+
+<p>And he went up the tree.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was revealed to Angus of the Bruga that
+Dermat was in deadly strait; and he came to the tree
+to his aid, without the knowledge of the Fena; and
+Dermat and Grania were filled with joy when they
+saw the old man.</p>
+
+<p>And when Garva, climbing from branch to branch,
+had come near the hut, Dermat dealt him a blow with
+his foot, which dashed him to the ground among the
+Fena. And Finn's hirelings cut off his head on the
+spot, for Angus had caused him to take the shape of
+Dermat; but after he was slain he took his own
+shape, so that all knew that it was Garva of Slieve
+Cua that had been killed.</p>
+
+<p>Then Garva of Slieve Crot<a name="FNanchor_CXXVIII._156" id="FNanchor_CXXVIII._156"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXVIII._156" class="fnanchor">[CXXVIII.]</a> said, "It was Dermat's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+father, Donn, that slew my father; and I will
+now avenge the deed on Dermat."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he went up the tree. But Angus gave
+him a blow which hurled him to the ground under
+the shape of Dermat, so that the hirelings fell on him
+and slew him. And then Finn told them that it was
+not Dermat they had killed, but Garva of Slieve Cua.</p>
+
+<p>Garva of Slieve Gora<a name="FNanchor_CXXIX._157" id="FNanchor_CXXIX._157"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXIX._157" class="fnanchor">[CXXIX.]</a> next started up, and said
+that his father had been slain by Dermat's father; and
+he began to climb up the tree to take Dermat's head
+in revenge. But Dermat flung him down like the
+others, while Angus gave him for the time the shape
+of Dermat, so that the hirelings slew him.</p>
+
+<p>And so matters went on till the nine Garvas had
+fallen; namely, Garva of Slieve Cua, Garva of Slieve
+Crot, Garva of Slieve Gora, Garva of Slieve Mucka,<a name="FNanchor_CXXX._158" id="FNanchor_CXXX._158"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXX._158" class="fnanchor">[CXXX.]</a>
+Garva of Slieve-more, Garva of Slieve Luga, Garva
+of Ath-free, Garva of Slieve Mish, and Garva of
+Drom-more. And full of grief and bitterness was the
+heart of Finn, witnessing this.</p>
+
+<p>Then Angus said he would take Grania away from
+that place of danger. And Dermat was glad, and
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Take her with thee; and if I live till evening I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
+will follow you. But if Finn slays me, send her to
+Tara to her father, and tell him to use her well."</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat kissed his dear wife; and Angus,
+having thrown his mantle round her, passed out from
+the tree without the knowledge of the Fena, and went
+straightway to Bruga of the Boyne.</p>
+
+<p>After Angus and Grania had gone, Dermat,
+addressing Finn from the tree, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will now go down from this tree; and I will
+slaughter many of thy hirelings before they slay me.
+For I see that thou art resolved to compass my death;
+and why should I fear to die now more than at a
+future time? There is, indeed, no escape for me, even
+should I pass from this place unharmed; since I can
+find no shelter in Erin from thy wrath. Neither have
+I a friend in the far-off countries of this great world
+to give me protection, seeing that I have from time to
+time dealt defeat and slaughter among them, every
+one, for thy sake. For never have the Fena been
+caught in any strait or danger, that I did not venture
+my life for them and for thee. When we went to
+battle, moreover, I was always in front of you; and I
+was always behind you when leaving the field. And
+now I care no longer to seek to prolong my life; but
+of a certainty thou shalt purchase my death dearly,
+for I shall avenge myself by dealing destruction
+among thy hirelings."</p>
+
+<p>"Dermat speaks truly," said Oscar; "and now let
+him have mercy and forgiveness; for he has suffered
+enough already."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I swear that I will never grant him peace or
+forgiveness to the end of my life," answered Finn,
+"till he has given me the eric I seek from him for the
+injury he has done me; that is to say, his head."</p>
+
+<p>"Shame it is to hear thee say so, and a sure mark
+of jealousy," answered Oscar. "And now I take the
+body and life of Dermat under the protection of my
+knighthood and valour; and I pledge the word of a
+true champion, that sooner shall the firmament fall on
+me, or the earth open up and swallow me, than that
+I shall let any man harm Dermat O'Dyna!"</p>
+
+<p>Then, looking upwards, he said, "Come down now,
+Dermat, and thou shalt certainly go in safety from
+this place; for as long as I am alive, no man will dare
+to offer thee hurt!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Dermat, choosing that side of the tree where
+the men stood nearest to the trunk, walked along a
+thick branch unseen, and, leaning on the shafts of his
+spears, he sprang forward and downward with a light,
+airy bound, and alighted outside the circle of those
+who stood round with joined hands; and in a moment
+he was beyond the reach of sword and spear. And
+Oscar joined him, looking back threateningly, so that
+no man of Finn's hirelings durst follow.</p>
+
+<p>So the two heroes fared on together, crossing the
+Shannon; and nothing is told of what befell them till
+they reached Bruga of the Boyne, where they met
+Angus and Grania. And Grania was almost beside
+herself with joy when she saw Dermat without wound
+or hurt of any kind. And the two champions were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
+welcomed by Angus; and Dermat related to him and
+Grania the whole story, how he had escaped from
+Finn and his hirelings, Oscar helping. And as Grania
+listened, her spirit almost left her, at the deadly
+peril Dermat had passed through.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_VIII" id="FCHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ATTACK OF THE WITCH-HAG.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now as regards Finn. After the departure of Dermat
+and Oscar, his heart was filled with anger and bitterness,
+and he vowed he would never rest till he had
+revenged himself on Dermat. And, leaving the Wood
+of Dooros, he marched eastward till he reached Allen.
+Making no delay, he ordered his trusted servants to
+make ready his best ship, and to put therein food and
+drink for a voyage. Then going on board, he put out
+to sea; and nothing is told of him till he reached the
+Land of Promise,<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> where his old nurse lived.</p>
+
+<p>When he appeared before her, she gave him a joyful
+welcome. And after he had eaten and drunk, she
+asked him the cause of his journey, knowing that
+some weighty matter had brought him thither. So he
+told her the whole story of what Dermat O'Dyna had
+done against him; and said that he had come to seek
+counsel from her how he should act. "For," he said,
+"no strength or cunning of men can compass his death;
+magic alone can overmatch him."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the old woman told him that she would go
+with him next day and work magic against Dermat.
+Whereupon Finn was much rejoiced, and they rested
+that night.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, they set out, Finn and his people and
+his nurse; and it is not told how they fared till they
+reached Bruga of the Boyne. And the men of Erin
+knew not that they had come thither, for the witch-hag
+threw a druidical mist round them, so that no
+man might see them.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced that Dermat hunted that day in the
+forest, alone; for Oscar had gone from Bruga the day
+before. When this was known to the witch-hag, she
+caused herself to fly into the air by magic, on a water-lily,
+having by her spells turned the pale flat leaf
+into a broad millstone with a hole in the middle.
+And, rising over the tops of the trees, she floated on
+the clear, cold wind, till she had come straight over
+the hero. Then, standing on the flat millstone, she
+began to aim deadly poisoned darts at him through
+the hole. And no distress Dermat ever suffered could
+compare with this; for the darts stung him even
+through his shield and armour, the witch having
+breathed venomous spells on them.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing at last that there was no escape from
+death unless he could slay the witch-hag, he seized
+the Ga-derg, and, leaning backwards, flung it with
+sure aim at the millstone, so that it went right
+through the hole, and pierced the hag; and she fell
+dead at Dermat's feet. Then he beheaded her, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
+brought the head to Angus of the Bruga; and he
+related to him and to Grania how he had escaped that
+great danger.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_IX" id="FCHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">PEACE AND REST AT LAST.</p>
+
+
+<p>Angus arose next morning, and, going to Finn, asked
+him whether he would make peace with Dermat.
+Finn, seeing that he was worsted in every attempt
+against the hero, and that moreover he had lost his
+nurse and many of his men, told Angus that he was
+weary of the quarrel, and that he was fain to make
+peace on whatever terms Dermat should choose.</p>
+
+<p>He next went to Tara to the king, Cormac, the
+grandson of Conn. Him he asked in like manner
+whether he was willing to grant Dermat peace and
+forgiveness; and Cormac answered that he was quite
+willing.</p>
+
+<p>Then he came to Dermat and said, "Peace is better
+for thee: art thou willing now to be at peace with
+Finn and Cormac?"</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat answered, "Gladly will I make peace,
+if they grant me such conditions as befit a champion
+and the husband of the princess Grania."</p>
+
+<p>And when Angus asked what these conditions
+were, he answered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The cantred which my father had, that is to say,
+the cantred of O'Dyna,<a name="FNanchor_CXXXI._159" id="FNanchor_CXXXI._159"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXI._159" class="fnanchor">[CXXXI.]</a> without rent or tribute to the
+king of Erin; also the cantred of Ben-Damis,<a name="FNanchor_CXXXII._160" id="FNanchor_CXXXII._160"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXII._160" class="fnanchor">[CXXXII.]</a> namely,
+Ducarn of Leinster. These two to be granted to me
+by Finn; and he shall not hunt over them, nor any
+of his Fena, without my leave. And the king of
+Erin shall grant me the cantred of Kesh-Corran,<a name="FNanchor_CXXXIII._161" id="FNanchor_CXXXIII._161"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXIII._161" class="fnanchor">[CXXXIII.]</a> as
+a dowry with his daughter. On these conditions will
+I make peace."</p>
+
+<p>Angus went to Finn, and afterwards to the king,
+with these conditions. And they granted them, and
+forgave Dermat all he had done against them during
+the time he was outlawed. So they made peace.
+And Cormac gave his other daughter to Finn to wife.</p>
+
+<p>Dermat and Grania went to live in the cantred of
+Kesh-Corran, far away from Finn and Cormac; and
+they built a house for themselves, namely, Rath-Grania,
+in which they abode many years in peace.
+And Grania bore Dermat four sons and one daughter.
+And his possessions increased year by year, insomuch
+that people said that no man of his time was richer
+than Dermat, in gold and silver and jewels, in sheep,
+and in cattle-herds.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="FCHAPTER_X" id="FCHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE DEATH OF DERMAT.</p>
+
+
+<p>Now when many years had passed, Grania said one
+day to Dermat&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is surely a thing unworthy of us, seeing the
+greatness of our household and our wealth, and the
+number of our folk, that we should live in a manner
+so much removed from the world. And in a special
+manner it is unbecoming that the two most illustrious
+men in Erin have never been in our house, namely,
+my father the king, and Finn the son of Cumal."</p>
+
+<p>For indeed she had not seen her father since the
+night she had left Tara with Dermat, and her heart
+yearned for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Wherefore say you this, Grania?" answered
+Dermat; "for though there is indeed peace between
+us, they are both none the less enemies of mine; and
+for this reason have I removed my dwelling far apart
+from them."</p>
+
+<p>And Grania said, "Their enmity has surely
+softened with length of time: and now I would that
+you give them a feast: so shall we win back their
+friendship and love."</p>
+
+<p>And in an evil hour Dermat consented.</p>
+
+<p>For a full year were they preparing for that great
+feast, and when it was ready, messengers were sent to
+invite the king, with his house-folk, and Finn, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
+the chief men of the seven batallions of the Fena. So
+they came, with their attendants and followers, their
+horses and dogs; and they lived for a whole year in
+Rath-Grania, hunting and feasting.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced one night, at the end of the year, long
+after all had gone to rest, that Dermat heard, through
+the silence of the night, the distant yelping of a
+hound; and he started up from his sleep. But Grania,
+being scared, started up also, and, throwing her arms
+round him, asked him what he had seen.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard the voice of a hound," answered
+Dermat; "and I marvel much to hear it at midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"May all things guard thee from harm!" said
+Grania. "This is surely a trap laid for thee by the
+Dedannans, unknown to Angus of the Bruga: and now
+lie down on thy bed again."</p>
+
+<p>Dermat lay down, but did not sleep, and again he
+heard the hound's voice. He started up, and this time
+was fain to go and look to the matter; but Grania
+caught him and kept him back a second time, saying
+that it was not meet for him to seek a hound whose
+voice he heard in the night.</p>
+
+<p>A gentle slumber now fell on Dermat, and he slept
+through a good part of the night. But the yelping of
+the hound came a third time, and awakened him, so
+that he started up; and it being now broad day, he
+told Grania that he would go to seek the hound, and
+find out why he was abroad in the night.</p>
+
+<p>And though Grania consented, she felt, she knew
+not why, ill at ease; and she said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Bring with you the Morallta, the sword of
+Mannanan Mac Lir, and the Ga-derg,<a href="#Footnote_CXXXIV._162" class="fnanchor">[CXXXIV.]</a> Angus's spear;
+for there may be danger."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat, regarding the matter lightly, and
+forced by fate to the worse choice, answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"How can danger arise from such a small affair?
+I will bring the Begallta and the Ga-boi;<a name="FNanchor_CXXXIV._162" id="FNanchor_CXXXIV._162"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXIV._162" class="fnanchor">[CXXXIV.]</a> and I will
+also bring my good hound Mac-an-coill, leading him
+by his chain."</p>
+
+<p>So Dermat went forth, and he delayed not till he
+reached the summit of Ben-Gulban,<a name="FNanchor_CXXXV._163" id="FNanchor_CXXXV._163"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXV._163" class="fnanchor">[CXXXV.]</a> where he found
+Finn; and Dermat, offering him no salute, asked him
+who it was that held the chase. Finn answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Some of our men came out from Rath-Grania at
+midnight with their hounds; and one of the hounds
+coming across the track of a wild boar, both men and
+dogs have followed it up. I indeed would have held
+them back, but the men were eager, and left me here
+alone. For this is the track of the wild boar of
+Ben-Gulban, and they who follow him are bent on a
+vain and dangerous pursuit. Often has he been
+chased; and he has always escaped, after killing many
+men and dogs. Even now thou canst see in the
+distance that the Fena are flying before him; and he
+has slain several this morning. He is coming towards
+this hillock where we stand; and the sooner we get
+out of his way the better."</p>
+
+<p>But Dermat said he would not leave the hillock
+through fear of any wild boar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span></p><p>"It is not meet that thou shouldst tarry here,"
+answered Finn. "Dost thou not know that thou art
+under gesa<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> never to hunt a boar?"</p>
+
+<p>Dermat answered, "I know nothing of these gesa;
+wherefore were they placed on me?"</p>
+
+<p>And Finn said, "I will tell thee of this matter, for
+well do I remember it. When thou wert taken to
+Bruga of the Boyne, to be fostered by Angus, the son of
+Angus's steward was fostered with thee, that he might
+be a companion and playmate to thee. Now the
+steward, being a man of the common sort, agreed to
+send each day to Bruga, food and drink for nine men,
+as a price for having his son fostered with thee&mdash;thy
+father, Donn, being one of the nobles of the Fena.
+And thy father was accordingly permitted to visit the
+house of Angus when it pleased him, with eight
+companions, and claim the food sent by the steward;
+and when he did not come, it was to be given to
+Angus's house-folk.</p>
+
+<p>"It chanced on a certain day that I was at Allen
+of the broad hill-slopes, with the chief men of the
+seven battalions of the Fena. And Bran Beg O'Bucan
+brought to my mind, what indeed I had forgotten,
+that it was forbidden to me to sleep at Allen more
+than nine nights one after another, and that the next
+would be the tenth.</p>
+
+<p>"Now this restriction had not been placed on any
+of the Fena save myself, and they all went into the
+hall except thy father and a few others. Then I
+asked where we should get entertainment for that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
+night. And thy father, Donn, answered that he would
+give me entertainment at Bruga of the Boyne; where
+food and drink awaited himself and his companions
+whenever he visited Angus. Donn said, moreover,
+that he had not been to see his son for a year, and
+that we were sure to get a welcome.</p>
+
+<p>"So Donn and I and the few that were with us
+went to the house of Angus, bringing our hounds; and
+Angus welcomed us. And thou and the steward's son
+were there, two children. After a while we could see
+that Angus loved thee, Dermat, very much, but that
+the house-folk loved the son of the steward; and thy
+father was filled with jealousy, that the people should
+show fondness for him and not for thee.</p>
+
+<p>"After night had fallen, it chanced that our hounds
+quarrelled over some broken meat we had thrown to
+them, and began to fight in the court; and the women
+and lesser people fled from them hither and thither.
+The son of the steward happened to run between thy
+father's knees, who, calling now to mind how the
+people favoured him more than thee, gave him a sudden
+strong squeeze with his knees, and killed him on the
+spot. And, without being seen by any one, he threw
+him under the feet of the hounds.</p>
+
+<p>"When at last the dogs were put asunder, the child
+was found dead; and the steward uttered a long,
+mournful cry. Then he came to me and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Of all the men in Angus's house to-night, I
+have come worst out of this uproar; for this boy was
+my only child. And now, O Finn, I demand eric<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+from thee for his death; for thy hounds have slain
+him.'</p>
+
+<p>"I told him to examine the body of his son, and
+that if he found the mark of a hound's tooth or nail, I
+would give him eric. So the child was examined, but
+no hurt&mdash;either bite or scratch&mdash;was found on him.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the steward laid me under fearful bonds
+of druidical gesa,<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> to find out for him who slew his
+son. So I called for a chess-board and some water, and,
+having washed my hands, I put my thumb under my
+tooth of knowledge;<a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> and then it was revealed to
+me that the boy had been slain by thy father. Not
+wishing to make this known, I now offered to pay eric
+for the boy; but the steward refused, saying that he
+should know who killed his son. So I was forced to
+tell him: whereupon he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'It is easier for Donn to pay me eric than for any
+other man in this house. And the eric I demand is
+that his son be placed between my knees: if the lad
+gets off safe, then I shall follow up the matter no
+further.'</p>
+
+<p>"Angus was very wroth at this; and thy father
+would have struck off the steward's head if I had not
+come between and saved him.</p>
+
+<p>"The steward said no more, but went aside and
+brought forth a druidical magic wand, and, striking his
+son with it, he turned him into a great bristly wild
+boar, having neither ears nor tail. And, holding the
+wand aloft, he chanted this incantation over the
+boar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"By this magical wand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By the wizard's command,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I appoint and decree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Dermat and thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The same bitter strife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The same span of life:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the pride of his strength,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou shalt slay him at length:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Lo, Dermat O'Dyna<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Lies stretched in his gore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Behold my avengers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">The tusks of the boar!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And thus is decreed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Donn's cruel deed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sure vengeance to come&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His son's bloody doom;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By this wand in my hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By the wizard's command!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"The moment he had ended the incantation, the
+boar rushed out through the open door, and we knew
+not whither he betook himself.</p>
+
+<p>"When Angus heard the steward's words, he laid
+a command on thee never to hunt a wild boar, that so
+thou mightest avoid the doom foretold for thee.</p>
+
+<p>"That same boar is the wild boar of Binbulbin;
+and he is now rushing furiously towards us. Come,
+then, let us leave this hill at once, that we may avoid
+him in time!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing of these incantations and prohibitions,"
+replied Dermat; "or if, as thou sayest, they
+were put on me in my boyhood, I forget them all now.
+And neither for fear of this wild boar of Ben-Gulban
+nor of any other wild beast will I leave this hillock.
+But thou, before thou goest, leave me thy hound, Bran,
+to help and encourage my dog, Mac-an-coill."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I will not leave him," answered Finn; "for often
+has Bran chased this boar, and has always barely
+escaped with his life. And now I leave; for lo, here
+he comes over yonder hill-shoulder."</p>
+
+<p>So Finn went his ways, and left Dermat standing
+alone on the hill. And after he had left Dermat
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I fear me, indeed, that thou hast begun this chase
+hoping that it would lead to my death. But here will
+I await the event; for if I am fated to die in this spot,
+I cannot avoid the doom in store for me."</p>
+
+<p>Immediately the boar came rushing up the face of
+the hill, with the Fena following far behind. Dermat
+loosed Mac-an-coill against him, but to no profit;
+for the hound shied and fled before him at the first
+glance. Then Dermat said, communing with himself&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Woe to him who does not follow the advice of a
+good wife! For this morning Grania bade me bring
+the Morallta and the Ga-derg; but I brought instead
+the Begallta and the Ga-boi, disregarding her counsel."</p>
+
+<p>Then, putting his white taper finger into the silken
+loop of the Ga-boi, he threw it with careful aim, and
+struck the boar in the middle of the forehead; but to no
+purpose, for the spear fell harmless to the ground,
+having neither wounded nor scratched the boar, nor
+disturbed even a single bristle.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing this, Dermat, though indeed he knew not
+fear, felt his courage a little damped. And thereupon
+drawing the Begallta from its sheath, he dealt a blow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+on the boar's neck, with the full strength of his
+brawny arm. But neither did he fare better this
+time; for the sword flew in pieces, leaving the hilt in
+his hand, while not a bristle of the boar was harmed.</p>
+
+<p>And now the boar rushed on him as he stood
+defenceless, and with furious onset hurled him headlong
+to the earth; and, turning round, he gashed the
+hero's side with his tusk, inflicting a deep and ghastly
+wound. Turning again, he was about to renew the
+attack, when Dermat flung the hilt of the sword at
+him, and drove it through the skull to his brain, so
+that the brute fell dead on the spot.</p>
+
+<p>Finn and the Fena now came up, and found Dermat
+lying pale and bleeding, in the pangs of death. And
+Finn said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It likes me well, Dermat, to see thee in this
+plight; only I am grieved that all the women of Erin
+cannot see thee also. For now, indeed, the surpassing
+beauty of thy form, that they loved so well, is gone
+from thee, and thou art pale and deformed!"</p>
+
+<p>And Dermat answered, "Alas, O Finn! these words
+surely come from thy lips only, and not from thy heart.
+And indeed it is in thy power to heal me even now if
+thou wilt."</p>
+
+<p>"How should I heal thee?" asked Finn.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not hard for thee to do so," answered Dermat.
+"For when, at the Boyne, the noble gift of foreknowledge
+was given to thee,<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> this gift also thou didst
+receive&mdash;that to whomsoever thou shouldst give a drink
+of water from the closed palms of thy two hands, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
+should be healed from sickness or wounds, even though
+he stood at the point of death."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should I heal thee by giving thee drink
+from my hands?" replied Finn. "For of a certainty
+thou of all men dost least deserve it from me."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou surely speakest hastily, not remembering
+past services," answered Dermat. "Well, indeed, do I
+deserve that thou shouldst heal me. Dost thou forget
+the day thou didst go with the chiefs and nobles of
+the Fena, to the house of Derca, the son of Donnara, to
+a banquet? And even as we sat down, and before the
+feast began, Carbri of the Liffey, son of Cormac,
+with the men of Tara, and of Bregia, and of Meath,
+and of Carmna, surrounded the palace, intent on slaying
+thee and all thy people. And they uttered three
+great shouts, and threw firebrands to burn the palace
+over our heads. Then thou didst arise and prepare to
+issue forth, but I put thee back and bade thee enjoy
+thy feast; and, leaving the banquet untasted, I rushed
+forth with a chosen few of my own men, and quenched
+the flames. Thrice we made a circuit of the palace,
+dealing slaughter amongst thy foes, so that we left
+fifty of them dead after each circuit. And having put
+Carbri and his men to flight, we returned to join the
+feast. Had I asked thee for a drink that night, gladly
+wouldst thou have given it to me. And yet, not more
+justly was it due to me then than it is now."</p>
+
+<p>"Ill dost thou deserve a healing drink from me, or
+any other favour," said Finn; "for it was thy part to
+guard Grania the night we came to Tara; but thou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+didst espouse her secretly, and didst fly with her from
+Tara, knowing that she was betrothed to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Lay not the blame of that on me," said Dermat;
+"for Grania put me under heavy gesa, which for all the
+wealth of the world I would not break through&mdash;no,
+not even for life itself. Neither did I rest on my own
+judgment in the matter; for well thou knowest that
+Oisin, and Oscar, and Dering, and Mac Luga counselled
+me to the course I took.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, O Finn, I pray thee let me drink from
+thy hands, for I feel the weakness of death coming on
+me. And thou wilt not gainsay that I deserve it, if
+thou wilt only remember the feast that Midac, the son
+of Colga, made for thee in the Fairy Palace of the
+Quicken Trees.<a name="FNanchor_CXXXVI._164" id="FNanchor_CXXXVI._164"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXVI._164" class="fnanchor">[CXXXVI.]</a> To this feast Midac invited thee and
+thy companions; while to the Palace of the Island he
+brought secretly the King of the World with a great
+host, and the three kings of the Island of the Torrent,
+with intent to slay thee and all thy Fena.</p>
+
+<p>"Now Midac caused some of the clay of the Island
+of the Torrent to be placed under you, with foul spells,
+in the Palace of the Quicken Trees, so that your feet
+and your hands clove to the ground. And it was
+revealed to thee that the King of the World was about
+to send a chief with a troop of warriors, to slay you,
+helpless as you were, and to bring him your heads to
+the Palace of the Island.</p>
+
+<p>"But at that same time, I came to thee outside the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees; and thou didst make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+known to me your deadly strait. Then did I take
+thee, Finn, and those who were with thee, under the
+protection of my knighthood and valour; and I went
+to the ford to defend it against the foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>"And after a little time the three dragon-like
+kings of the Island of the Torrent came towards the
+palace: but I defended the ford, and, venturing my
+life for thee, I bore their attack and slew them all
+three. And I swept off their heads, and brought them,
+all gory as they were, in the hollow of my shield, to
+the palace where you lay miserably bound; and, sprinkling
+the clay with the blood, I broke the spell and set
+you free. And had I asked thee for a drink on that
+night, O Finn, of a surety thou wouldst not have
+refused me.</p>
+
+<p>"And many another deadly strait did I free you
+from, since the day I was admitted among the Fena,
+always putting myself forward to the post of danger,
+and perilling my life for your safety; and now why
+dost thou requite me with this foul treachery?</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, many a king's son and many a brave
+warrior hast thou slain; and thou hast earned the
+enmity of powerful foes: neither is there yet an end of
+it. For the day will come&mdash;I see it even now&mdash;a day
+of direful overthrow and slaughter,<a name="FNanchor_CXXXVII._165" id="FNanchor_CXXXVII._165"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXVII._165" class="fnanchor">[CXXXVII.]</a> when few, alas! of
+the Fena will be left to tell the tale. Then thou shalt
+sorely need my help, O Finn, and sorely shalt thou
+rue this day. I grieve not, indeed, for thee, but for my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+dear, faithful companions&mdash;for Oscar and Mac Luga
+and Dering, and more than all for Oisin, who shall long
+outlive the others in sad old age.<a name="FNanchor_CXXXVIII._166" id="FNanchor_CXXXVIII._166"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXVIII._166" class="fnanchor">[CXXXVIII.]</a> Alas! how deadly
+shall be their strait when I am not near to aid
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Oscar, moved with pity even to tears,
+addressing Finn, said, "Although I am nearer akin to
+thee, O king, than to Dermat, yet I cannot suffer that
+he die, when a drink from thy hands would heal him.
+Bring him, then, a drink without delay."</p>
+
+<p>And Finn answered, "I know of no well on this
+mountain from which to bring drink."</p>
+
+<p>"Therein thou speakest not truth," said Dermat;
+"for thou knowest that not more than nine paces from
+thee, hidden under yonder bush, is a well of crystal
+water."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Finn went to the well, and, holding his
+two hands tightly together, he brought up some of the
+water, and came towards Dermat; but after he had
+walked a little way, he let it spill through his fingers,
+saying that he was not able to bring water in his
+hands so far.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, Finn," said Dermat. "I saw thee that of
+thy own will thou didst let it spill. And now, O king,
+hasten, for death is on me."</p>
+
+<p>Again he went to the well, and was bringing the
+water slowly, while Dermat followed the dripping
+hands with his eyes; but when Finn thought of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
+Grania he let the water spill a second time. And
+Dermat, seeing this, uttered a piteous sigh of anguish.</p>
+
+<p>And now was Oscar no longer able to contain his
+grief and rage; and he said, "I swear, O king, if thou
+dost not bring the water, that only one of us two&mdash;thou
+or I&mdash;shall leave this hill alive!"</p>
+
+<p>Hearing Oscar's words, and seeing the frowning
+looks of the others, Finn dipped up the water a third
+time, and was hastening forward; but before he had
+got half-way, Dermat's head dropped backwards, and
+his life departed.</p>
+
+<p>And all the Fena present raised three long loud
+cries of sorrow for Dermat O'Dyna.</p>
+
+<p>Then Oscar, looking fiercely on Finn, spoke and
+said, "Would that thou thyself lay dead here instead of
+Dermat! For now indeed the noblest heart of the Fena
+is still; and our mainstay in battle and danger is gone.
+Ah! why did I not foresee this? Why was I not told
+that Dermat's life was linked with the life of the wild
+boar of Ben-Gulban? Then would I have stayed this
+chase, and put off the evil day!"</p>
+
+<p>And Oscar wept; and Oisin, and Dering, and Mac
+Luga wept also, for Dermat was much loved by all.</p>
+
+<p>After a time, Finn said, "Let us now leave this
+hill, lest Angus of the Bruga overtake us. For
+although we had no hand in Dermat's death, nevertheless
+he may not believe us."</p>
+
+<p>So Finn and the Fena departed from the hill, Finn
+leading Dermat's dog, Mac-an-coill. But Oisin, and
+Oscar, and Dering, and Mac Luga turned back, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
+with tears, threw their mantles over Dermat; after
+which they followed the others.</p>
+
+<p>Grania sat that day on the highest rampart of
+Rath-Grania, watching for Dermat's return; for a dark
+fear haunted her mind on account of this chase. And
+when at last the Fena came in view, she saw Dermat's
+dog led by Finn; but not seeing Dermat himself, she
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ah me! what is this I see? Surely if Dermat
+were alive, it is not by Finn that Mac-an-coill would
+be led to his home!"</p>
+
+<p>And as she spoke she fell forward off the rampart,
+and lay long in a swoon as if her spirit had fled,
+while her handmaid stood over her, weeping and distracted.
+And when at last she opened her eyes, then
+indeed they told her that Dermat was dead; and she
+uttered a long and piteous cry, so that her women and
+all the people of the court came round her to ask the
+cause of her sorrow. And when they were told that
+Dermat had perished by the wild boar of Ben-Gulban,
+they raised three loud, bitter cries of lamentation,
+which were heard in the glens and wildernesses
+around, and which pierced the clouds of heaven.</p>
+
+<p>When at length Grania became calm, she ordered
+that five hundred of her people should go to Ben-Gulban,
+to bring home the body of Dermat. Then, turning to
+Finn, who still held Mac-an-coill in his hand, she
+asked him to leave her Dermat's hound; but Finn
+refused, saying that a hound was a small matter, and
+that he might be allowed to inherit at least so much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
+of Dermat's riches. When Oisin heard this, he came
+forward and took the hound from the hand of Finn
+and gave him to Grania.</p>
+
+<p>At the time that the men left Rath-Grania to go
+for the body of Dermat, it was revealed to Angus that
+the hero was lying dead on Ben-Gulban. And he set
+out straightway, and travelling on the pure, cool wind,
+soon reached the mountain; so that when Grania's
+people came up, they found him standing over the
+body, sorrowing, with his people behind him. And
+they held forward the wrong sides of their shields in
+token of peace.</p>
+
+<p>Then both companies, having viewed the dead
+hero, raised three mighty cries of sorrow, so loud and
+piercing that they were heard in the wastes of the
+firmament, and over the five provinces of Erin.</p>
+
+<p>And when they had ceased, Angus spoke and said,
+"Alas! why did I abandon thee, even for once, O my
+son? For from the day I took thee to Bruga, a
+tender child, I have watched over thee and guarded
+thee from thy foes, until last night. Ah! why did I
+abandon thee to be decoyed to thy doom by the guileful
+craft of Finn? By my neglect hast thou suffered,
+O Dermat; and now, indeed, I shall for ever feel the
+bitter pangs of sorrow!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Angus asked Grania's people what they had
+come for. And when they told him that Grania had
+sent them to bring the body of Dermat to Rath-Grania,
+he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will bring the body of Dermat with me to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
+Bruga of the Boyne; and I will keep him on his bier,
+where he shall be preserved by my power, as if he
+lived. And though I cannot, indeed, restore him to
+life, yet I will breathe a spirit into him, so that for
+a little while each day he shall talk with me."</p>
+
+<p>Then he caused the body to be placed on a golden
+bier, with the hero's javelins fixed one on each side,
+points upwards. And his people raised the bier and
+carried it before him; and in this manner they
+marched slowly to Bruga of the Boyne.</p>
+
+<p>Grania's people then returned; and when they had
+told her the whole matter, though she was grieved at
+first, yet in the end she was content, knowing how
+Angus loved Dermat.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_CULLINN" id="THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_CULLINN"></a>THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN.</h2>
+
+<p class="center">IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW FINN'S HAIR WAS CHANGED IN ONE DAY
+FROM THE COLOUR OF GOLD TO SILVERY GREY.<a name="FNanchor_CXXXIX._167" id="FNanchor_CXXXIX._167"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXXXIX._167" class="fnanchor">[CXXXIX.]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>Culand, the smith of the Dedannans,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> who lived at
+Slieve Cullinn,<a name="FNanchor_CXL._168" id="FNanchor_CXL._168"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXL._168" class="fnanchor">[CXL.]</a> had two beautiful daughters, Milucra
+and Aina. They both loved Finn,<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> and each sought
+him for her husband.</p>
+
+<p>As they walked together one evening near Allen,<a name="FNanchor_CXLI._169" id="FNanchor_CXLI._169"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLI._169" class="fnanchor">[CXLI.]</a>
+they fell to talking of many things; and their conversation
+turning at last on their future husbands,
+Aina said she would never marry a man with grey
+hair.</p>
+
+<p>When Milucra heard this, she resolved with herself
+that if she could not get Finn, she would plan so that
+he should not marry her sister Aina. So she departed
+immediately, and, turning her steps northwards, she
+summoned the Dedannans to meet her at Slieve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
+Cullinn. Having brought them all together, she
+caused them to make her a lake<a name="FNanchor_CXLII._170" id="FNanchor_CXLII._170"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLII._170" class="fnanchor">[CXLII.]</a> near the top of
+the mountain; and she breathed a druidical virtue on
+its waters, that all who bathed in it should become
+grey.</p>
+
+<p>On a morning not long after this, Finn happened
+to be walking alone on the lawn before the palace
+of Allen, when a doe sprang out from a thicket, and,
+passing quite close to him, bounded past like the
+wind. Without a moment's delay, he signalled for his
+companions and dogs; but none heard except his two
+hounds, Bran and Skolan. He instantly gave chase,
+with no other arms than his sword, Mac-an-Lona, and
+accompanied only by his two dogs; and before the
+Fena<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> knew of his absence, he had left Allen of the
+green slopes far behind.</p>
+
+<p>The chase turned northwards; and though the
+hounds kept close to the doe, the chief kept quite
+as close to the hounds the whole way. And so they
+continued without rest or pause, till they reached
+Slieve Cullinn, far in the north.</p>
+
+<p>Here the doe made a sudden turn and disappeared;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
+and what direction she took, whether east or west,
+Finn knew not, for he never caught sight of her after.
+And he marvelled much that any doe in the world
+should be able to lead Bran and Skolan so long a
+chase, and escape from them in the end. Meantime
+they kept searching, Finn taking one side of the hill
+and the dogs another, so that he was at last left quite
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>While he was wandering about the hill and
+whistling for his hounds, he heard the plaintive cry
+of a woman at no great distance; and, turning his
+steps towards the place, he saw a lady sitting on the
+brink of a little lake, weeping as if her heart would
+break. Never before did the chieftain see a maiden
+so lovely. The rose colour on her cheeks was
+heightened by her grief; her lips were like ruddy
+quicken berries; the delicate blossom of the apple
+tree was not more white than her neck; her hair fell
+in heavy golden ringlets on her shoulders; and as she
+looked up at the chief, her eyes beamed like stars on
+a frosty night.</p>
+
+<p>Finn accosted her; and, seeing that she ceased her
+weeping for a moment, he asked her had she seen
+his two hounds pass that way.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not seen thy hounds," she replied, "nor
+have I been at all concerned in the chase; for, alas,
+there is something that troubles me more nearly, a
+misadventure that has caused me great sorrow!"</p>
+
+<p>And as she spoke these words, she burst out
+weeping and sobbing more bitterly than before.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Finn was greatly moved at this, so much so, that
+he quite forgot all about his hounds and his own
+troubles; and he asked her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What is the cause of this great grief, gentle
+lady? Has death robbed you of your husband or
+your child, or what other evil has befallen you? I am
+much concerned to see a lady in such distress; and
+I wish you to tell me if anything can be done to
+lighten your sorrow, or to remove the cause of it?"</p>
+
+<p>She replied, "I had a precious gold ring on my
+finger, which I prized beyond anything in the world;
+and it has fallen from me into the water. I saw it
+roll down the steep slope at the bottom, till it went
+quite out of my sight. This is the cause of my sorrow,
+and thou canst remedy the mishap if thou wilt. The
+Fena are sworn never to refuse help to a woman in
+distress; and I now put on thee those gesa<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> that true
+heroes dare not break through, to search for the ring,
+and cease not till thou find it and restore it to me."</p>
+
+<p>Though the chief had indeed at the moment no
+inclination to swim, he could not refuse a prayer urged
+in this manner. So he plunged in without a moment's
+hesitation, and examined the lake on all sides, diving
+and searching into every nook and cranny at the
+bottom.</p>
+
+<p>After swimming in this manner three times round
+and round the lake, he found the ring at last; and,
+approaching the lady, he handed it to her from the
+water. The moment she had got it she sprang into
+the lake before his eyes, and, diving down, disappeared
+in an instant.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chief, wondering greatly at this strange behaviour,
+stepped forth from the water; but as soon as
+his feet had touched the dry land, he lost all his
+strength, and fell on the brink, a withered, grey old man,
+shrunken up and trembling all over with weakness.
+He sat him down in woful plight; and soon his
+hounds came up. They looked at him wistfully and
+sniffed and whined around him; but they knew him
+not, and, passing on, they ran round the lake, searching
+in vain for their master.</p>
+
+<p>On that day the Fena were assembled in the
+banquet hall of the palace of Allen; some feasting and
+drinking, some playing chess, and others listening to
+the sweet music of the harpers. While all were in this
+wise pleasantly engaged, Kylta Mac Ronan<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> stood
+up in the midst, and said in the hearing of all&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have observed, friends, that our master and king,
+Finn the son of Cumal, has not been amongst us to-day,
+as is his wont; and I wish to know whither he
+has gone."</p>
+
+<p>This speech caused a sudden alarm amongst us;
+for no one knew aught of the chief, or was aware till
+that moment that he was absent at all; and we knew
+not wherefore he had disappeared or whither he had
+gone. In the midst of our anxious tumult, the
+envious and foul-mouthed Conan Mail<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> stood up, and
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have never heard sweeter music than your
+words, Kylta! The Fena are now about to seek for
+their king; and my only wish is that their quest may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
+last for a whole year, and that it may prove a vain
+search in the end! Be not cast down, however, O
+Fena; if you should fail to find the son of Cumal, you
+will not be so ill off as you think; for I will undertake
+to be your king from this time forth!"</p>
+
+<p>Though we were at the time more inclined to be
+sad than mirthful, being weighed down with much
+anxiety, we could not help laughing when we heard
+the loud, foolish talk of Conan Mail; but we took
+no further notice of him.</p>
+
+<p>Inquiring now from the lesser people about the
+palace, we found that the chief and his two dogs had
+followed a doe northwards. So, having mustered
+a strong party of the Fena, we started in pursuit.
+Kylta and I took the lead, the rest keeping close
+behind; and in this order we followed the track,
+never taking rest or slackening speed till we reached
+Slieve Cullinn.</p>
+
+<p>We began to search round the hill, hoping to find
+either the chief himself or some person who might
+give us tidings of him. After wandering among
+brakes and rough, rocky places, we at last espied a
+grey-headed old man sitting on the brink of a lake.
+I went up to him to ask a question, followed by the
+rest of the Fena. At first I thought he might be a
+fisherman who had come up from the plains to fish;
+but when we came near him, he seemed so wretched
+an old creature, all shrivelled up, with the skin
+hanging in wrinkles over the bare points of his bones,
+that I felt quite sure he was not a fisherman, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
+he was reduced to that state more by sickness and
+want than by old age.</p>
+
+<p>I asked the poor old man if he had seen a
+noble-looking hero pass that way, with two hounds,
+chasing a doe. He never answered a word, neither
+did he stir from where he sat, or even look up; but at
+the question, his head sank on his breast, and his
+limbs shook all over as with palsy. Then he fell into
+a sudden fit of grief, wringing his hands and uttering
+feeble cries of woe.</p>
+
+<p>We soothed him and used him gently for a time,
+hoping he might speak at last; but to no purpose, for
+he still kept silent. Then at last growing impatient,
+and thinking that this might be a mere headstrong
+humour, we drew our swords, and threatened him
+with instant death if he did not at once tell us all he
+knew of the chief and his hounds&mdash;for we felt sure he
+had seen them. But he only lamented the more, and
+still answered nothing.</p>
+
+<p>At last, after this had gone on for some time, and
+when we were about to leave him, he beckoned to
+Kylta Mac Ronan; and when Kylta had come near,
+the old man whispered into his ear the dreadful secret.
+And then we all came to know the truth. When we
+found that the withered old man was no other than
+our beloved king, Finn, himself, we uttered three
+shouts of lamentation and anger, so loud and prolonged
+that the foxes and badgers rushed affrighted
+from their dens in the hollows of the mountain.</p>
+
+<p>Conan now stepped forward, looking very fierce;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
+and, unsheathing his sword with mighty bluster, he
+began in a loud voice to revile Finn and the Fena
+with the foulest language he could think of. And he
+ended by saying that he meant to slay the king that
+moment&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Now, O Finn Mac Cumal, I will certainly strike
+off your head; for you are the man that never gave me
+credit for valour, or praised my noble deeds in battle.
+Ever since your father, Cumal of the Hosts, was slain
+on the field of Knocka<a name="FNanchor_CXLIII._171" id="FNanchor_CXLIII._171"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLIII._171" class="fnanchor">[CXLIII.]</a> by the Clann Morna<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> of the
+Golden Shields, you have been our bitter foe; and it is
+against your will that any of us are now alive. I am
+very glad to see you, Finn Mac Cumal, brought down
+to what you now are; and I only wish that the rest of
+the Clann Baskin<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> were like you. Then should I
+very soon make short work of them all; and joyful to
+me would be the task of raising a great carn to their
+memory!"</p>
+
+<p>To which Oscar replied with great scorn, "It is
+not worth while drawing a sword to punish thee,
+Conan Mail, vain and foolish boaster as thou art; and
+besides, we have at present something else to think of.
+But if it were not for the trouble that now lies heavy
+on us on account of our king, I would of a certainty
+chastise thee by breaking all the bones of thy mouth
+with my fist!"</p>
+
+<p>"Cease, Oscar," returned Conan, in a voice still
+louder than before; "cease your foolish talk! It is
+actions and not words that prove a man; and as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
+the noble warlike deeds done in past times by the
+Fena, it was by the Clann Morna they were performed,
+and not by the chicken-hearted Clann Baskin!"</p>
+
+<p>The fiery Oscar could bear this no longer. He
+rushed towards Conan Mail; but Conan, terrified at
+his vengeful look, ran in amongst the Fena with great
+outcry, beseeching them to save him from the rage of
+Oscar. We straightway confronted the young hero,
+and checked him in his headlong career; and after
+much ado, we soothed his anger and made peace between
+him and Conan.</p>
+
+<p>When quietness was restored, Kylta asked Finn
+how this dread evil had befallen him, who was the
+enchanter, and whether there was any hope of restoring
+him to his own shape. Finn told him that it
+was the daughter of Culand the smith who had transformed
+him by her spells. And then he recounted
+how she had lured him to swim in the lake, and how,
+when he came forth, he was turned into a withered
+old man.</p>
+
+<p>We now made a framework litter of slender poles,
+and, placing our king on it, we lifted him tenderly
+on our shoulders. And, turning from the lake, we
+marched slowly up-hill till we came to the fairy palace
+of Slieve Cullinn, where we knew the daughter of
+Culand had her dwelling deep under ground.<a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> Here
+we set him down, and the whole troop began at once
+to dig, determined to find the enchantress in her cave-palace,
+and to take vengeance on her if she did not
+restore our chief.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For three days and three nights we dug, without a
+moment's rest or pause, till at length we reached her
+hollow dwelling; when she, affrighted at the tumult
+and at the vengeful look of the heroes, suddenly
+started forth from the cave and stood before us. She
+held in her hand a drinking-horn of red gold, which
+was meant for the king. Yet she appeared unwilling,
+and held it back, notwithstanding the threatening
+looks of the Fena. But, happening to cast her eyes on
+the graceful and manly youth, Oscar, she was moved
+with such admiration and love for him that she wavered
+no longer, but placed the fairy drinking-horn in the
+hands of the king. No sooner had he drunk from it,
+than his own shape and features returned, save only
+that his hair remained of a silvery grey.</p>
+
+<p>When we gazed on our chief in his own graceful
+and manly form, we were all pleased with the soft,
+silvery hue of the grey hairs. And, though the enchantress
+appeared ready to restore this also, Finn
+himself told her that it pleased him as it pleased the
+others, and that he chose to remain grey for the rest
+of his life.</p>
+
+<p>When the king had drunk from the horn, he
+passed it to Mac Reth, who drank from it in like
+manner and gave it to Dering. Dering, after drinking,
+was about to hand it to the next, when it gave a
+sudden twist out of his hand, and darted into the
+loose earth at our feet, where it sank out of sight.
+We ran at once to recover it; but, though we turned
+up the earth deeply all round, we were not able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
+find the drinking-horn. This was a disappointment
+that vexed us exceedingly, for if we had all drunk
+from it, we should have been gifted with a foreknowledge
+of future events.</p>
+
+<p>A growth of slender twigs grew up afterwards
+over the spot where it sank into the ground; and this
+little thicket is still gifted with a part of the virtue of
+the golden drinking-horn. For any one who looks on
+it in the morning fasting, will know in a moment all
+things that are to happen that day.</p>
+
+<p>So ended the Chase of Slieve Cullinn; and in this
+wise it came to pass that Finn's hair was turned in
+one day from golden yellow to silvery grey.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_FUAD" id="THE_CHASE_OF_SLIEVE_FUAD"></a>THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD.</h2>
+
+
+<p>IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW AILNA, THE WIFE OF MERGAH OF THE
+SHARP SPEARS, IN ORDER TO BE REVENGED ON THE FENA FOR
+THE DEATH OF HER HUSBAND, TRANSFORMED HERSELF INTO A DEER,
+AND DECOYED THEM TILL SHE GOT THEM INTO THE POWER OF HER
+BROTHER, DRYANTORE, A GIANT AND AN ENCHANTER; HOW HE
+THREW THEM INTO A DUNGEON, WITH INTENT TO KILL THEM;
+AND HOW THEY WERE IN THE END SET FREE BY CONAN MAIL.<a name="FNanchor_CXLIV._172" id="FNanchor_CXLIV._172"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLIV._172" class="fnanchor">[CXLIV.]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>Finn and the Fena<a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> went one day to hunt at Slieve
+Fuad.<a name="FNanchor_CXLV._173" id="FNanchor_CXLV._173"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLV._173" class="fnanchor">[CXLV.]</a> When they had come very near to the top
+of the mountain, a deer suddenly bounded from a
+thicket right before them, very large and fierce, with
+a great pair of sharp, dangerous antlers. At once they
+loosed their dogs and gave chase; and those who were
+scattered here and there about the hill gave up
+the pursuit of smaller game to join the main body
+for it was very seldom they fell in with a deer that
+promised better sport.</p>
+
+<p>She led them through rugged places, over rocks
+and bogs, and into deep glens. The hounds several
+times surrounded her; but she fought her way with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span>
+so much strength and fury that she always escaped,
+after killing many of the dogs and disabling some
+of the men.</p>
+
+<p>Soon she left Slieve Fuad behind, nor did she
+slacken speed till she reached the green hill of Lidas,
+while the hunters and dogs followed in full chase
+close behind. She then made her way across the
+open country to a rugged and bushy hill&mdash;the hill of
+Carrigan;<a name="FNanchor_CXLVI._174" id="FNanchor_CXLVI._174"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLVI._174" class="fnanchor">[CXLVI.]</a> and here they suddenly lost her among
+the rocks and thickets. They searched round the hill
+without avail, north, south, east, and west, till all, both
+men and dogs, were quite scattered; and Finn and
+Dara the Melodious were left alone.</p>
+
+<p>At length Finn's dog, Skolan, started the deer once
+more, and again the chase began. Back over the selfsame
+course she ran, by the hill of Lidas, and straight
+on towards Slieve Fuad, Finn and Dara close on her
+track; while the main body of the Fena followed far
+behind, guided by the cries of the dogs.</p>
+
+<p>When the deer reached Slieve Fuad, she again took
+cover and disappeared at the very spot where they
+had first started her; and the two chiefs, after beating
+the thickets on every side, were at length forced to
+give up the search.</p>
+
+<p>A druidical mist now rose up, darkening the air,
+and enfolding them on every side; so that they lost
+their way. They tried many times to regain the
+path, but to no purpose; for they only lost themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
+more and more among the quagmires and thickets.
+At last they sat down to rest, weary and baffled; and
+Dara played a mournful strain on his timpan; after
+which they sounded the Dord-Fian,<a name="FNanchor_CXLVII._175" id="FNanchor_CXLVII._175"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLVII._175" class="fnanchor">[CXLVII.]</a> as a signal to
+their friends.</p>
+
+<p>When the Fena heard the Dord-Fian sounding afar
+off, they felt sure that their leader was in trouble
+or strait of some kind; and they started to his relief,
+making northwards straight towards the point from
+which they thought the signal came. But they had
+not gone far when they heard it sounding from the
+east, and altered their course accordingly. Again it
+changed to the west; and no sooner had they set
+forward in that direction than it seemed to come from
+the south. In this manner were they led hither and
+thither, till they became quite bewildered; and they
+found themselves no nearer to those they were in
+search of, for every time they heard the Dord-Fian,
+it seemed as far off as ever.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime Finn and Dara, after resting for a time,
+again started off, intent on trying once more to reach
+their friends; for they heard their shouts, and knew
+they were seeking them. As they were making their
+way through the thick fog, they heard a voice at a
+little distance, as if from one in distress; and, turning
+their steps that way, they met a young woman, very
+beautiful, and very pleasing in manner, but looking
+weary and sore perplexed, and all over in sad plight
+from the bogs and brambles.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span></p>
+<p>Finn accosted her in a gentle voice, asking how
+she came to be alone in a place so wild.</p>
+
+<p>She replied, "I and my husband were journeying
+along over the plain, when we heard the melodious
+cry of hounds; and he left me to follow the chase,
+telling me to continue along the same path, and
+promising to rejoin me without delay. But this fairy
+fog has risen around me, and I have lost my way,
+so that I know not now in what direction to go."</p>
+
+<p>Finn then asked her name and the name of her
+husband.</p>
+
+<p>"My husband's name is Lavaran, and mine is
+Glanlua. But I perceive that you are one of the
+Fena; and indeed I think, from your arms and from
+your noble mien, that you must be the great chief
+Finn himself. If this be so, I place myself under
+your protection; and I know well that you will lead
+me safely out of this place to my husband; for the
+Fena never yet refused their help to a woman in
+distress."</p>
+
+<p>Finn replied, "You are quite right, lady, for I am
+Finn; and this chase that has parted you and your
+husband belongs to me. We will certainly take you
+under our protection, and we will neither abandon
+you on this mountain, nor suffer any one to harm you.
+But as to leading you to your husband, it is not at
+present in our power to do that; for you must know,
+lady, that we also have been set astray by this magical
+fairy fog. Nevertheless, we will do the best we can;
+and now you had better come with us."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So the three set forward in the direction they
+thought most likely to lead to the open plain.</p>
+
+<p>After walking for some time, they heard a low,
+sweet strain of fairy music; and they stopped to
+listen. It seemed to be near them and around them
+in the fog, so that Finn thought it came from the spot
+where the lady stood; and she thought it came from
+Finn or Dara: and the music was followed by shouts
+and noise, as if from a great company. When the
+noise ceased, the music began again more sweetly than
+before; so that they felt heavy, and as if inclined to
+sleep. Still more drowsy and powerless they became
+as they listened; and at last they all three sank on
+the ground, in a trance deep and deathlike.</p>
+
+<p>After a time they awoke, and slowly regained their
+senses; though they were so weak that they could
+scarcely move. The fog had cleared away, leaving
+the air bright and warm; and when they were able to
+look around, they found themselves on the margin of a
+blue lake. The part of the lake that lay in front
+of them was narrow, and quite calm and smooth; but
+on each side, to the right and left, it opened out into
+two broad, green-bordered seas, with great waves
+tumbling wildly about, as if the waters were torn up
+by whirlwinds. But where they sat, not a breath was
+blowing. And looking across the narrow part, they
+saw a stately palace right before them on the opposite
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>As they were gazing at all these strange things,
+silent and much astonished, they saw a warrior coming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
+forth from the palace, in size like a giant, rough and
+fierce-looking, with a beautiful woman by his side.
+The two walked quickly down to the shore, and,
+plunging in, they swam straight across the middle
+of the lake. And Dara and Glanlua, turning to Finn,
+said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Of a surety, it is not for our good yonder
+strangers are approaching; but to work us treachery
+and mischief!"</p>
+
+<p>This forecast turned out to be true. The large
+warrior and the beautiful lady had no sooner gained
+the land than they came up to Finn and his two
+companions; and without speaking a word, the giant
+seized them roughly, and led them down to the shore
+of the lake. For the two heroes were still so weak
+from the spell of the fairy music that they were not
+able to raise a hand to defend either the lady or themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The giant and his companion, making no delay,
+plunged in, and swam back towards the palace,
+bringing the three with them; and as soon as they
+had reached the shore, the strange warrior, addressing
+Finn in a fierce and surly manner, said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"For a long time have I sought Finn Mac Cumal,
+the evil-minded and crafty; and now, O Finn, now
+that thou hast been by a well-laid plan cast under
+my power, I will take good care that thou shalt not
+escape till I take revenge, even to the full, for all
+the injuries thou hast done to me and to my sister!"</p>
+
+<p>Finn listened to this speech with much surprise,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
+for he could not call to mind that he had ever seen the
+hero before; and he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, I pray thee, who thou art; for I know
+thee not; neither do I know of any injury thou hast
+suffered at my hands. Thou art, indeed, large of body,
+and fierce and boastful in speech; but know that
+to take revenge on a foe who is unable to defend
+himself, is a deed quite unbecoming a hero!"</p>
+
+<p>The large man replied, "Do you not remember the
+treachery you practised on Mergah of the Sharp
+Spears, and on my sons, two fair youths, whom you
+slew by unfair means, at the battle of Knockanare?<a name="FNanchor_CXLVIII._176" id="FNanchor_CXLVIII._176"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLVIII._176" class="fnanchor">[CXLVIII.]</a>
+Well indeed do I know thee, Finn, for I am Dryantore,
+and this is Ailna my sister, the wife of Mergah. She
+is left without her husband, and I without my sons,
+by your cruel wiles; for it was by fraud and foul
+play, and not by fair fighting, that you gained the
+battle of Knockanare, and slew Mergah and his host!"</p>
+
+<p>"I remember well," said Finn, "that they all fell
+on the battle-field; but it was not by craft or
+treachery. Mergah of the Sharp Spears came with
+a mighty host to conquer Erin, and lay it under
+tribute. But they were met at Knockanare, and every
+man of them slain in fair, open fight, though not
+without sore loss to the Fena."</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span></p>
+<p>"You may say what you please on the matter,"
+said Dryantore; "but it is quite enough for me that
+you have slain Ailna's husband and my two sons.
+And now, indeed, I shall take revenge&mdash;of that be
+sure&mdash;both on you and on all the Fena that come
+within my reach."</p>
+
+<p>And having so spoken, he began without more
+ado to bind Finn, Dara, and Glanlua in strong fetters;
+and having done so, he threw them into a dungeon,
+where he left them without food or drink or comfort
+of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the Fena ceased not to search for their
+king. They knew, by the sad strain they had heard
+in the distance, and by the strange manner in which
+the music had shifted from place to place, that he was
+caught under some druidic spell; and they vowed they
+would never rest till they had found him and punished
+the enchanter, whoever he might be.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, Ailna visited the dungeon; and Finn
+addressed her&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hast thou forgotten, Ailna, that when thou didst
+come to Erin after the death of thy husband, Mergah
+of the Sharp Spears, the Fena received thee hospitably,
+and, pitying thy distress, treated thee with much
+kindness? But for this thou hast indeed given us an
+ungrateful and unbecoming return; for thou hast shut
+us up in this dungeon, without food or drink, having,
+by guileful druidical spells, taken away our strength."</p>
+
+<p>"I remember very well," said Ailna, "that you
+treated me kindly. But you killed my husband; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
+I am well pleased that it has now come to my turn
+to avenge his death. I do not feel the least pity
+for you; and I only wish that the whole of the Fena
+were with you in that dungeon, to be dealt with by
+my brother."</p>
+
+<p>Then, casting her eyes on Glanlua, she began to
+upbraid her in bitter words for having been in the
+company of Finn and Dara. But Glanlua explained
+the matter, saying that she had never seen either
+of the chiefs before, and that it was only by chance
+she had fallen on them when she had lost her way
+in the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"If that be so," said Ailna, "it is not just that you
+should be punished for the evil deeds of the others."</p>
+
+<p>And she went and told Dryantore, who came forthwith
+to release the lady.</p>
+
+<p>Glanlua took leave of Finn and Dara, and left the
+prison, grieving much for their evil plight; for she
+was grateful for their kindness on the mountain.
+Ailna led her to the palace; and, having placed food
+before her, bade her eat. But Glanlua, being overcome
+by weakness, suddenly fell into a swoon, and remained
+for a long time without sense or motion, like
+one dead. When at last she opened her eyes, she saw
+Ailna standing near, holding in her hand a golden
+drinking-horn. And Ailna gave her to drink, and
+immediately the spells lost their power; and she
+regained her strength; and the bloom and beauty of
+her countenance returned.</p>
+
+<p>But now she bethought her of the two heroes;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
+and, remembering their dismal plight in the dungeon,
+she became sorrowful, and began to sigh and weep.
+And when Ailna and Dryantore came to know the
+cause of her tears, they told her with much severity
+that Finn and Dara deserved their punishment; and
+that both should stay in prison till the time had come
+to put them to death.</p>
+
+<p>"I seek not to release them from prison or to save
+them from death," said Glanlua; "but that they are
+left without food and drink&mdash;this it is that moves me
+to pity."</p>
+
+<p>And Dryantore said, "If only that has caused your
+tears, you may, if you so please, bring them food.
+Besides, I do not mean to put them to death immediately.
+I shall let them live yet awhile, that I may
+decoy by them the other Fena, who are now wandering
+hither and thither in quest of their chief. And it is
+my firm belief that in a little time I shall have them
+all in that dungeon."</p>
+
+<p>So Glanlua went to the prison, bringing food and
+drink, and Ailna went with her. They found the
+heroes sitting on the floor, sorrowing, their strength
+and activity all gone; for the music-spell still held
+them, and they suffered also from want of food. And
+when they saw the two ladies, they shed bitter tears.
+Glanlua, on her part, wept with pity when she looked
+on the wasted face of the chief. But not so Ailna;
+she was pleased at their distress, for her heart was
+hardened with vengeance, and she longed for the time
+when they should suffer death. Howbeit, Glanlua<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
+placed food and drink before them, and they ate and
+drank and were strengthened for the time.</p>
+
+<p>When the two ladies returned, Dryantore asked
+Glanlua if it were true what he had heard, that Dara
+was a favourite among the Fena; and why it was that
+they loved him so.</p>
+
+<p>Glanlua replied, "I only know that he is a very
+skilful musician; for I never heard melody sweeter
+than the strains he played yesterday, when I met
+himself and Finn in the fog."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like very much to hear this music," said
+Dryantore, "if it be so melodious as you say;" and as
+he spoke these words he went towards the dungeon.</p>
+
+<p>And when he had come to the door, he said to
+Dara, in a loud, harsh, surly voice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard that you are a skilful musician, and
+can play very sweet strains. I wish you to play for
+me now that I may know if this be true."</p>
+
+<p>To which Dara replied, "If I had the Fena around
+me, I could delight them with the melody of my
+timpan; but as for you, guileful and cruel as you are,
+I do not believe that you can take any pleasure in
+music. Moreover, how can you expect that I should
+play sweet music for you, seeing that I am shut up
+here in this dismal dungeon, and that all manly
+strength and cheerfulness of mind have left me
+through your foul spells?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will take off the spells if only you play for
+me," said Dryantore; "and if your strains be as delightful
+as I have heard reported, I will bring you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
+forth from your prison, and I will keep you for ever
+in my castle, and you shall play for me whensoever I
+wish for music."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never consent to be released, neither will
+I play any music for you, so long as my chief lies in
+bondage and under enchantment," said Dara; "for I
+grieve not indeed for myself, but for him."</p>
+
+<p>Dryantore replied, "I will lift the spells from both
+of you for a time; but as to releasing Finn, that is a
+matter I do not wish to talk of now."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Dryantore removed the spells, and the
+heroes regained their strength and courage.</p>
+
+<p>Dara then played a low, sweet tune; and Dryantore,
+who had never before heard such music, listened
+with delight and wonder. He was so charmed that
+he called Ailna and Glanlua, that they also might
+hear; and they were as much delighted as the giant.
+But what pleased Glanlua most was to see the heroes
+restored to their wonted cheerfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Now all this time the Fena were seeking among
+the glens and hollows of the mountain for Finn and
+Dara. After walking for some time over a stony
+and rugged way, a faint strain of music struck on
+their ears. They stopped to listen, breathless; and
+every man knew the sound of Dara's timpan; and
+they raised a shout of gladness, which reached Finn
+and Dara in their dungeon. At the same moment
+they came in view of the palace, and they drew their
+swords and put their shields and spears in readiness,
+as men do going to battle. And they went forward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
+warily, for they feared foul play, and their hearts had
+a forecast that a foe was near. But, indeed, they little
+deemed what manner of foe they should meet.</p>
+
+<p>When Dryantore heard the shouts, he hid himself
+from the view of the Fena, and forthwith betook him
+to his magic arts. And again the spell fell on the two
+heroes, and their strength departed; and Dara's hand,
+losing its cunning, trembled on the strings, so that his
+music became dull and broken.</p>
+
+<p>And when Dara's music ceased, the Fena heard
+a low, hoarse murmur, which, growing each moment
+louder, sounded at last like the hollow roar of waves.
+And anon their strength and their swiftness left
+them, and they fell to the ground every man, in a
+deep trance as if they slept the sleep of death.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dryantore and Ailna came forth, and having
+bound them one by one in strong, hard fetters, they
+roused them up and led them helpless and faltering to
+the dungeon, where they shut them in with Finn and
+Dara.</p>
+
+<p>The Fena looked sadly on their king; and he, on
+his part, shed bitters tears to think that he had
+decoyed them&mdash;though, indeed, he had done so
+unwittingly&mdash;into the hands of their foe.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of their sighs and tears they heard
+the loud voice of the giant, who, looking in on them
+from the open door, addressed them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Now at last, ye Fena, you are in my safe keeping.
+Truly you have done great deeds in your time, but
+yet, methinks, you will not be able to escape from this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
+prison till I have taken just vengeance on you for
+slaying Mergah of the Sharp Spears, and my two
+sons, at the battle of Knockanare!"</p>
+
+<p>And having so spoken, he shut the door and went
+his way.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to the palace, he found that Glanlua's
+husband, Lavaran, had been there. Upon which
+he fell into a mighty rage; for he feared to let any
+man know the secrets of the palace; and he feared also
+that Lavaran might try to aid Finn and the others.
+He inquired of the two ladies whither he had gone;
+but they replied they did not know. He then began
+to search through the rooms, and, raising his voice, he
+called aloud for Lavaran; and the Fena, even in their
+dungeon, heard the roar quite plainly.</p>
+
+<p>Lavaran, hearing him, was sore afraid, and answered
+from a remote part of the palace. And as he
+came forward, the giant placed him under his spells,
+and, having bound him, flung him into the dungeon
+with the others.</p>
+
+<p>Dryantore's fury had not in the least abated; and,
+entering the dungeon, he struck off the heads of
+several of the Fena with his great sword, saying he
+would visit them each day, and do in like manner till
+he had killed them all.</p>
+
+<p>During this time the Fena were unable to defend
+themselves; for, besides that their strength had gone
+out from their limbs on account of the spells, they
+found that from the time the enchanter entered the
+prison, they were all fixed firmly in their places, every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
+man cleaving to the ground, in whatsoever position he
+chanced to be, sitting, lying, or standing. And Finn
+shed tears&mdash;even tears of blood in sight of all&mdash;seeing
+his men fall one by one, while he had to look on without
+power to help them.</p>
+
+<p>After Dryantore had in this manner slain several,
+he approached Conan Mail,<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> with intent to end that
+day's work by cutting off his head; and as it chanced,
+Conan was lying full length on the floor. Now Conan,
+though he was large-boned and strong, and very boastful
+in his speech, was a coward at heart, and more
+afraid of wounds and death than any man that ever
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>So when he saw Dryantore coming towards him
+with his sword in his hand all dripping, he shouted
+aloud&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hold thy hand, Dryantore! Hold thy hand for a
+little while, and be not guilty of such treachery!"</p>
+
+<p>But the giant, not heeding in the least Conan's
+words, raised his sword with his two hands and rose
+on tiptoe for a mighty blow. Then Conan, terrified
+beyond measure, put forth all his strength to free
+himself, and bounded from the floor clear outside the
+range of the sword; but left behind him, clinging to
+the floor, all the skin of his back, even from the points
+of his shoulders to the calves of his legs.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw the giant still making towards him
+in a greater rage than ever for missing his blow, he
+again cried aloud&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your hand this time, Dryantore! Is it not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
+enough that you see me in this woful plight? For
+it is plain that I cannot escape death. Leave me,
+then, to die of my wounds, and slay me not thus
+suddenly!"</p>
+
+<p>Dryantore held his hand; but he told Conan that
+he would for a certainty kill him next time he came,
+if he did not find him already dead of his wounds.
+Then he stalked out of the dungeon, and, shutting
+close the door, left the Fena in gloom and sadness.</p>
+
+<p>Though Lavaran had been only a little while in
+the palace, he made good use of his time, and now
+approaching Finn, he whispered in his ear&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There is that in yonder palace which would
+free us from those accursed spells if we only could
+get at it."</p>
+
+<p>And when Finn asked what it was, he replied,
+"A magical golden drinking-horn of wondrous virtue.
+I saw it in the palace among many other precious
+jewels."</p>
+
+<p>And when Finn again questioned him how he
+knew of its secret power, he said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Glanlua, my wife, told me. For she said that,
+being herself at the point of death, Ailna fetched this
+drinking-horn and bade her drink. And when she
+had drunk, she was immediately freed from spells and
+sickness. She told me, moreover, that it would remove
+the spell from the Fena, and bring back their strength
+and heal their wounds, if they could get to drink
+from it."</p>
+
+<p>Conan, being near, overheard this conversation;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
+and he inwardly resolved that he would try to secure
+the drinking-horn, if perchance he might be able to
+heal his wounds by means of it.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after, the giant again came to the prison,
+sword in hand, and addressed Conan in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come forward now, O big, bald man, for I am
+about to fulfil my promise to you! Come forward,
+that I may strike off your large head; for I see that
+your wounds have not killed you!"</p>
+
+<p>But Conan, instead of coming forward, fell back
+even to the farthest part of the dungeon, and replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You must know, Dryantore, that I, of all men
+alive, am the most unwilling to die any death unworthy
+of a brave hero. You see my evil plight, all
+wounded and faint from loss of blood; and, being as I
+am a valiant warrior, it would surely be a shameful
+thing and a foul blot on my fame, to be slain while in
+this state. I ask only one favour&mdash;that you cure me
+of my wounds first. After this, you may put me to
+death in any manner that is most agreeable to you."</p>
+
+<p>To this Dryantore consented, seeing that Conan
+was secure; and he called to Ailna and bade her fetch
+him the magical golden drinking-horn. "For I wish,"
+said he, "to heal the wounds of yonder big, bald man."</p>
+
+<p>But Ailna replied, "Of what concern are his
+wounds to us? Is it not better that he should die
+at once, and all the other Fena with him?"</p>
+
+<p>Conan spoke out from where he stood, "Lovely
+Ailna, I seek not to escape death. I ask only to be
+healed first and slain afterwards!"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ailna went to the palace and soon returned, bringing,
+not the drinking-horn, but a large sheepskin,
+covered all over with a long growth of wool. Dryantore
+took it from her, and doing as she told him, he
+fitted it on Conan's back, where it cleaved firmly, so
+that his wounds were all healed up in an instant.</p>
+
+<p>As long as Conan lived afterwards, this sheepskin
+remained on his back; and the wool grew upon it
+every year, even as wool grows on the back of a living
+sheep. And from that time forth, the other Fena were
+always mocking him and laughing at him and calling
+him nicknames.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Conan felt his wounds healed, he again
+spoke to the giant&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is my opinion, Dryantore, that it would be a
+very unwise thing for you to put me to death. I see
+plainly you want a servant. Now, although I am
+large of bone and strong of body, and very brave
+withal, still I am very harmless. And if you let me
+live, I shall be your servant for ever, and you will find
+me very useful to you."</p>
+
+<p>The giant saw the force and wisdom of Conan's
+words; and he felt that he wanted a servant very
+much, though he never perceived it till that moment,
+when Conan reminded him of it.</p>
+
+<p>So he said, "I believe, indeed, Conan, that your
+words are truth. Wherefore, I will not put you to
+death. You are now my servant, and so shall you be
+for the rest of your life."</p>
+
+<p>He then led Conan forth from the dungeon towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
+the palace; and he was in such good humour at having
+got a servant, that he forgot to kill any of the Fena on
+that occasion.</p>
+
+<p>He called to him Ailna and Glanlua, to tell them
+of what he had done. And he said to them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I find that I need a servant very much. Wherefore,
+I have made Conan my servant. And I am now
+about to free him from the spell and give him back
+his strength by a drink from the golden drinking-horn,
+so that he may be able to wait on me and do my
+work."</p>
+
+<p>For Conan, though his wounds were healed, was
+still so weak from the spell that he was scarce able
+to walk.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not at all approve what you have done,"
+said Ailna. "It would be, methinks, much better to
+put him straightway to death along with all the
+others. As long as he is with us as our servant, I
+shall never think myself free from danger; for the
+Fena are treacherous all alike."</p>
+
+<p>"As for the other Fena," replied Dryantore, "you
+need not be in any trouble on their account, for their
+time is short. As soon as I have got Conan free from
+the spell, I will go straight to the dungeon and kill
+them, every man. And when they are fairly put out
+of the way, it seems to me that we need not fear
+danger from this big, bald man with the sheepskin on
+his back."</p>
+
+<p>When Ailna heard that the death of the Fena was
+near at hand, she no longer gainsaid her brother. So<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
+Dryantore led Conan to the palace; and placing the
+magical drinking-horn in his hand, bade him drink.
+And Conan drank; and immediately his strength and
+his spirits returned.</p>
+
+<p>Now it so happened, while these things went on,
+that Finn asked Dara to play one of his sweet, sad
+tunes, that they might hear the music of his timpan
+before they died. And Dara took his timpan, and
+began to play; and historians say that no one either
+before or since ever played sweeter strains.</p>
+
+<p>At the very moment that Conan had finished
+drinking, he and Dryantore heard the music sounding
+faintly in the distance; and the giant opened the door
+and stood on the threshold to listen. He was so
+charmed that he quite forgot all about Conan and the
+drinking-horn; and finding that he could not hear
+the music plainly enough where he stood, he walked
+hastily towards the dungeon, leaving Conan behind
+with the drinking-horn in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had he gone out than Conan hid the
+drinking-horn under his cloak, and went to the
+dungeon after him.</p>
+
+<p>And when the giant saw him he said, "Why have
+you followed me; and what business have you here?
+Are you not my servant; and why have you come
+without being bidden by me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought," replied Conan, "that you were about
+to put the Fena to death; and I came to look at them
+once more before they died."</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly Dryantore bethought him of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
+drinking-horn, and he said, "Where is the golden
+drinking-horn I gave you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I left it," said Conan, "just where I found it in
+the palace."</p>
+
+<p>The giant ran hastily towards the palace to secure
+the drinking-horn; and no sooner was he out of sight
+than Conan, drawing forth the horn, put it to the lips
+of each to drink, beginning with Finn. Only Finn
+and Oscar had drunk, when they heard the heavy
+steps of the giant running towards the dungeon; and
+now they saw that he was indeed inflamed with fury.
+Oscar seized his great, polished spear, and sprang to
+the door; and the others raised a mighty shout of
+joy; while Conan went on releasing the heroes one
+by one.</p>
+
+<p>When Dryantore saw Oscar, he uttered a roar of
+rage and disappointment; and then called aloud to
+Ailna to come to him. And she came forth; and
+when she saw how matters stood, she was seized with
+such grief and terror that she dropped down and died
+immediately. Glanlua was standing near at hand,
+rejoicing at the release of her husband and friends;
+but when she saw Ailna fall to the ground dead, she
+became sad, and, stooping down, wept over her.</p>
+
+<p>All this Oscar saw from where he stood; and it
+was with much ado he checked his tears. For though
+my son was the bravest of the heroes, and the most
+terrible in battle, he had a gentle heart, and never saw
+a woman or a child in distress without being moved
+to pity.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Conan felt not the least pity. On the contrary,
+he was very glad to see Ailna dead; and he told
+Oscar that it was very well she was out of the way,
+for that she was a vicious woman, and had wrought
+the Fena much trouble and woe.</p>
+
+<p>And now Oscar, casting his eyes again on Dryantore,
+hardened his heart for battle, and addressed the
+giant in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It has at last come to pass, O Dryantore, that
+you are in the power of the Fena; and there is no
+escape for you, though you are a large and strong giant,
+and a druid with powerful magical spells. But the
+Fena never yet treated an enemy ungenerously. You
+indeed dealt unfairly and treacherously with us; and
+meant to kill us all, after having taken away our
+strength and valour by your black, guileful magic.
+But even so, we give you your choice; and we challenge
+you now to single combat with any of our
+champions you may wish to choose."</p>
+
+<p>To which Dryantore replied, "It is very true that
+the Fena have prevailed over me; and it is a just
+punishment for my folly in releasing Conan the Bald
+from my spells. I desire single combat. I will fight
+the Fena one after another, till I either fall myself
+or slay them all; and I will begin with you!"</p>
+
+<p>Oscar then took his shield and made ready for
+battle. Meantime the giant, harbouring great wrath
+against Conan, approached him unawares; and when
+he had come near enough, he sprang suddenly on him,
+and aimed a blow with all his might at his head. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
+Conan, springing aside, barely escaped the edge of the
+sword; and, running in great fear, called to Oscar
+with great outcry to save him from the giant.</p>
+
+<p>Then Oscar ran between; and he and the giant
+fought a long and fierce fight, while we looked on
+with anxious hearts. The giant was furious and
+strong; but my son was active and watchful and
+fearless of heart; and Dryantore at length fell at the
+door of his own palace, pierced through and through
+by the long, smooth spear of Oscar.</p>
+
+<p>When the Fena saw the giant fall, they raised
+three mighty shouts of joy. And Glanlua brought
+the magic drinking-horn to Oscar, from which he
+drank, so that his wounds were healed, and his
+strength straightway returned to him.</p>
+
+<p>The Fena then went into the palace, where they
+found food in great plenty, with wine and mead in
+golden bowls and drinking-horns. And they ate and
+drank and made merry; after which they rested that
+night on soft beds and couches.</p>
+
+<p>When they awoke in the morning, all was changed.
+The palace and the lake were gone; and the heroes
+found themselves lying on the heathy side of Slieve
+Fuad, at the selfsame spot where they had first
+started the deer; with the morning sun shining
+brightly over their heads.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="OISIN_IN_TIRNANOGECXLIX" id="OISIN_IN_TIRNANOGECXLIX"></a>OISIN IN TIRNANOGE;<a name="FNanchor_CXLIX._177" id="FNanchor_CXLIX._177"></a><a href="#Footnote_CXLIX._177" class="fnanchor">[CXLIX.]</a><br />
+
+<span class="small">OR,</span><br />
+
+THE LAST OF THE FENA.</h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>[According to an ancient legend, Finn's son, Oisin, the hero-poet,
+survived to the time of St. Patrick, two hundred years (the
+legend makes it three hundred) after the other Fena. On a
+certain occasion, when the saint asked him how he had lived
+to such a great age, the old hero related the following story.]</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p>A short time after the fatal battle of Gavra,<a name="FNanchor_CL._178" id="FNanchor_CL._178"></a><a href="#Footnote_CL._178" class="fnanchor">[CL.]</a> where
+so many of our heroes fell, we were hunting on a dewy
+morning near the brink of Lough Lein,<a name="FNanchor_CLI._179" id="FNanchor_CLI._179"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLI._179" class="fnanchor">[CLI.]</a> where the
+trees and hedges around us were all fragrant with
+blossoms, and the little birds sang melodious music on
+the branches. We soon roused the deer from the
+thickets, and as they bounded over the plain, our
+hounds followed after them in full cry.</p>
+
+<p>We were not long so engaged, when we saw a
+rider coming swiftly towards us from the west; and
+we soon perceived that it was a maiden on a white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
+steed. We all ceased from the chase on seeing the
+lady, who reined in as she approached. And Finn and
+the Fena were greatly surprised, for they had never
+before seen so lovely a maiden. A slender golden
+diadem encircled her head; and she wore a brown robe
+of silk, spangled with stars of red gold, which was
+fastened in front by a golden brooch, and fell from
+her shoulders till it swept the ground. Her yellow
+hair flowed far down over her robe in bright, golden
+ringlets. Her blue eyes were as clear as the drops of
+dew on the grass; and while her small, white hand
+held the bridle and curbed her steed with a golden
+bit, she sat more gracefully than the swan on Lough
+Lein. The white steed was covered with a smooth,
+flowing mantle. He was shod with four shoes of pure
+yellow gold, and in all Erin a better or more beautiful
+steed could not be found.</p>
+
+<p>As she came slowly to the presence of Finn, he
+addressed her courteously in these words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who art thou, O lovely youthful princess? Tell
+us thy name and the name of thy country, and relate
+to us the cause of thy coming."</p>
+
+<p>She answered in a sweet and gentle voice, "Noble
+king of the Fena, I have had a long journey this day,
+for my country lies far off in the Western Sea. I am
+the daughter of the king of Tirnanoge, and my name
+is Niam of the Golden Hair."</p>
+
+<p>"And what is it that has caused thee to come so
+far across the sea? Has thy husband forsaken thee;
+or what other evil has befallen thee?"</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My husband has not forsaken me, for I have
+never been married or betrothed to any man. But I
+love thy noble son, Oisin; and this is what has brought
+me to Erin. It is not without reason that I have
+given him my love, and that I have undertaken this
+long journey: for I have often heard of his bravery, his
+gentleness, and the nobleness of his person. Many
+princes and high chiefs have sought me in marriage;
+but I was quite indifferent to all men, and never consented
+to wed, till my heart was moved with love for
+thy gentle son, Oisin."</p>
+
+<p>When I heard these words, and when I looked on
+the lovely maiden with her glossy, golden hair, I was
+all over in love with her. I came near, and, taking
+her small hand in mine, I told her she was a mild star
+of brightness and beauty, and that I preferred her to
+all the princesses in the world for my wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said she, "I place you under gesa,<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> which
+true heroes never break through, to come with me on
+my white steed to Tirnanoge, the land of never-ending
+youth. It is the most delightful and the most renowned
+country under the sun. There is abundance
+of gold and silver and jewels, of honey and wine; and
+the trees bear fruit and blossoms and green leaves
+together all the year round. You will get a hundred
+swords and a hundred robes of silk and satin, a
+hundred swift steeds, and a hundred slender, keen-scenting
+hounds. You will get herds of cows without
+number, and flocks of sheep with fleeces of gold; a
+coat of mail that cannot be pierced, and a sword that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
+never missed a stroke and from which no one ever
+escaped alive. There are feasting and harmless pastimes
+each day. A hundred warriors fully armed
+shall always await you at call, and harpers shall
+delight you with their sweet music. You will wear
+the diadem of the king of Tirnanoge, which he never
+yet gave to any one under the sun, and which will
+guard you day and night, in tumult and battle and
+danger of every kind. Lapse of time shall bring
+neither decay nor death, and you shall be for ever
+young, and gifted with unfading beauty and strength.
+All these delights you shall enjoy, and many others
+that I do not mention; and I myself will be your wife
+if you come with me to Tirnanoge."</p>
+
+<p>I replied that she was my choice above all the
+maidens in the world, and that I would willingly
+go with her to the Land of Youth.</p>
+
+<p>When my father, Finn, and the Fena heard me say
+this, and knew that I was going from them, they
+raised three shouts of grief and lamentation. And
+Finn came up to me and took my hand in his, saying
+sadly&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Woe is me, my son, that you are going away
+from me, for I do not expect that you will ever return
+to me!"</p>
+
+<p>The manly beauty of his countenance became quite
+dimmed with sorrow; and though I promised to
+return after a little time, and fully believed that I
+should see him again, I could not check my tears, as
+I gently kissed my father's cheek.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I then bade farewell to my dear companions, and
+mounted the white steed, while the lady kept her seat
+before me. She gave the signal, and the steed galloped
+swiftly and smoothly towards the west, till he reached
+the strand; and when his gold-shod hoofs touched the
+waves, he shook himself and neighed three times. He
+made no delay, but plunged forward at once, moving
+over the face of the sea with the speed of a cloud-shadow
+on a March day. The wind overtook the
+waves and we overtook the wind, so that we straightway
+lost sight of land; and we saw nothing but
+billows tumbling before us and billows tumbling
+behind us.</p>
+
+<p>Other shores came into view, and we saw many
+wonderful things on our journey&mdash;islands and cities,
+lime-white mansions, bright greenans<a name="FNanchor_CLII._180" id="FNanchor_CLII._180"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLII._180" class="fnanchor">[CLII.]</a> and lofty
+palaces. A hornless fawn once crossed our course,
+bounding nimbly along from the crest of one wave
+to the crest of another; and close after, in full chase,
+a white hound with red ears. We saw also a lovely
+young maiden on a brown steed, with a golden apple
+in her hand; and as she passed swiftly by, a young
+warrior on a white steed plunged after her, wearing a
+long, flowing mantle of yellow silk, and holding a gold-hilted
+sword in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>I knew naught of these things, and, marvelling
+much, I asked the princess what they meant; but
+she answered&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Heed not what you see here, Oisin; for all these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
+wonders are as nothing compared with what you
+shall see in Tirnanoge."</p>
+
+<p>At last we saw at a great distance, rising over the
+waves on the very verge of the sea, a palace more
+splendid than all the others; and, as we drew near, its
+front glittered like the morning sun. I asked the
+lady what royal house this was, and who was the
+prince that ruled over it.</p>
+
+<p>"This country is the Land of Virtues," she replied.
+"Its king is the giant, Fomor of the Blows, and its
+queen the daughter of the king of the Land of Life.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+This Fomor brought the lady away by force from her
+own country, and keeps her in his palace; but she has
+put him under gesa<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> that he cannot break through,
+never to ask her to marry him till she can find a
+champion to fight him in single combat. But she still
+remains in bondage; for no hero has yet come hither
+who has the courage to meet the giant."</p>
+
+<p>"A blessing on you, golden-haired Niam," I replied;
+"I have never heard music sweeter than your
+voice; and although I feel pity for this princess, yet
+your story is pleasant to me to hear; for of a certainty
+I will go to the palace, and try whether I cannot kill
+this Fomor, and free the lady."</p>
+
+<p>So we came to land; and as we drew nigh to the
+palace, the lovely young queen met us and bade us
+welcome. She led us in and placed us on chairs
+of gold; after which choice food was placed before
+us, and drinking-horns filled with mead, and golden
+goblets of sweet wine.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When we had eaten and drunk, the mild young
+princess told us her story, while tears streamed from
+her soft, blue eyes; and she ended by saying&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never return to my own country and to
+my father's house, so long as this great and cruel giant
+is alive!"</p>
+
+<p>When I heard her sad words, and saw her tears
+falling, I was moved with pity; and telling her to
+cease from her grief, I gave her my hand as a pledge
+that I would meet the giant, and either slay him
+or fall myself in her defence.</p>
+
+<p>While we were yet speaking, we saw the giant
+coming towards the palace, large of body, and ugly and
+hateful in appearance, carrying a load of deerskins on
+his back, and holding a great iron club in his hand.
+He threw down his load when he saw us, turned a
+surly look on the princess, and, without greeting us
+or showing the least mark of courtesy, he forthwith
+challenged me to battle in a loud, rough voice.</p>
+
+<p>It was not my wont to be dismayed by a call
+to battle, or to be terrified at the sight of an enemy;
+and I went forth at once without the least fear in my
+heart. But though I had fought many battles in Erin
+against wild boars and enchanters and foreign invaders,
+never before did I find it so hard to preserve
+my life. We fought for three days and three nights
+without food or drink or sleep; for the giant did not
+give me a moment for rest, and neither did I give
+him. At length, when I looked at the two princesses
+weeping in great fear, and when I called to mind my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span>
+father's deeds in battle, the fury of my valour arose;
+and with a sudden onset I felled the giant to the earth;
+and instantly, before he could recover himself, I cut
+off his head.</p>
+
+<p>When the maidens saw the monster lying on the
+ground dead, they uttered three cries of joy; and they
+came to me, and led me into the palace. For I was
+indeed bruised all over, and covered with gory wounds;
+and a sudden dizziness of brain and feebleness of body
+seized me. But the daughter of the king of the Land
+of Life applied precious balsam and healing herbs to
+my wounds; and in a short time I was healed, and
+my cheerfulness of mind returned.</p>
+
+<p>Then I buried the giant in a deep and wide grave;
+and I raised a great carn over him, and placed on it
+a stone with his name graved in Ogam.</p>
+
+<p>We rested that night, and at the dawn of next
+morning Niam said to me that it was time for us
+to resume our journey to Tirnanoge. So we took
+leave of the daughter of the king of the Land of Life;
+and though her heart was joyful after her release, she
+wept at our departure, and we were not less sorry at
+parting from her. When we had mounted the white
+steed, he galloped towards the strand; and as soon
+as his hoofs touched the wave, he shook himself and
+neighed three times. We plunged forward over the
+clear, green sea with the speed of a March wind on a
+hill-side; and soon we saw nothing but billows tumbling
+before us and billows tumbling behind us. We saw
+again the fawn chased by the white hound with red<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
+ears; and the maiden with the golden apple passed
+swiftly by, followed by the young warrior in yellow
+silk on his white steed. And again we passed many
+strange islands and cities and white palaces.</p>
+
+<p>The sky now darkened, so that the sun was hidden
+from our view. A storm arose, and the sea was
+lighted up with constant flashes. But though the
+wind blew from every point of the heavens, and the
+waves rose up and roared around us, the white steed
+kept his course straight on, moving as calmly and
+swiftly as before, through the foam and blinding spray,
+without being delayed or disturbed in the least, and
+without turning either to the right or to the left.</p>
+
+<p>At length the storm abated, and after a time the
+sun again shone brightly; and when I looked up,
+I saw a country near at hand, all green and full of
+flowers, with beautiful smooth plains, blue hills, and
+bright lakes and waterfalls. Not far from the shore
+stood a palace of surpassing beauty and splendour.
+It was covered all over with gold and with gems of
+every colour&mdash;blue, green, crimson, and yellow; and on
+each side were greenans shining with precious stones,
+built by artists the most skilful that could be found.
+I asked Niam the name of that delightful country, and
+she replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is my native country, Tirnanoge; and there
+is nothing I have promised you that you will not find
+in it."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as we reached the shore, we dismounted;
+and now we saw advancing from the palace a troop<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
+of noble-looking warriors, all clad in bright garments,
+who came forward to meet and welcome us. Following
+these we saw a stately glittering host, with the
+king at their head wearing a robe of bright yellow
+satin covered with gems, and a crown that sparkled
+with gold and diamonds. The queen came after,
+attended by a hundred lovely young maidens; and as
+they advanced towards us, it seemed to me that this
+king and queen exceeded all the kings and queens of
+the world in beauty and gracefulness and majesty.</p>
+
+<p>After they had kissed their daughter, the king
+took my hand, and said aloud in the hearing of the
+host&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is Oisin, the son of Finn, for whom my
+daughter, Niam, travelled over the sea to Erin. This
+is Oisin, who is to be the husband of Niam of the
+Golden Hair. We give you a hundred thousand
+welcomes, brave Oisin. You will be for ever young
+in this land. All kinds of delights and innocent pleasures
+are awaiting you, and my daughter, the gentle,
+golden-haired Niam, shall be your wife; for I am the
+king of Tirnanoge."</p>
+
+<p>I gave thanks to the king, and I bowed low to
+the queen; after which we went into the palace,
+where we found a banquet prepared. The feasting
+and rejoicing lasted for ten days, and on the last
+day, I was wedded to the gentle Niam of the Golden
+Hair.</p>
+
+<p>I lived in the Land of Youth more than three
+hundred years; but it appeared to me that only three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
+years had passed since the day I parted from my
+friends. At the end of that time, I began to have a
+longing desire to see my father, Finn, and all my old
+companions, and I asked leave of Niam and of the
+king to visit Erin. The king gave permission, and
+Niam said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will give consent, though I feel sorrow in
+my heart, for I fear much you will never return to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I would surely return, and that she
+need not feel any doubt or dread, for that the white
+steed knew the way, and would bring me back in
+safety. Then she addressed me in these words, which
+seemed very strange to me&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will not refuse this request, though your
+journey afflicts me with great grief and fear. Erin
+is not now as it was when you left it. The great
+king Finn and his Fena are all gone; and you will
+find, instead of them, a holy father and hosts of priests
+and saints. Now, think well on what I say to you,
+and keep my words in your mind. If once you
+alight from the white steed, you will never come back
+to me. Again I warn you, if you place your feet on
+the green sod in Erin, you will never return to this
+lovely land. A third time, O Oisin, my beloved
+husband, a third time I say to you, if you alight from
+the white steed, you will never see me again."</p>
+
+<p>I promised that I would faithfully attend to her
+words, and that I would not alight from the white
+steed. Then, as I looked into her gentle face and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
+marked her grief, my heart was weighed down with
+sadness, and my tears flowed plentifully; but even
+so, my mind was bent on coming back to Erin.</p>
+
+<p>When I had mounted the white steed, he galloped
+straight towards the shore. We moved as swiftly as
+before over the clear sea. The wind overtook the
+waves and we overtook the wind, so that we straightway
+left the Land of Youth behind; and we passed
+by many islands and cities, till at length we landed
+on the green shores of Erin.</p>
+
+<p>As I travelled on through the country, I looked
+closely around me; but I scarcely knew the old
+places, for everything seemed strangely altered. I saw
+no sign of Finn and his host, and I began to dread
+that Niam's saying was coming true. At length, I
+espied at a distance a company of little men and
+women,<a name="FNanchor_CLIII._181" id="FNanchor_CLIII._181"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLIII._181" class="fnanchor">[CLIII.]</a> all mounted on horses as small as themselves;
+and when I came near, they greeted me kindly and
+courteously. They looked at me with wonder and
+curiosity, and they marvelled much at my great size,
+and at the beauty and majesty of my person.</p>
+
+<p>I asked them about Finn and the Fena; whether
+they were still living, or if any sudden disaster had
+swept them away. And one replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We have heard of the hero Finn, who ruled the
+Fena of Erin in times of old, and who never had an
+equal for bravery and wisdom. The poets of the
+Gaels have written many books concerning his deeds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
+and the deeds of the Fena, which we cannot now
+relate; but they are all gone long since, for they lived
+many ages ago. We have heard also, and we have
+seen it written in very old books, that Finn had a son
+named Oisin. Now this Oisin went with a young
+fairy maiden to Tirnanoge, and his father and his
+friends sorrowed greatly after him, and sought him
+long; but he was never seen again."</p>
+
+<p>When I heard all this, I was filled with amazement,
+and my heart grew heavy with great sorrow. I
+silently turned my steed away from the wondering
+people, and set forward straightway for Allen of the
+mighty deeds, on the broad, green plains of Leinster.
+It was a miserable journey to me; and though my
+mind, being full of sadness at all I saw and heard,
+forecasted further sorrows, I was grieved more than
+ever when I reached Allen. For there, indeed, I found
+the hill deserted and lonely, and my father's palace all
+in ruins and overgrown with grass and weeds.</p>
+
+<p>I turned slowly away, and afterwards fared
+through the land in every direction in search of my
+friends. But I met only crowds of little people, all
+strangers, who gazed on me with wonder; and none
+knew me. I visited every place throughout the
+country where I knew the Fena had lived; but I
+found their houses all like Allen, solitary and in
+ruins.</p>
+
+<p>At length I came to Glenasmole,<a name="FNanchor_CLIV._182" id="FNanchor_CLIV._182"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLIV._182" class="fnanchor">[CLIV.]</a> where many a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
+time I had hunted in days of old with the Fena, and
+there I saw a crowd of people in the glen. As soon as
+they saw me, one of them came forward and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come to us, thou mighty hero, and help us out
+of our strait; for thou art a man of vast strength."</p>
+
+<p>I went to them, and found a number of men trying
+in vain to raise a large, flat stone. It was half lifted
+from the ground; but those who were under it were
+not strong enough either to raise it further or to free
+themselves from its weight. And they were in great
+distress, and on the point of being crushed to death.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it a shameful thing that so many men
+should be unable to lift this stone, which Oscar, if he
+were alive, would take in his right hand and fling
+over the heads of the feeble crowd. After I had
+looked a little while, I stooped forward and seized the
+flag with one hand; and, putting forth my strength,
+I flung it seven perches from its place, and relieved
+the little men. But with the great strain the golden
+saddle-girth broke, and, bounding forward to keep
+myself from falling, I suddenly came to the ground
+on my two feet.</p>
+
+<p>The moment the white steed felt himself free, he
+shook himself and neighed. Then, starting off with
+the speed of a cloud-shadow on a March day, he left
+me standing helpless and sorrowful. Instantly a
+woeful change came over me: the sight of my eyes
+began to fade, the ruddy beauty of my face fled, I lost
+all my strength, and I fell to the earth, a poor,
+withered old man, blind and wrinkled and feeble.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The white steed was never seen again. I never
+recovered my sight, my youth, or my strength; and I
+have lived in this manner, sorrowing without ceasing
+for my gentle, golden-haired wife, Niam, and thinking
+ever of my father, Finn, and of the lost companions of
+my youth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_VOYAGE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_OCORRACLV" id="THE_VOYAGE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_OCORRACLV"></a>THE VOYAGE OF THE SONS OF O'CORRA.<a name="FNanchor_CLV._183" id="FNanchor_CLV._183"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLV._183" class="fnanchor">[CLV.]</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>A princely upright hundred-herd brugaid<a name="FNanchor_CLVI._184" id="FNanchor_CLVI._184"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLVI._184" class="fnanchor">[CLVI.]</a> was born
+one time in the lovely province of Connaught, namely,
+Conall Derg O'Corra the fair-haired. And thus was
+this brugaid (circumstanced):&mdash;he was a fortunate,
+rich, prosperous man; and his house was never found
+without three shouts in it&mdash;the shout of the brewers
+brewing ale, and the shout of the servants over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
+caldrons distributing (meat) to the hosts, and the shout
+of the youths over the chessboards<a name="FNanchor_CLVII._185" id="FNanchor_CLVII._185"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLVII._185" class="fnanchor">[CLVII.]</a> winning games
+from one another.</p>
+
+<p>The same house was never without three measures:&mdash;a
+measure of malt for making yeast, a measure of
+wheat for providing bread for the guests, and a
+measure of salt for savouring each kind of food.</p>
+
+<p>His wife was Cairderga<a name="FNanchor_CLVIII._186" id="FNanchor_CLVIII._186"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLVIII._186" class="fnanchor">[CLVIII.]</a> the daughter of the Erenach<a name="FNanchor_CLIX._187" id="FNanchor_CLIX._187"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLIX._187" class="fnanchor">[CLIX.]</a>
+of Clogher.<a name="FNanchor_CLX._188" id="FNanchor_CLX._188"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLX._188" class="fnanchor">[CLX.]</a> They felt no want of any kind except
+being without children; and it was not that they were
+without children (being born to them), but that the
+infants always died the moment after birth.</p>
+
+<p>Then this brugaid said (one day) to his wife as
+she reclined near him on the couch:&mdash;"It is a sad
+thing for us," said he, "that we have no children who
+would take our place and fill it worthily when we are
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"What desire is in your mind in regard to that?"
+says the wife.</p>
+
+<p>"It is my desire," says the brugaid, "to make a
+bond with the demon to try if he would give us a son
+or a daughter who would take our place after us (since
+God has not done so)."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us do that," said the woman.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span></p><p>They accordingly fasted (and prayed) to the
+demon; (and the demon hearkened unto them. And
+in due time) the pains and struggles, of childbirth
+came upon the lady; and she bore three sons at that
+great birth, namely, a son at the beginning of the
+night, and a son at the middle of the night, and a son
+at the end of the night.</p>
+
+<p>And they were baptised according to the baptism of
+the pagans (by which they were dedicated not to God
+but to the demon); and their names were Lochan,
+Enna, and Silvester. And after that, they were reared
+and carefully trained up till they were swift and active
+on sea and land; so that they were an overmatch for
+all the young people of their own age in every game
+and in every accomplishment. And they were in the
+mouths and on the tongues of all who saw or heard of
+them in their day.</p>
+
+<p>One day when they were resting at the railings of
+the house of their father and mother, wearied after
+their hurling and their martial games, the housefolk
+said that they saw no fault or defect in these handsome
+much-renowned youths, except only their being baptised
+in the service of the devil. (And the youths hearing
+this said):&mdash;"If it be so," said they, "that the devil
+is our lord and master, it is very wrong of us not to
+bring ruin and wrath and woe on his enemies, that is to
+say, (we ought) to slaughter the clergy, and burn and
+spoil their churches."</p>
+
+<p>Then did these three youths arise, (and collecting a
+band), and taking unto them their arms, they came to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
+Tuam-da-Gualann,<a name="FNanchor_CLXI._189" id="FNanchor_CLXI._189"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXI._189" class="fnanchor">[CLXI.]</a> and spoiled and burned the town.
+And (after that) they plundered and made dreadful
+havoc on the churches and clergy throughout the
+province of Connaught, until their wicked and bloodthirsty
+ravages were noised over the four quarters of
+Erin. Thus did they run their evil course without
+ceasing for a whole year, during which time they
+destroyed more than half the churches of Connaught.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the year Lochan said to his brothers:
+"We have made one great mistake through forgetfulness,"
+says he, "and our lord the devil will not be
+thankful to us on account of it." "What is that?"
+said the other two youths. "Our grandfather," says
+he, "that is our mother's father&mdash;not to have killed him
+and burned his church."</p>
+
+<p>So they set out straightway, journeying without
+sparing or respite (to Clogher), and this was how
+they found the erenach, namely, on the green of the
+church with a great company of his folk around him,
+(waiting for the O'Corras), in order to attend on them
+and to deal out to them the choice of every food and
+the best of every ale. And the intention that the
+elder had towards them, that indeed was not the
+intention they had towards him, but to murder him
+and to burn and spoil his church.</p>
+
+<p>Then the O'Corras came to the spot where the elder
+was standing, and they made up their minds not to kill
+him or burn the houses till night, when the cows and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
+the (other) cattle of the homestead would be housed,
+all in their own proper places.</p>
+
+<p>The elder welcomed them and led them to the
+homestead; and he now became aware of their intention.
+Nevertheless he put them in a goodly pleasant
+<i>Greenan</i>,<a name="FNanchor_CLXII._190" id="FNanchor_CLXII._190"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXII._190" class="fnanchor">[CLXII.]</a> and they were served with food and ale till
+they became exhilarated and cheerful: after which
+couches were made ready for them on lofty bedsteads.</p>
+
+<p>And now deep slumber and heavy sleep fell on them,
+and a wonderful vision was revealed in a dream to
+Lochan, the eldest of the sons of O'Corra, in which he
+was carried to see heaven and hell. And after this he
+awoke. The other two awoke at the same time, and
+they said:&mdash;"Let us now arise, for it is time to plunder
+and destroy the homestead."</p>
+
+<p>"Seems to me," said Lochan, "that this is not the
+right thing for us to do: for evil is the lord we have
+served until now, and good is the Lord we have plundered
+and outraged.</p>
+
+<p>"And last night I had," said he, "a fearful dream,
+in which I saw a vision of heaven and hell. And first
+I was taken to see hell, where were countless souls of
+men and vast crowds of demons suffering divers tortures,
+and plagues unexampled. And I saw the four rivers
+of hell, that is to say, a river of toads, a river of
+serpents, a river of fire, and a river of snow. I saw
+also a monstrous serpent with many heads and legs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
+at sight whereof, even though it were only a single
+glance, all the men in the world would drop dead with
+loathing and horror.</p>
+
+<p>"After this methought I was taken to see heaven;
+where I beheld the Lord Himself seated on His kingly
+throne, and angels in the shapes of white birds singing
+for Him. And among them was one great snow-white
+bird of dazzling brightness that excelled all the others
+in size and beauty and voice, chanting strains of surpassing
+sweetness. Women in travail and men sore
+wounded and sick people racked with pain would fall
+asleep if they heard the delightful harmony of his
+voice. And it was made known to me that this great
+bird who chanted such heavenly music to his mild Lord
+was Michael the Archangel.</p>
+
+<p>"And now my brothers," said Lochan, "it is my
+counsel to you that you follow God henceforward."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said the others, "will the Lord accept repentance
+from us for the dreadful evils we have already
+done?"</p>
+
+<p>They go to the father of their mother, namely, the
+erenach, and they ask this thing of him. "He will accept
+your repentance without doubt," says the erenach.</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," said Lochan, "let Mass be celebrated
+for us, and put us under instruction, and let us offer
+our confession to God. After that we will make staffs
+of the handles of our spears; and we will go to Finnen
+of Clonard,<a name="FNanchor_CLXIII._191" id="FNanchor_CLXIII._191"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXIII._191" class="fnanchor">[CLXIII.]</a> the tutor of the saints and of the just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
+men of all Erin. He is a very holy man, and he will
+advise us in regard to what we ought to do."</p>
+
+<p>To this counsel they agreed; and on the morrow
+they set out for the place where Finnen was; whom
+they found on the green of Clonard with a number of
+his clerics.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are these coming towards us?" said the
+clerics. And one said, "They are the O'Corras the
+robbers." Hearing this they fled, like lightning, in
+a body from their master, for they felt quite sure
+that the O'Corras were coming to slay them; so that
+Finnen was left quite alone before the three brothers.</p>
+
+<p>"It is from us the clerics are fleeing:" says Lochan.</p>
+
+<p>"Of a certainty it is," said his brothers. "Let us,"
+said Lochan, "cast from us our staffs, the only little
+remnant of our arms left with us; and let us throw
+ourselves on our knees before the cleric."</p>
+
+<p>And this they did. "What is your desire?" says
+the cleric (Finnen). "Our desire," said they, "is
+faith and piety, and to serve God, and to abandon the
+lord whom we have hitherto served, namely, the devil."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a good resolution," says the cleric; "and
+let us go now to the homestead yonder, the place where
+live our brotherhood."</p>
+
+<p>They go accordingly with him to the brotherhood;
+and after the matter had been considered, it was arranged
+to set apart a young cleric to teach them; and it was
+decreed that they should not speak to any one except
+their own master till the end of a year.</p>
+
+<p>So they continued for a whole year till they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
+read the Canons through, and by the time they had
+come to be able to read them, the whole brotherhood
+felt grateful (to God) for their piety and their gentleness.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the year they came to Finnen; and
+they knelt before him, and said to him:&mdash;"It is time
+now that we should be judged and sentence passed on
+us for the great crimes we have committed.</p>
+
+<p>"What," said Finnen, "do ye not think it enough&mdash;the
+penance you have done already for a whole year
+among the brotherhood?" "It is not enough," said
+they. "What then are the greatest crimes ye have
+committed?" says Finnen. "We have burned more
+than half the churches of Connaught; and neither
+priest nor bishop got quarter or protection from us."</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot" replied Finnen, "give back life to
+the people you have killed; but do ye that which will
+be in your power, namely, to build up the churches ye
+have burned, and to repair every other damage ye have
+committed in them. And I will give to each man
+of you," says he, "the swiftness and strength of a
+hundred; and I will take from you all weariness of
+feet, of hands, and of body; and I will give you light
+and understanding which will have neither decay nor
+end."</p>
+
+<p>So the O'Corras departed, and went first to Tuam-da-Gualann;
+and after that, they fared through the
+province, obedient to rule and working hard each day,
+until it came to pass that they had restored everything
+they had previously destroyed.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After that they came at the end of the year to
+speak with Finnen. "Have you been able," asks
+Finnen, "to repair everything ye destroyed belonging
+to the Church?" "We have," said they, "except one
+place alone, namely Kenn-Mara."<a name="FNanchor_CLXIV._192" id="FNanchor_CLXIV._192"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXIV._192" class="fnanchor">[CLXIV.]</a> "Alas for that,"
+says Finnen; "that is the very first place you should
+have repaired; for it is the homestead of the oldest of
+all the saints of Ireland, namely, the aged Camann of
+Kenn-Mara. And now go and carefully restore everything
+ye have destroyed in that homestead. And the
+sentence that holy man passes on you, fulfil it patiently."</p>
+
+<p>So they went gladly to Kenn-Mara; and they
+repaired everything they had ruined there.</p>
+
+<p>One day when they had come forth from the homestead,
+they sat on the margin of the little bay, watching
+the sun as it went westward. And as they gazed and
+reflected on the course of the sun, they began to marvel
+greatly, pondering whither it went after it had gone
+down beneath the verge of the sea. "What more
+wonderful thing is there in the whole world," said
+they, "than that the sea does not freeze into ice, while
+ice is formed in every other water!"</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon they formed the resolution on the spot
+to bring unto them a certain artificer who was a fast
+friend of theirs, and to (get him) to make a three-hide
+curragh<a name="FNanchor_CLXV._193" id="FNanchor_CLXV._193"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXV._193" class="fnanchor">[CLXV.]</a> for them. Accordingly the curragh was made,
+and a strong-sided one it was. And the reward the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span>
+artificer asked for building it was to be let go with
+them.</p>
+
+<p>When the time had come, and they were about to
+embark, they saw a large crowd passing close by; and
+this crowd was a company of <i>crossans</i>.<a name="FNanchor_CLXVI._194" id="FNanchor_CLXVI._194"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXVI._194" class="fnanchor">[CLXVI.]</a> When the
+<i>crossans</i> saw the curragh putting forth on the sea,
+they inquired:&mdash;"Who are yonder people that are
+launching this curragh on the sea?" said they.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>furshore</i> (juggler) of the crossans said:&mdash;"I
+know them well; they are the sons of Conall derg
+O'Corra the fair-haired of Connaught, the destroyers
+and robbers, going on their pilgrimage on the sea and
+on the great ocean, to make search for their Lord."
+"And indeed," added the <i>furshore</i>, "my word for it,
+they do not stand more in need of seeking for heaven
+than we do."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a long day I fancy till you go on your pilgrimage,"
+said the leader of the band. "Say not so,"
+answered the <i>furshore</i>: "for I will certainly go with
+these people on my pilgrimage now without delay."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon our word," said the <i>crossans</i>, "you will not
+take away our clothes with you; for not a single article
+of the garments you wear belongs to you." "It is not
+so small a matter that would keep me with you," says he.</p>
+
+<p>So they stripped off all his clothes, and sent him
+away mother naked to the curragh.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Who and what in the world are you, good man?"
+asked the crew. "A poor wretch who wishes to go
+with you on pilgrimage," said he. "Indeed," said
+they, "you shall not by any means come with us,
+seeing that you are stark naked." "Say not so, young
+men," said he, "for the sake of God do not refuse me;
+for I will amuse you and keep your hearts cheerful
+(with my music and singing); and your piety will not
+be a whit the worse for it."</p>
+
+<p>And (inasmuch as he had asked) for the sake of
+God they consented to let him go.</p>
+
+<p>Now this is how it was with the crew:&mdash;each man
+of them had built a church and raised an altar to the Lord
+in his own district. Their number was nine; among
+whom was a bishop, and a priest, and a deacon; and
+they had one <i>gilla</i> (attendant) who was the ninth man.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us go aboard our curragh now," says Lochan,
+"as we have finished our task of restoring the churches,
+and as we have, besides, each of us built a church to the
+Lord in our own district."</p>
+
+<p>It was then they put up their prayers fervently to
+God in the hope that they might have fine weather;
+and that the Lord would quell the fury of the billows,
+and the might of the ocean, and the rage of the terrible
+sea monsters. So they embarked in their curragh,
+bringing their oars; and they began to question among
+themselves what direction they should take. "The
+direction in which this wind will bring us," says the
+bishop. And having commended themselves to God,
+one and all, they betook them to their oars. A great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
+wind now arose, which drove them out on the waste of
+waters straight to the west; and they were forty days
+and forty nights on the ocean. And God revealed to
+them great and unheard of wonders.</p>
+
+<p>They had not been long rowing when the <i>crossan</i>
+died; and sad and sorrowful were they for his loss, and
+wept much. While they were still mourning, they saw
+a little bird alight on the deck of the curragh. And
+the little bird spoke and said to them:&mdash;"Good people,
+tell me now in God's name what is the cause of your
+sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>crossan</i> that we had playing music for us; and
+he died a little while ago in this curragh; and that is
+the cause of our sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>And the bird said:&mdash;"Lo, I am your little <i>crossan</i>:
+and now be not sorrowful any longer, for I am going
+straightway to heaven." So saying he bade them farewell
+and flew away.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I.</h3>
+
+<p>They row forward for a long time till there was
+shown to them a wonderful island, and in it a great
+grove of marvellous beauty, laden with apples, golden
+coloured and sweet scented. A sparkling rivulet of
+wine flowed through the midst of the grove; and when
+the wind blew through the trees, sweeter than any music
+was the rustling it made. The O'Corras ate some of
+the apples and drank from the rivulet of wine, and
+were immediately satisfied. And from that time forth
+they were never troubled by either wounds or sickness.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>II.</h3>
+
+<p>Then they took to their oars; and after a time they
+came in view of another island, and four companies of
+people in it, such as had never been seen before. Now
+these people had divided the island into four parts: old
+greyheaded people were in the first division; princes
+in the second; warriors in the third; and servants in the
+fourth. They were all beautiful and glorious to behold;
+and they diverted themselves continually with games and
+pastimes. One of the crew went to them to ask news:
+(he was a comely, well-favoured youth, but) he seemed
+ugly and dark-visaged in presence of these glorious
+people. When he had got among them, he became in
+a moment beautiful like the others; and he joined in
+their games, and laughed, and made merry. Moreover
+he remembered nothing more of his companions; and
+he sojourned in the island after that for evermore. And
+the O'Corras were at length forced to depart, though
+much grieved for the loss of their companion.</p>
+
+
+<h3>III.</h3>
+
+<p>Then they set out and rowed for some time till they
+sighted another marvellous island. It stood up in the
+air high over the great sea; and it was propped up by a
+pillar like a single foot standing under it in the middle.
+And the crew heard great shouting and the loud conversation
+of people on the top of the island overhead;
+but though the O'Corras sailed round and round, they
+could not get a sight of them.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>IV.</h3>
+
+<p>They row forward after that till they come to an
+island in which lived one lone cleric. Very lovely was
+that island, and glorious its history. Beautiful purple
+flowers covered all the plains, dropping honey in abundance;
+and on the trees were perched flocks of bright-coloured
+birds singing slow sweet fairy-music. The
+O'Corras went to ask the cleric about himself and
+about the island. And he spoke as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am a disciple of St. Andrew the Apostle, and
+Dega is my name. On a certain night I neglected to
+read my Matins; and it is for this that I was sent on
+a pilgrimage on the ocean; and here I am awaiting
+the Judgment day. And yonder birds that are singing
+those incomparable strains on the trees, these are the
+souls of holy men."</p>
+
+
+<h3>V.</h3>
+
+<p>They took leave of the old man and plied their
+oars, till they reached another island, with dead people
+on one side of it, and living people on the other side:
+and many of the living people had feet of iron. All
+round was a burning sea, which broke over the island
+continually in mighty waves. And the living people
+uttered fearful cries when the fiery waves flowed over
+them, for their torments thereby were great and terrible.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VI.</h3>
+
+<p>After leaving this they rowed on till they saw an
+island formed of great flat stones for ever burning red<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
+hot. And thereon they saw whole hosts of people
+burning in great torment; and many had red fiery
+spits thrust through their bodies. And they uttered
+great cries of pain without ceasing. The crew called
+out from a distance to ask who they were: whereupon
+one answered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is one of the flagstones of hell. We are
+souls who in life did not fulfil the penance imposed on
+us; and warn all men to avoid this place; for whosoever
+cometh hither shall never go hence till the Day of
+Judgment."</p>
+
+
+<h3>VII.</h3>
+
+<p>The next island they saw was very beautiful and
+glorious to look upon. It had a wall of copper all
+round it, with a network of copper hanging out from
+each corner; and in the centre stood a palace. The
+crew left their curragh on the strand and went towards
+the palace. And when they had come nigh unto the
+wall, the wind, as it rustled and murmured through
+the copper network, made music so soft and sweet that
+they fell into a gentle slumber, and slept for three
+days and three nights. When they awoke they saw a
+beautiful maiden coming towards them from the palace.
+She had sandals of <i>findrina</i> (a sort of white metal) on
+her feet, and an inner garment of fine silk next her
+snow-white skin. She wore a beautiful gold-coloured
+vest, and over all a bright-tinted mantle, plaited fivefold
+on its upper border, and fastened at the neck with
+a brooch of burnished gold. In one hand she held a
+pitcher of copper, and in the other a silver goblet.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When she had come near she greeted them and
+bade them welcome. And she gave them food from
+the copper pitcher which seemed to them like cheese;
+and she brought them water in the silver goblet from a
+well on the strand. And there was no delicious flavour
+that was ever tasted by man that they did not find in
+this food and drink. Then the maiden said to them:&mdash;"Although
+we are all&mdash;you and I&mdash;of one race, yet
+shall ye go hence without delay, for your resurrection
+is not to be here."</p>
+
+<p>So they bade her farewell and took to their oars
+once more.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VIII.</h3>
+
+<p>After rowing for some time they saw flocks of large
+birds of divers colours flying over the sea; and their
+number was great beyond counting. One of them
+alighted on the deck of the curragh.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a delightful thing," said one of the
+clerics, "if this bird were a messenger from the Lord,
+sent to give us news."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be quite possible with God," said the
+eldest; and as he spoke he raised his eyes and looked
+at the bird. Whereupon the bird spoke and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is indeed to converse with you that I have
+come; for I am of the land of Erin."</p>
+
+<p>Now this bird was crimson red all over, except
+three beautiful streaks on her breast, which shone as
+bright as the sun. And after a time she said to the
+same cleric:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am the soul of a woman; and I am your friend.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
+And come ye now," says she, "to hear yonder birds;
+for these are the souls that are permitted to come out
+of hell every Sunday."</p>
+
+<p>"It is better that we leave this place at once,"
+said the same old cleric. And his companions said
+to him:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We will go with thee whithersoever thou goest."
+So they departed from that place; (and the crimson
+red bird went with them).</p>
+
+
+<h3>IX.</h3>
+
+<p>And as they went, they saw three wonderful
+streams, namely, a stream of otters, a stream of eels,
+and a stream of black swans. Great flocks of birds
+arose from these three streams and flew past the
+voyagers; and the black swans followed close after,
+tearing and tormenting the birds. And the crimson
+red bird said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Marvel not, neither be ye sad of heart; for these
+bird-shapes that ye see are the souls of people suffering
+the punishment of their crimes. And the black swans
+that follow them, these are devils who are for ever
+tormenting them; and the birds scream fearfully, and
+are for ever trying to fly from the demons and to free
+themselves from their torment.</p>
+
+<p>"And now as to me," continued the bird, "I am
+about to depart from you. It is not permitted me to
+make known to you what is to befall you; but in a
+little time another will tell you all that you need to
+know."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And the cleric said:&mdash;"Tell us, I beseech thee,
+what are those three beautiful streaks on thy breast."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you that," answered the bird. "When
+I was in the world I was married; but I did not yield
+obedience to my husband, neither did I fulfil my lawful
+homely duties as a wife. And when a grievous sickness
+came upon him I left him to die. But thrice I
+went in pity to him:&mdash;once to see him and ask after his
+illness; once to bring him such food as befitted his
+state; and the third time when he was dead, to watch
+by the body and see it buried. These three good deeds
+are the three beautiful streaks that you see on my
+breast; and I should have been bright all over like
+these streaks if I had not violated my lawful marriage
+duties."</p>
+
+<p>And having so spoken, the bird bade them farewell
+and flew away.</p>
+
+
+<h3>X.</h3>
+
+<p>They next discovered a very beautiful island. The
+grass was bright green, and it was all over intermingled
+with pretty purple-coloured flowers. Flocks
+of lovely little birds of many bright colours, and
+myriads of bees, flew among the trees and flowers,
+humming and singing harmonious music. The voyagers
+saw a venerable grey-headed old man with a
+harp in his hand. He played this harp on the island
+continually; and the music thereof was sweeter than
+any music they had ever heard. They saluted the old
+man, who saluted them in return, with a blessing.
+But immediately he bade them to depart.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>XI.</h3>
+
+<p>So they rowed away till they came to another
+island, on which they saw a man digging in a field;
+and his spade was all fiery, and the handle thereof,
+which he held in his hand, was red hot. From the sea
+at one side arose at times a mighty wave all flaming
+red with fire, which flowed quite over the island and
+over the man. And ever when he saw the wave
+coming he cried out with fear; and when the burning
+torrent covered him, he strove to raise his head above
+the flames, and roared with his great torment. Now
+when one of the waves had retired they spoke to him
+and asked:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who art thou, O wretched man?"</p>
+
+<p>And he answered:&mdash;"Lo, this is my punishment
+for my misdeeds. For when I lived on earth I always
+worked on Sundays, digging in my garden; for which
+I am condemned to dig with this fiery spade, and to
+suffer the torments of these fiery waves. And now,
+for the sake of God, offer up your prayers for me, that
+my pains may be lightened."</p>
+
+<p>And they prayed fervently; after which they
+departed from the island.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XII.</h3>
+
+<p>Soon after leaving this they saw a horseman of
+vast size riding on the sea; and the horse he rode was
+made of fire flaming red. And as he rode, great waves
+of fire came after him along the sea; and when a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
+wave began to roll over him, he yelled aloud with
+fear and pain. Then they asked him why he was
+thus tormented; and he answered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am he who stole my brother's horse; and after
+I had gotten him I rode him every Sunday. For this
+I am now undergoing my punishment, riding on
+this horse of fire, and tormented with these great
+waves of fire."</p>
+
+
+<h3>XIII.</h3>
+
+<p>After leaving this they came in sight of another
+island, full of people, all weeping and lamenting
+grievously. Great numbers of jet-black birds with
+beaks of fire and red-hot fiery talons followed and
+fluttered round about them, tearing and burning them
+with their talons, and rending away pieces of flesh, the
+full of their fiery beaks. Then the crew said aloud:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who are ye, O miserable people?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are dishonest smiths and artisans; and because
+we cheated while we lived, we are punished by these
+hateful fiery birds. Moreover, our tongues are burning,
+being all afire in our heads; for that we reviled people
+with bitter words and foul taunts."</p>
+
+
+<h3>XIV.</h3>
+
+<p>Coming now to another place, they saw a giant
+huge in size, and of a sooty black colour all over.
+His mouth was all on fire; and from his throat he
+belched forth great flakes of fire, each flake as it
+came from his mouth larger than the skin of a three-year-old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
+wether. He held in his hand an iron club
+larger than the shaft of a mill wheel; and on his back
+he bore an immense faggot of firewood, a good load for
+a team of horses. Now this faggot often blazed up and
+burned him; and he tried to free himself from his
+torment by lying down so that the sea might flow over
+him. But ever as he did so, the sea around him
+turned to fire, and rose up in mighty burning billows,
+covering him all over, so that he made the place resound
+with his bellowings.</p>
+
+<p>"Miserable wretch, who art thou?" asked the crew.</p>
+
+<p>And he answered:&mdash;"I will tell you truly. When
+I lived I used to cut faggots and bring them home on my
+back every Sunday: and lo, here is my punishment."</p>
+
+
+<h3>XV.</h3>
+
+<p>They came after that to a sea of fire full of men's
+heads, all black, and continually fighting with each
+other. And many great serpents rose up among the
+heads and came with fury to attack the curragh, so
+that at one time they pierced through the outer hide.
+And one of the crew who looked on cried out in great
+horror, and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is enough to strike one dead to behold the
+fearful things I see!"</p>
+
+<p>And the whole crew when they saw the heads and
+the serpents fell flat with fear. But the elder (the
+bishop) comforted them, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Be ye not afraid or troubled on account of these
+things; for God is able to protect us, even though we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span>
+were in a curragh of only one hide; and if He wishes
+to save us, these monsters cannot hurt us, however
+furious they may be to slay us."</p>
+
+<p>And they took courage after this, and rowed out
+into the open sea.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XVI.</h3>
+
+<p>There was shown to them next another beautiful
+island, having in one place an open wood. The trees
+were laden with fruit, and the leaves dropped honey to
+the ground. The sides of the hills were clothed with
+purple blossomed heather, mixed with soft, green
+grass to its very centre. In the midst of the island
+was a pretty lake, whose waters tasted like sweet wine.
+They rested for a week on the shore of this lake, and
+cast off their weariness. And now, being about to
+leave the island, as they turned to go to the curragh, a
+monstrous reptile<a name="FNanchor_CLXVII._195" id="FNanchor_CLXVII._195"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXVII._195" class="fnanchor">[CLXVII.]</a> rose up from the lake and looked
+at them. And they trembled with fear at the sight of
+this terrible beast; for each man thought that he himself
+would be the first to be attacked. But after a little
+time the reptile dived again into the water, and they
+saw no more of him.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XVII.</h3>
+
+<p>From this they rowed away; and after a long
+time they came at midnight to an island wherein<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
+was a community of Ailbe of Emly.<a name="FNanchor_CLXVIII._196" id="FNanchor_CLXVIII._196"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXVIII._196" class="fnanchor">[CLXVIII.]</a> On the beach
+they found two spring wells; one foul, the other
+bright and clear. The gilla wished to drink of the
+clear well; but the elder (the bishop) told him it was
+better to ask leave, if there was anyone living on the
+island.</p>
+
+<p>Then they saw a great light; and coming closer,
+they found the twelve men of the community at their
+prayers; and now they perceived that the bright light
+they saw came from the radiant faces of the twelve; so
+that these holy men needed no other light. One of
+them, an old man, comes towards the voyagers; and
+he bids them welcome and asks news of them. They
+tell him all their adventures, and ask his leave to
+drink from the well; whereupon he said to them:&mdash;"Ye
+may fill your pitchers from the clear well, if your
+elder (<i>i.e.</i> the bishop) gives you leave."</p>
+
+<p>"Who are ye?" asks the gilla.</p>
+
+<p>"A community of Ailbe of Emly," says he: "and
+we are the crew of one of Ailbe's curraghs. God has
+permitted that we live here till the Day of Judgment,
+praying for everyone who is drowned at sea. And
+now leave this land before morning," he added, "for
+your resurrection is not to be here. And if ye have
+not left by the dawn, so much the worse for yourselves;
+for if once ye get a view of this island in the light of
+day, bitter will be your anguish of mind for leaving it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
+(on account of its surpassing loveliness). So it is better
+for you to go away during the night."</p>
+
+<p>And they did exactly all he told them to do.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we take away some of the pebbles of the
+strand?" said they (talking among themselves).</p>
+
+<p>"It is better to ask leave," answered the cleric. So
+the gilla asked leave of the same old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if you have the permission (of your bishop),"
+answered he. "Nevertheless," he added, "those who
+take them will be sorry; and those who do not take
+them will be sorry also."</p>
+
+<p>They pick up pebbles, some bringing away one,
+some two, some three. (After which they row away in
+the dark night from the island.) In the morning they
+drank some of the spring water of the island from their
+pitchers; which threw them into a deep sleep from that
+time till next day. On wakening up, they examined
+their pebbles in the light; and some were found to be
+crystal, some silver, and some gold. Then those who
+brought some away were in sorrow that they had not
+brought more; and much greater was the sorrow of
+those who had brought away none. So the words of
+the old man came true.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XVIII.</h3>
+
+<p>After leaving this they came to a lovely island on
+which was a church standing all alone: and when they
+drew nigh they heard the voice of a cleric singing the
+psalms with a sweet voice. They came to the door
+and struck it with the hand-wood; and straightway a
+beautiful bright-coloured bird came to speak with them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>
+When they had told him who they were and what they
+wanted, he flew back to the cleric, who bade him have
+the door opened for the pilgrims. And when they had
+come in, they found the cleric&mdash;a very old man with
+white hair&mdash;who sang his hymns continually. And
+they saluted each other; and the pilgrims stayed there
+that night. And an angel came and brought them
+supper, and ministered unto them. On the morrow the
+old priest bade them depart, since that was not to be
+the place of their resurrection on the Judgment Day.
+But before they went he foretold all that should happen
+to them during the rest of their voyage.</p>
+
+
+<h3>XIX.</h3>
+
+<p>From that they came to an island in which was a
+disciple of Christ. Glorious and beautiful was that
+island; and on it stood a church and a kingly shrine.
+As they came near they heard some one singing the
+Pater to God in the door of the church: whereupon
+one of the clerics said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome the prayer of our father and teacher,
+Jesus."</p>
+
+<p>And the priest who stood praying at the door
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Why say you so? Who are ye; and where have
+ye seen Him?"</p>
+
+<p>And when they had told him that they were
+servants of Jesus, he spoke again:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I too am one of His disciples. And when I first
+took Him for my Lord I was faithful and steady; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
+after a time I left Him and came to sea in my curragh,
+and rowed till I came to this island. For a long time
+I lived on fruit and herbs; till at length an angel came
+from heaven to visit me. And he said to me:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Thou hast not done well: nevertheless thou shalt
+abide on this island, eating the same food without
+either decay or death till the Judgment Day.' And so
+I have lived here to this hour: and no daily meal is
+sent to me, but I eat of the herbs and fruit that grow
+on the island."</p>
+
+<p>Then they all went together into one house; and
+being very hungry, they prayed fervently for food.
+And presently an angel came down from heaven; and
+while they looked on he placed a supper for them on a
+flagstone hard by the strand, namely, a cake with a
+slice of fish for each. And while they ate, whatsoever
+taste each man separately wished for, that taste he
+found on the food. In the morning, when they were
+about to bid the cleric farewell, he foretold all that
+should happen to them, saying:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ye shall go from me now on sea till ye reach the
+western point of Spain. And as ye near the land, ye
+shall meet a boat with a crew of men fishing, who will
+bring you with them to land."</p>
+
+<p>Then turning to the bishop, he said:&mdash;"Immediately
+after leaving the curragh, as soon as thou hast
+reached the land, prostrate thyself three times to God.
+And the place on which thou shalt first set thy foot,
+there a great crowd shall gather round thee from every
+quarter. And they will treat thee kindly, and will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
+give thee land on which they will build a church for
+thee; and after this thy fame shall spread over the
+whole world. And the successor of Peter (the Pope)
+shall bring thee eastwards to Rome. Yonder priest
+thou shalt leave as thy successor in the church, and the
+deacon thou shalt leave to be his sacristan. That place
+and that church shall be revered, and shall be preserved
+for ever. And thou shalt leave the Gilla in Britain,
+where he will live for the rest of his life."</p>
+
+<p>After this they bade the old man farewell and
+left the island. And all fell out just as he had foretold.
+And the bishop went to Rome; and he afterwards related
+these adventures to Saerbrethach bishop of West
+Munster, and to Mocolmoc, one of the holy men of
+Aran, as we have set them down here.</p>
+
+<p class="p2">Thus far the Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_FATE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_USNACLXIX" id="THE_FATE_OF_THE_SONS_OF_USNACLXIX"></a>THE FATE OF THE SONS OF USNA.<a name="FNanchor_CLXIX._197" id="FNanchor_CLXIX._197"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXIX._197" class="fnanchor">[CLXIX.]</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Avenging and bright fall the swift sword of Erin<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On him who the brave sons of Usna betrayed.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza right">
+<span class="smcap">Moore.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_I" id="GCHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE FLIGHT TO ALBAN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Concobar mac Nessa, king of Ulaid,<a name="FNanchor_CLXX._198" id="FNanchor_CLXX._198"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXX._198" class="fnanchor">[CLXX.]</a> ruled in Emain.
+And his chief story-teller, Felimid, made a feast for the
+king and for the knights of the Red Branch,<a name="FNanchor_CLXXI._199" id="FNanchor_CLXXI._199"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXI._199" class="fnanchor">[CLXXI.]</a> who all
+came to partake of it in his house. While they were
+feasting right joyously, listening to the sweet music
+of the harps and the mellow voices of the bards, a
+messenger brought word that Felimid's wife had given
+birth to a little daughter, an infant of wondrous beauty.
+And when Caffa, the king's druid and seer, who was
+of the company, was ware of the birth of the child, he
+went forth to view the stars and the clouds, if he might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>
+thereby glean knowledge of what was in store for that
+little babe.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXII._200" id="FNanchor_CLXXII._200"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXII._200" class="fnanchor">[CLXXII.]</a> And when he had returned to his place,
+he sat deep pondering for a time: and then standing
+up and obtaining silence, he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This child shall be called Deir-dr&#277;<a name="FNanchor_CLXXIII._201" id="FNanchor_CLXXIII._201"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXIII._201" class="fnanchor">[CLXXIII.]</a>; and fittingly
+is she so named: for much of woe will befall Ulaid
+and Erin in general on her account. There shall be
+jealousies, and strifes, and wars: evil deeds will be
+done: many heroes will be exiled: many will fall."</p>
+
+<p>When the heroes heard this, they were sorely
+troubled, and some said that the child should be killed.
+But the king said:&mdash;"Not so, ye Knights of the Red
+Branch; it is not meet to commit a base deed in order
+to escape evils that may never come to pass. This
+little maid shall be reared out of the reach of mischief,
+and when she is old enough she shall be my wife: thus
+shall I be the better able to guard against those evils
+that Caffa forecasts for us."</p>
+
+<p>And the Ultonians did not dare to gainsay the
+word of the king.</p>
+
+<p>Then king Concobar caused the child to be placed
+in a strong fortress on a lonely spot nigh the palace,
+with no opening in front, but with door and windows
+looking out at the back on a lovely garden watered by
+a clear rippling stream: and house and garden were
+surrounded by a wall that no man could surmount.
+And those who were put in charge of her were, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
+tutor, and her nurse, and Concobar's poetess, whose
+name was Lavarcam: and save these three, none were
+permitted to see her. And so she grew up in this
+solitude, year by year, till she was of marriageable
+age, when she excelled all the maidens of her time for
+beauty.</p>
+
+<p>One snowy day as she and Lavarcam looked forth
+from the window, they saw some blood on the snow,
+where her tutor had killed a calf for dinner; and a
+raven alighted and began to drink of it. "I should
+like," said Deirdre, "that he who is to be my husband
+should have these three colours: his hair as black as
+the raven: his cheeks red as the blood: his skin like
+the snow. And I saw such a youth in a dream last
+night; but I know not where he is, or whether he is
+living on the ridge of the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly," said Lavarcam, "the young hero that
+answers to thy words is not far from thee; for he is
+among Concobar's knights: namely, Naisi the son of
+Usna."</p>
+
+<p>Now Naisi and his brothers, Ainnli and Ardan, the
+three sons of Usna, were the best beloved of all the
+Red Branch Knights, so gracious and gentle were they
+in time of peace, so skilful and swift-footed in the
+chase, so strong and valiant in battle.</p>
+
+<p>And when Deirdre heard Lavarcam's words, she
+said:&mdash;"If it be as thou sayest, that this young knight
+is near us, I shall not be happy till I see him: and I
+beseech thee to bring him to speak to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, child," replied Lavarcam, "thou knowest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
+not the peril of what thou askest me to do: for if thy
+tutor come to know of it, he will surely tell the king;
+and the king's anger none can bear."</p>
+
+<p>Deirdre answered not: but she remained for many
+days sad and silent: and her eyes often filled with
+tears through memory of her dream: so that Lavarcam
+was grieved: and she pondered on the thing if it could
+be done, for she loved Deirdre very much, and had
+compassion on her. At last she contrived that these
+two should meet without the tutor's knowledge: and
+the end of the matter was that they loved each other:
+and Deirdre said she would never wed the king, but
+she would wed Naisi.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing well the doom that awaited them when
+Concobar came to hear of this, Naisi and his young
+wife and his two brothers, with thrice fifty fighting
+men, thrice fifty women, thrice fifty attendants, and
+thrice fifty hounds, fled over sea to Alban. And the
+king of the western part of Alban received them
+kindly, and took them into military service. Here
+they remained for a space, gaining daily in favour:
+but they kept Deirdre apart, fearing evil if the king
+should see her.</p>
+
+<p>And so matters went on, till it chanced that the
+king's steward, coming one day by Naisi's house, saw
+the couple as they sat on their couch: and going
+directly to his master, he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"O king, we have long sought in vain for a woman
+worthy to be thy wife, and now at last we have found
+her: for the woman, Deirdre, who is with Naisi, is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>
+worthy to be the wife of the king of the western world.
+And now I give thee this counsel:&mdash;Let Naisi be
+killed, and then take thou Deirdre for thy wife."</p>
+
+<p>The king basely agreed to do so; and forthwith he
+laid a plot to slay the sons of Usna; which matter
+coming betimes to the ears of the brothers, they fled by
+night with all their people. And when they had got
+to a safe distance, they took up their abode in a wild
+place, where with much ado they obtained food by
+hunting and fishing. And the brothers built them
+three hunting booths in the forest, a little distance
+from that part of the seashore looking towards Erin:
+and the booth in which their food was prepared, in
+that they did not eat; and the one in which they ate,
+in that they did not sleep. And their people in like
+manner built themselves booths and huts, which gave
+them but scant shelter from wind and weather.</p>
+
+<p>Now when it came to the ears of the Ultonians,
+that the sons of Usna and their people were in
+discomfort and danger, they were sorely grieved: but
+they kept their thoughts to themselves, for they dared
+not speak their mind to the king.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_II" id="GCHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">CONCOBAR'S GUILEFUL MESSAGE.</p>
+
+
+<p>AT this same time a right joyous and very splendid
+feast was given by Concobar in Emain Macha to the
+nobles and the knights of his household. And the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>
+number of the king's household that sat them down
+in the great hall of Emain on that occasion was five
+and three score above six hundred and one thousand.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXIV._202" id="FNanchor_CLXXIV._202"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXIV._202" class="fnanchor">[CLXXIV.]</a>
+Then arose, in turn, their musicians to sound their
+melodious harpstrings, and their poets and their story-tellers
+to sing their sweet poetic strains, and to recount
+the deeds of the mighty heroes of the olden time.
+And the feasting and the enjoyment went on, and the
+entire assembly were gay and cheerful. At length
+Concobar arose from where he sat high up on his royal
+seat; whereupon the noise of mirth was instantly
+hushed. And he raised his kingly voice and said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I desire to know from you, ye Nobles and
+Knights of the Red Branch, have you ever seen in
+any quarter of Erin a house better than this house of
+Emain, which is my mansion: and whether you see
+any want in it."</p>
+
+<p>And they answered that they saw no better house,
+and that they knew of no want in it.</p>
+
+<p>And the king said: "I know of a great want:
+namely, that we have not present among us the three
+noble sons of Usna. And why now should they be in
+banishment on account of any woman in the world?"</p>
+
+<p>And the nobles replied:&mdash;"Truly it is a sad thing
+that the sons of Usna, our dear comrades, should be in
+exile and distress. They were a shield of defence to
+Ulaid: and now, O king, it will please us well that
+thou send for them and bring them back, lest they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span>
+and their people perish by famine or fall by their
+enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Let them come," replied Concobar, "and make
+submission to me: and their homes, and their lands
+and their places among the Knights of the Red Branch
+shall be restored to them."</p>
+
+<p>Now Concobar was mightily enraged at the marriage
+and flight of Naisi and Deirdre, though he hid his
+mind from all men; and he spoke these words pretending
+forgiveness and friendship. But there was guile in
+his heart, and he planned to allure them back to Ulaid
+that he might kill them.</p>
+
+<p>When the feast was ended, and the company had
+departed, the king called unto him Fergus mac Roy,
+and said:&mdash;"Go thou, Fergus, and bring back the
+sons of Usna and their people. I promise thee that I
+will receive them as friends should be received, and
+that what awaits them here is not enmity or injury,
+but welcome and friendship. Take my message of
+peace and good will, and give thyself as pledge and
+surety for their safety. But these two things I charge
+thee to do:&mdash;That the moment you land in Ulaid on
+your way back, you proceed straight to Barach's house
+which stands on the sea cliff high over the landing
+place fronting Alban: and that whether the time of
+your arrival be by day or by night, thou see that the
+sons of Usna tarry not, but let them come hither
+direct to Emain, that they may not eat food in Erin
+till they eat of mine."</p>
+
+<p>And Fergus, suspecting no evil design, promised to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span>
+do as the king directed: for he was glad to be sent on
+this errand, being a fast friend to the sons of Usna.</p>
+
+<p>Fergus set out straightway, bringing with him
+only his two sons, Illan the Fair and Buinni the Red,
+and his shield-bearer to carry his shield. And as soon
+as he had departed, Concobar sent for Barach and said
+to him:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Prepare a feast in thy house for Fergus: and
+when he visits thee returning with the sons of Usna,
+invite him to partake of it." And Barach thereupon
+departed for his home to do the bidding of the king
+and prepare the feast.</p>
+
+<p>Now those heroes of old, on the day they received
+knighthood, were wont to make certain pledges which
+were to bind them for life, some binding themselves
+to one thing, some to another. And as they made the
+promises on the faith of their knighthood, with great
+vows, in presence of kings and nobles, they dared not
+violate them; no, not even if it was to save the lives of
+themselves and all their friends: for whosoever broke
+through his knighthood pledge was foully dishonoured
+for evermore. And one of Fergus's obligations was
+never to refuse an invitation to a banquet: a thing
+which was well known to King Concobar and to
+Barach.</p>
+
+<p>As to Fergus mac Roy and his sons: they went on
+board their galley and put to sea, and made no delay
+till they reached the harbour nigh the campment of
+the sons of Usna. And coming ashore, Fergus gave
+the loud shout of a mighty man of chase. The sons of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span>
+Usna were at that same hour in their booth; and
+Naisi and Deirdre were sitting with a polished
+chessboard between them playing a game.</p>
+
+<p>And when they heard the shout, Naisi said:&mdash;"That
+is the call of a man from Erin."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so," replied Deirdre, "it is the call of a man
+of Alban."</p>
+
+<p>And after a little time when a second shout came,
+Naisi said:&mdash;"That of a certainty is the call of a man
+of Erin!"</p>
+
+<p>But Deirdre again replied:&mdash;"No, indeed: it
+concerns us not: let us play our game."</p>
+
+<p>But when a third shout came sounding louder than
+those before, Naisi arose and said:&mdash;"Now I know
+the voice: that is the shout of Fergus!" And
+straightway he sent Ardan to the shore to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>Now Deirdre knew the voice of Fergus from the
+first: but she kept her thoughts to herself: for her
+heart misgave her that the visit boded evil. And
+when she told Naisi that she knew the first shout, he
+said:&mdash;"Why, my queen, didst thou conceal it
+then?"</p>
+
+<p>And she replied:&mdash;"Lo, I saw a vision in my
+sleep last night: three birds came to us from Emain
+Macha, with three drops of honey in their beaks, and
+they left us the honey and took away three drops of
+our blood."</p>
+
+<p>"What dost thou read from that vision, O princess?"
+said Naisi.</p>
+
+<p>"It denotes the message from Concobar to us," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span>
+Deirdre; "for sweet as honey is the message of peace
+from a false man, while he has thoughts of blood
+hidden deep in his heart."</p>
+
+<p>When Ardan arrived at the shore, the sight of
+Fergus and his two sons was to him like rain on the
+parched grass; for it was long since he had seen any
+of his dear comrades from Erin. And he cried out as
+he came near, "An affectionate welcome to you, my
+dear companions": and he fell on Fergus's neck and
+kissed his cheeks, and did the like to his sons. Then
+he brought them to the hunting-booth; and Naisi,
+Ainnli, and Deirdre gave them a like kind welcome;
+after which they asked the news from Erin.</p>
+
+<p>"The best news I have," said Fergus, "is that
+Concobar has sent me to you with kindly greetings, to
+bring you back to Emain and restore you to your lands
+and homes, and to your places in the Red Branch;
+and I am myself a pledge for your safety."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not meet for them to go," said Deirdre: "for
+here they are under no man's rule; and their sway in
+Alban is even as great as the sway of Concobar in
+Erin."</p>
+
+<p>But Fergus said: "One's mother country is better
+than all else, and gloomy is life when a man sees not
+his home each morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Far dearer to me is Erin than Alban," said Naisi,
+"even though my sway should be greater here."</p>
+
+<p>It was not with Deirdre's consent he spoke these
+words: and she still earnestly opposed their return to
+Erin.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Fergus tried to re-assure her:&mdash;"If all the men
+of Erin were against you," said he, "it would avail
+nought once I have passed my word for your safety."</p>
+
+<p>"We trust in thee," said Naisi, "and we will go
+with thee to Erin."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_III" id="GCHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE RETURN TO EMAIN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Going next morning on board their galleys, Fergus
+and his companions put out on the wide sea: and oar
+and wind bore them on swiftly till they landed on the
+shore of Erin near the house of Barach.</p>
+
+<p>And Deirdre, seating herself on a cliff, looked sadly
+over the waters at the blue headlands of Alban: and
+she uttered this farewell:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h4>I.</h4>
+
+<p>"Dear to me is yon eastern land: Alban with its
+wonders. Beloved is Alban with its bright harbours
+and its pleasant hills of the green slopes. From that
+land I would never depart except to be with Naisi.</p>
+
+
+<h4>II.</h4>
+
+<p>"Kil-Cuan, O Kil-Cuan,<a name="FNanchor_CLXXV._203" id="FNanchor_CLXXV._203"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXV._203" class="fnanchor">[CLXXV.]</a> whither Ainnli was wont
+to resort: short seemed the time to me while I sojourned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
+there with Naisi on the margins of its streams and
+waterfalls.</p>
+
+
+<h4>III.</h4>
+
+<p>"Glen-Lee, O Glen-Lee, where I slept happy under
+soft coverlets: fish and fowl, and the flesh of red deer
+and badgers; these were our fare in Glen-Lee.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IV.</h4>
+
+<p>"Glen-Masan, O Glen-Masan: tall its cresses of
+white stalks: often were we rocked to sleep in our
+curragh in the grassy harbour of Glen-Masan.</p>
+
+
+<h4>V.</h4>
+
+<p>"Glen-Orchy, O Glen-Orchy: over thy straight
+glen rises the smooth ridge that oft echoed to the
+voices of our hounds. No man of the clan was more
+light-hearted than my Naisi when following the chase
+in Glen-Orchy.</p>
+
+
+<h4>VI.</h4>
+
+<p>"Glen-Ettive, O Glen-Ettive: there it was that my
+first house was raised for me: lovely its woods in the
+smile of the early morn: the sun loves to shine on
+Glen-Ettive.</p>
+
+
+<h4>VII.</h4>
+
+<p>"Glen-da-Roy, O Glen-da-Roy: the memory of
+its people is dear to me: sweet is the cuckoo's note
+from the bending bough on the peak over Glen-da-Roy.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4>VIII.</h4>
+
+<p>"Dear to me is Dreenagh over the resounding
+shore: dear to me its crystal waters over the speckled
+sand. From those sweet places I would never depart,
+but only to be with my beloved Naisi."</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">After this they entered the house of Barach; and
+when Barach had welcomed them, he said to Fergus:
+"Here I have a three-days banquet ready for thee, and
+I invite thee to come and partake of it."</p>
+
+<p>When Fergus heard this, his heart sank and his
+face waxed all over a crimson red: and he said fiercely
+to Barach:&mdash;"Thou hast done an evil thing to ask me
+to this banquet: for well thou knowest I cannot refuse
+thee. Thou knowest, too, that I am under solemn
+pledge to send the Sons of Usna this very hour to
+Emain: and if I remain feasting in thy house, how
+shall I see that my promise of safety is respected?"</p>
+
+<p>But none the less did Barach persist; for he was
+one of the partners in Concobar's treacherous design.</p>
+
+<p>Then Fergus turned to Naisi and said:&mdash;"I dare
+not violate my knighthood promise: what am I to
+do in this strait?" But Deirdre answered for her
+husband:&mdash;"The choice is before thee, Fergus; and
+it is more meet for thee to abandon thy feast than to
+abandon the sons of Usna, who have come over on thy
+pledge."</p>
+
+<p>Then Fergus was in sore perplexity; and pondering
+a little he said:&mdash;"I will not forsake the sons of Usna:
+for I will send with them to Emain Macha my two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span>
+sons, Illan the Fair and Buinni the Red, who will be
+their pledge instead of me."</p>
+
+<p>But Naisi said: "We need not thy sons for guard
+or pledge: we have ever been accustomed to defend
+ourselves!" And he moved from the place in great
+wrath: and his two brothers, and Deirdre, and the two
+sons of Fergus followed him, with the rest of the clan;
+while Fergus remained behind silent and gloomy: for
+his heart misgave him that mischief was brewing for
+the sons of Usna.</p>
+
+<p>Then Deirdre tried to persuade the sons of Usna
+to go to Rathlin, between Erin and Alban, and tarry
+there till Barach's feast was ended: but they did not
+consent to do so, for they deemed it would be a mark
+of cowardice: and they sped on by the shortest ways
+towards Emain Macha.</p>
+
+<p>When now they had come to Fincarn of the
+Watch-tower on Slieve Fuad, Deirdre and her attendants
+stayed behind the others a little: and she fell
+asleep. And when Naisi missed her, he turned back
+and found her just awakening; and he said to her:&mdash;"Why
+didst thou tarry, my princess?"</p>
+
+<p>And she answered:&mdash;"I fell asleep and had a
+dream. And this is what I saw in my dream:&mdash;Illan
+the Fair took your part: Buinni the Red did not: and
+I saw Illan without his head: but Buinni had neither
+wound nor hurt."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, O beauteous princess," said Naisi, "thou
+utterest nought but evil forebodings: but the king is
+true and will not break his plighted word."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So they fared on till they had come to the Ridge
+of the Willows,<a name="FNanchor_CLXXVI._204" id="FNanchor_CLXXVI._204"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXVI._204" class="fnanchor">[CLXXVI.]</a> an hour's journey from the palace:
+and Deirdre, looking upwards in great fear, said to
+Naisi:&mdash;"O Naisi, see yonder cloud in the sky over
+Emain, a fearful chilling cloud of a blood-red tinge:
+a baleful red cloud that bodes disaster! Come ye now
+to Dundalgan and abide there with the mighty hero
+Cuculainn till Fergus returns from Barach's feast; for
+I fear Concobar's treachery."</p>
+
+<p>But Naisi answered:&mdash;"We cannot follow thy
+advice, beloved Deirdre, for it would be a mark of
+fear: and we have no fear."</p>
+
+<p>And as they came nigh the palace Deirdre said to
+them:&mdash;"I will now give you a sign if Concobar
+meditates good or evil. If you are brought into his
+own mansion where he sits surrounded by his nobles,
+to eat and drink with him, this is a token that he
+means no ill; for no man will injure a guest that has
+partaken of food at his table: but if you are sent to
+the house of the Red Branch, be sure he is bent on
+treachery."</p>
+
+<p>When at last they arrived at the palace, they
+knocked loudly with the handwood: and the door-keeper
+swang the great door wide open. And when
+he had spoken with them, he went and told Concobar
+that the sons of Usna and Fergus's two sons had come,
+with their people.</p>
+
+<p>And Concobar called to him his stewards and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span>
+attendants and asked them:&mdash;"How is it in the house
+of the Red Branch as to food and drink?" And they
+replied that if the seven battalions of Ulaid were to
+come to it, they would find enough of all good things.
+"If that is so," said Concobar, "take the sons of Usna
+and their people to the Red Branch."</p>
+
+<p>Even then Deirdre besought them not to enter the
+Red Branch: for she deemed now that of a certainty
+there was mischief afoot. But Illan the Fair said:&mdash;"Never
+did we show cowardice or unmanliness, and
+we shall not do so now." Then she was silent and
+went with them into the house.</p>
+
+<p>And the company, when they had come in, sat
+them down so that they filled the great hall: and
+alluring viands and delicious drinks were set before
+them: and they ate and drank till they became
+satisfied and cheerful: all except Deirdre and the
+Sons of Usna, who did not partake much of food or
+drink. And Naisi asked for the king's chessboard and
+chessmen; which were brought: and he and Deirdre
+began to play.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_IV" id="GCHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">TROUBLE LOOMING.</p>
+
+
+<p>Let us now speak of Concobar. As he sat among his
+nobles, the thought of Deirdre came into his mind,
+and he said:&mdash;"Who among you will go to the Red
+Branch and bring me tidings of Deirdre, whether her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span>
+youthful shape and looks still live upon her: for if so
+there is not on the ridge of the world a woman more
+beautiful." And Lavarcam said she would go.</p>
+
+<p>Now the sons of Usna were very dear to
+Lavarcam: and Naisi was dearer than the others.
+And rising up she went to the Red Branch, where she
+found Naisi and Deirdre with the chessboard between
+them, playing. And she saluted them affectionately:
+and she embraced Deirdre, and wept over her, and
+kissed her many times with the eagerness of her love:
+and she kissed the cheeks of Naisi and of his brothers.</p>
+
+<p>And when her loving greeting was ended, she
+said:&mdash;"Beloved children, evil is the deed that is to
+be done this night in Emain: for the three torches of
+valour of the Gaels will be treacherously assailed, and
+Concobar is certainly resolved to put them to death.
+And now set your people on guard, and bolt and bar
+all doors, and close all windows; and be steadfast and
+valorous, and defend your dear charge manfully, if
+you may hold the assailants at bay till Fergus comes."
+And she departed weeping piteously.</p>
+
+<p>And when Lavarcam had returned to Concobar he
+asked what tidings she brought. "Good tidings have
+I," said she: "for the three sons of Usna have come,
+the three valiant champions of Ulaid: and now that
+they are with thee, O king, thou wilt hold sway in
+Erin without dispute. And bad tidings I bring also:
+Deirdre indeed is not as she was, for her youthful
+form and the splendour of her countenance have fled
+from her."</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And when Concobar heard this, his jealousy abated,
+and he joined in the feasting.</p>
+
+<p>But again the thought of Deirdre came to him,
+and he asked:&mdash;"Who now will go for me to the Red
+Branch, and bring me further tidings of Deirdre and
+of the sons of Usna?" for he distrusted Lavarcam.
+But the Knights of the Red Branch had misgivings of
+some evil design, and all remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>Then he called to him Trendorn, one of the lesser
+chiefs: and he said:&mdash;"Knowest thou, Trendorn, who
+slew thy father and thy three brothers in battle?"
+And Trendorn answered:&mdash;"Verily, it was Naisi, the
+son of Usna, that slew them." Then the king said:&mdash;"Go
+now to the Red Branch and bring me back
+tidings of Deirdre and of the sons of Usna."</p>
+
+<p>Trendorn went right willingly. But when he
+found the doors and windows of the Red Branch shut
+up, he was seized with fear, and he said:&mdash;"It is not
+safe to approach the sons of Usna, for they are surely
+in wrathful mood: nevertheless I must needs bring
+back tidings to the king."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon, not daring to knock at the door, he
+climbed nimbly to a small window high up that had
+been unwittingly left open, through which he viewed
+the spacious banquet hall, and saw Naisi and Deirdre
+playing chess. Deirdre chanced to look up at that
+moment, and seeing the face of the spy with eyes
+intently gazing on her, she started with affright and
+grasped Naisi's arm, as he was making a move with
+the chessman. Naisi, following her gaze, and seeing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>
+the evil-looking face, flung the chessman with unerring
+aim, and broke the eye in Trendorn's head.</p>
+
+<p>Trendorn dropped down in pain and rage; and
+going straight to Concobar, he said:&mdash;"I have tidings
+for thee, O king: the three sons of Usna are sitting
+in the banquet hall, stately and proud like kings: and
+Deirdre is seated beside Naisi; and verily for beauty
+and queenly grace her peer cannot be found."</p>
+
+<p>When Concobar heard this, a flame of jealousy and
+fury blazed up in his heart, and he resolved that by no
+means should the sons of Usna escape the doom he
+planned for them.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_V" id="GCHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">THE ATTACK ON THE SONS OF USNA.</p>
+
+
+<p>Coming forth on the lawn of Emain, King Concobar
+now ordered a large body of hireling troops to beset
+the Red Branch: and he bade them force the doors
+and bring forth the sons of Usna. And they uttered
+three dreadful shouts of defiance, and assailed the
+house on every side; but the strong oak stood bravely,
+and they were not able to break through doors or walls.
+So they heaped up great piles of wood and brambles,
+and kindled them till the red flames blazed round
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>Buinni the Red now stood up and said to the sons
+of Usna:&mdash;"To me be entrusted the task to repel this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
+first assault: for I am your pledge in place of my
+father." And marshalling his men, and causing the
+great door to be thrown wide open, he sallied forth and
+scattered the assailants, and put out the fires: slaying
+thrice fifty hirelings in that onslaught.</p>
+
+<p>But Buinni returned not to the Red Branch: for
+the king sent to him with a secret offer of great favours
+and bribes: namely, his own royal friendship, and a
+fruitful tract of land; which Buinni took and basely
+abandoned the sons of Usna. But none the better
+luck came to him of it: for at that same hour a blight
+fell on the land, so that it became a moor, waste and
+profitless, which is at this day called Slieve Fuad.</p>
+
+<p>When Illan the Fair became aware of his brother's
+treason, he was grieved to the heart, and he said:&mdash;"I
+am the second pledge in place of my father for the
+sons of Usna, and of a certainty I will not betray
+them: while this straight sword lives in my hand I
+will be faithful: and I will now repel this second
+attack." For at this time the king's hirelings were
+again thundering at the doors.</p>
+
+<p>Forth he issued with his band: and he made three
+quick furious circuits round the Red Branch, scattering
+the troops as he went: after which he returned to the
+mansion and found Naisi and Deirdre still playing.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXVII._205" id="FNanchor_CLXXVII._205"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXVII._205" class="fnanchor">[CLXXVII.]</a>
+But as the hireling hordes returned to the attack, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
+went forth a second time and fell on them, dealing
+death and havoc whithersoever he went.</p>
+
+<p>Then, while the fight was still raging, Concobar
+called to him his son Ficra, and said to him:&mdash;"Thou
+and Illan the Fair were born on the same night: and
+as he has his father's arms, so thou take mine, namely,
+my shield which is called the Ocean, and my two spears
+which are called Dart and Slaughter, and my great
+sword, the Blue-green blade. And bear thyself manfully
+against him, and vanquish him, else none of my
+troops will survive."</p>
+
+<p>Ficra did so and went against Illan the Fair; and
+they made a stout, warlike, red-wounding attack on
+each other, while the others looked on anxious: but
+none dared to interfere. And it came to pass that
+Illan prevailed, so that Ficra was fain to shelter
+himself behind his father's shield the Ocean, and he was
+like to be slain. Whereupon, the shield moaned, and
+the Three Waves of Erin uttered their hollow melancholy
+roar.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXVIII._206" id="FNanchor_CLXXVIII._206"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXVIII._206" class="fnanchor">[CLXXVIII.]</a></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span></p>
+<p>The hero Conall Carnagh, sitting in his dun afar
+off, heard the moan of the shield and the roar of the
+Wave of Tuath: and springing up from where he sat,
+he said: "Verily, the king is in danger: I will go to
+his rescue."</p>
+
+<p>He ran with the swiftness of the wind, and arrived
+on the Green of Emain, where the two young heroes
+were fighting. Thinking it was Concobar that crouched
+beneath the shield, he attacked Illan, not knowing him,
+and wounded him even unto death. And Illan looking
+up said, "Is it thou, Conall? Alas, dreadful is the
+deed thou hast done, not knowing me, and not knowing
+that I am fighting in defence of the sons of Usna, who
+are now in deadly peril from the treachery of
+Concobar."</p>
+
+<p>And Conall, finding he had unwittingly wounded
+his dear young friend Illan, turned in his grief and
+rage on the other, and swept off his head. And he
+stalked fierce and silent out of the battlefield.</p>
+
+<p>Illan, still faithful to his charge, called aloud to
+Naisi to defend himself bravely: then putting forth
+his remaining strength, he flung his arms, namely, his
+sword and his spears and his shield, into the Red
+Branch; and falling prone on the green sward, the
+shades of death dimmed his eyes, and his life departed.</p>
+
+<p>And now when it was the dusk of evening, another
+great battalion of the hirelings assailed the Red
+Branch, and kindled fagots around it: whereupon
+Ardan sallied out with his valorous band and scattered
+them, and put out the fires, and held guard for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
+first third of the night. And during the second third
+Ainnli kept them at bay.</p>
+
+<p>Then Naisi took his turn, issuing forth, and fought
+with them till the morning's dawn: and until the
+sands of the seashore, or the leaves of the forest, or the
+dew-drops on the grass, or the stars of heaven are
+counted, it will not be possible to number the
+hirelings that were slain in that fight by Naisi and
+his band of heroes.</p>
+
+<p>And as he was returning breathless from the rout,
+all grimy and terrible with blood and sweat, he spied
+Lavarcam, as she stood watching the battle anxiously;
+and he said:&mdash;"Go, Lavarcam, go and stand on the
+outer rampart, and cast thine eyes eastwards, if perchance
+thou shouldst see Fergus and his men coming."</p>
+
+<p>For many of Naisi's brave followers had fallen in
+these encounters: and he doubted that he and the
+others could sustain much longer the continual
+assaults of superior numbers. And Lavarcam went,
+but returned downcast, saying she saw nought eastwards,
+but the open plain with the peaceful herds
+browsing over it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h3><a name="GCHAPTER_VI" id="GCHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+
+<p class="center b1">DEATH OF THE SONS OF USNA.</p>
+
+
+<p>Believing now that they could no longer defend the
+Red Branch, Naisi took council with his brothers; and
+what they resolved on was this:&mdash;To sally forth with
+all their men and fight their way to a place of safety.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
+Then making a close, firm fence of shields and spears
+round Deirdre, they marched out in solid ranks and
+attacked the hireling battalions and slew three hundred
+in that onslaught.</p>
+
+<p>Concobar, seeing the rout of his men, and being
+now sure that it was not possible to subdue the sons
+of Usna in open fight, cast about if he might take
+them by falsehood and craft. And sending for Caffa,
+the druid, who loved them, he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"These sons of Usna are brave men, and it is our
+pleasure to receive them back into our service. Go
+now unto them, for thou art their loved friend; and
+say to them that if they lay down their arms and
+submit to me, I will restore them to favour and give
+them their places among the Red Branch Knights.
+And I pledge thee my kingly word and my troth as a
+true knight, that no harm shall befall them."</p>
+
+<p>Caffa, by no means distrusting him, went to the
+sons of Usna, and told them all the king had said.
+And they, suspecting neither guile nor treachery,
+joyfully threw their swords and spears aside, and
+went towards the king to make submission. But now,
+while they stood defenceless, the king caused them to
+be seized and bound. Then, turning aside, he sought
+for some one to put them to death; but he found no
+man of the Ultonians willing to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Among his followers was a foreigner named Maini
+of the Rough Hand, whose father and two brothers
+had fallen in battle by Naisi: and this man undertook
+to kill the sons of Usna.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When they were brought forth to their doom,
+Ardan said:&mdash;"I am the youngest: let me be slain
+first, that I may not see the death of my brothers."
+And Ainnli earnestly pleaded for the same thing for
+himself, saying that he was born before Ardan, and
+should die before him.</p>
+
+<p>But Naisi said:&mdash;"Lo, I have a sword, the gift
+of Mannanan mac Lir, which leaves no remnant
+unfinished after a blow: let us be struck with it, all
+three together, and we shall die at the same moment."</p>
+
+<p>This was agreed to: and the sword was brought
+forth, and they laid their heads close together, and
+Maini swept off all three with one blow of the mighty
+sword. And when it became known that the sons of
+Usna were dead, the men of Ulaid sent forth three
+great cries of grief and lamentation.</p>
+
+<p>As for Deirdre, she cried aloud, and tore her golden
+hair, and became like one distracted. And after a
+time, when her calmness had a little returned, she
+uttered a lament:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h4>I.</h4>
+
+<p>"Three lions of the hill are dead, and I am left
+alone to weep for them. The generous princes who
+made the stranger welcome have been guilefully lured
+to their doom.</p>
+
+
+<h4>II.</h4>
+
+<p>"The three strong hawks of Slieve Cullinn,<a name="FNanchor_CLXXIX._207" id="FNanchor_CLXXIX._207"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXIX._207" class="fnanchor">[CLXXIX.]</a> a
+king's three sons, strong and gentle: willing obedience<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
+was yielded to them by heroes who had conquered
+many lands.</p>
+
+
+<h4>III.</h4>
+
+<p>"Three generous heroes of the Red Branch, who
+loved to praise the valour of others: three props of
+the battalions of Quelna: their fall is the cause of
+bitter grief.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IV.</h4>
+
+<p>"Ainnli and Ardan, haughty and fierce in battle,
+to me were ever loving and gentle: Naisi, Naisi,
+beloved spouse of my choice, thou canst not hear thy
+Deirdre lamenting thee.</p>
+
+
+<h4>V.</h4>
+
+<p>"When they brought down the fleet red deer in the
+chase, when they speared the salmon skilfully in the
+clear water, joyful and proud were they if I looked on.</p>
+
+
+<h4>VI.</h4>
+
+<p>"Often when my feeble feet grew weary wandering
+along the valleys, and climbing the hills to view
+the chase, often would they bear me home lightly on
+their linked shields and spears.</p>
+
+
+<h4>VII.</h4>
+
+<p>"It was gladness of heart to be with the sons
+of Usna: long and weary is the day without their
+company: short will be my span of life since they have
+left me.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h4>VIII.</h4>
+
+<p>"Sorrow and tears have dimmed my eyes, looking
+at the grave of Naisi: a dark deadly sickness has seized
+my heart: I cannot, I cannot live after Naisi.</p>
+
+
+<h4>IX.</h4>
+
+<p>"O thou who diggest the new grave, make it deep
+and wide: let it be a grave for four; for I will sleep
+for ever beside my beloved."</p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">When she had spoken these words, she fell beside
+the body of Naisi and died immediately. And a great
+cairn of stones was piled over their grave, and their
+names were inscribed in Ogham, and their funeral rites
+were performed.</p>
+
+<p>This is the sorrowful tale of The Fate of the Sons
+of Usna.</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2><a name="NOTES" id="NOTES"></a>NOTES.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="smcap">Note 1.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Dedannans.</i>
+</p><p>
+According to the old bardic legends, the first man who led a
+colony to Ireland after the Flood was Parthalon. Next came Nemed
+and his people; and after these the Firbolgs, who were conquered
+and succeeded by the Dedannans.
+</p><p>
+The legend relates that the Dedannans, in the course of their
+wanderings, spent some time in Greece, where they learned magic
+and other curious arts. From this they migrated to Lochlann, in
+the north of Europe (<a href="#Footnote_6_6">see note 6</a>), from which they came through
+Scotland to their final resting-place, Ireland.
+</p><p>
+From the three queens of their three last kings, Ireland got the
+three names, Erin, F&#333;la, and Banba.
+</p><p>
+After the Dedannans had held sway in Ireland for about two
+hundred years, they were in their turn conquered by the last and
+greatest colony of all, the people of Milèd or Milesius, who are
+commonly known by the name of Milesians, and who are the
+ancestors of the leading Gaelic families of Ireland. The Milesians
+defeated the Dedannans in two great battles: one fought at <i>Tailltenn</i>,
+now Teltown, on the river Blackwater, between Navan and
+Kells, in Meath; and the other at <i>Druim-Lighean</i>, now Drumleene,
+about three miles from Lifford, in Donegal.
+</p><p>
+In the legendary and romantic literature of Ireland, the
+Dedannans are celebrated as magicians. By the Milesians and
+their descendants they were regarded as gods, and ultimately, in
+the imagination of the people, they became what are now in Ireland
+called "fairies."
+</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span></p><p>
+After their defeat by the Milesians, they seem to have retired to
+remote and lonely places; and their reputation as magicians, as
+well as the obscure and mysterious manner in which they lived,
+gradually impressed the vulgar with the belief that they were
+supernatural beings.
+</p><p>
+The notion was that they lived in splendid palaces in the
+interior of pleasant green hills. These hills were called <i>sidh</i> (pronounced
+<i>shee</i>); and hence the Dedannans were called <i>Daoine-sidhe</i>
+(<i>Deena-shee</i>), or people of the fairy hills; <i>Marcra-sidhe</i> (<i>Markra-shee</i>),
+fairy cavalcade; and <i>Sluagh-sidhe</i> (<i>Sloo-shee</i>), fairy host.
+</p><p>
+Of this mysterious race, the following are the principal characters
+mentioned in these tales.
+</p><p>
+Mannanan Mac Lir, the Gaelic sea-god. In "Cormac's Glossary"
+(written <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 900), we are told that he was a famous merchant who
+resided in, and gave name to, <i>Inis-Manann</i>, or the Isle of Man;
+that he was the best merchant in Western Europe; and that he
+used to know, by examining the heavens, the length of time the
+fair and the foul weather would last.
+</p><p>
+The Dagda, whose name some interpret to mean "the great
+good fire," so called from his military ardour, who reigned as king
+of Ireland from <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> 3370 to 3450.
+</p><p>
+Angus or Angus Oge, the son of the Dagda, who lived at <i>Brugh</i>
+or Bruga, on the north shore of the Boyne, a little below the village
+of Slane. Angus is spoken of as the wisest and the most skilled
+in magic of all the Dedannan race.
+</p><p>
+Nuada of the Silver Hand. (<a href="#Footnote_4_4">See note 4.</a>)
+</p><p>
+Lir of Shee Finnaha, the father of the four "Children of Lir,"
+and Bove Derg of Shee Bove, of whom we know little more than
+what is told of them in the "Fate of the Children of Lir." Shee
+Finnaha is supposed to have been situated near Newtown Hamilton,
+in Armagh; and Shee Bove was on the shore of Lough Derg,
+on the Shannon.
+</p><p>
+Luga of the Long Arms, who imposed the eric-fine on the three
+sons of Turenn for slaying his father Kian. (<a href="#Footnote_7_7">See note 7</a> for a
+further account of this Luga.)
+</p><p>
+Dianket, the great physician, of whose powers of cure extraordinary
+stories are told. He had a son Midac, and a daughter
+Armedda, more skilful than himself. The old legend relates that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span>
+Midac took off the silver arm which his father Dianket had put on
+Nuada (<a href="#Footnote_4_4">see note 4</a>), and, having procured the bones of the real arm,
+he clothed them with flesh and skin, and fixed the arm in its place
+as well as ever "in three moments." Dianket was so enraged at
+being outdone by his son that he slew him. After Midac had been
+buried for some time, three hundred and sixty-five healing herbs
+grew up from his grave, one from every joint and sinew of his body&mdash;each
+herb to cure disease in that part of the human body from
+which it grew&mdash;all which were gathered by his sister Armedda,
+and placed carefully in her cloak in their proper order. But before
+she had time to study their several virtues fully, her father
+Dianket mixed them all up in utter confusion. (O'Curry, <i>Atlantis</i>,
+vii. and viii. 158.) Were it not for this churlish proceeding,
+Armedda would have found out, and we should now know, the
+exact herb to cure each particular disease of the human frame.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="smcap">Note 2.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Feast of Age.</i>
+</p><p>
+This was also called the Feast of Gobnenn the Dedannan smith.
+It was instituted by Mannanan Mac Lir, and whoever was present
+at it, and partook of the food and drink, was free ever after from
+sickness, decay, and old age.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="smcap">Note 3.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Druids.</i>
+</p><p>
+The ancient Irish druids do not appear to have been <i>priests</i> in
+any sense of the word. They were, in popular estimation, men of
+knowledge and power&mdash;"Men of science," as they were often
+designated; they knew the arts of healing and divination; and
+they were skilled above all in magic. In fact, the Irish druids were
+magicians, neither more nor less; and hence the Gaelic word for
+"druidical" is almost always applied where we should use the term
+"magical"&mdash;to spells, incantations, metamorphoses, etc. (See
+O'Curry, "Lectures on the Manners and Customs of the Ancient
+Irish," Lecture ix.)</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="smcap">Note 4.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Nuada of the Silver Hand.</i>
+</p><p>
+Nuada of the Silver Hand was king of Ireland, according to the
+chronology of the Four Masters, from <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> 3311 to 3330. He commanded
+the Dedannans in the first battle of Moytura (<a href="#Footnote_11_11">see note 11</a>),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span>
+where his arm was cut off with a sword-blow by Sreng, the great
+Firbolg champion. Afterwards Credne the artificer made him a
+silver arm with a hand, which was fixed on by Dianket, the physician
+(<a href="#Footnote_1_1">see note 1</a>). Nuada was slain in the second battle of Moytura,
+by Balor of the Mighty Blows (<a href="#Footnote_11_11">see note 11</a>).</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="smcap">Note 5.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Fomorians.</i>
+</p><p>
+"Fomor," the simple form of this word, means, according to
+the old etymologists, a sea-robber, from <i>fo</i>, on or along, and <i>muir</i>,
+the sea. The word is also used to denote a giant, or a gigantic
+champion.
+</p><p>
+The Fomorians of Irish history were sea-robbers, who infested
+the coasts, and indeed the interior, of Ireland, for a long series of
+years, and at one time fortified themselves in Tory Island. They
+are stated to have come to Ireland from Lochlann, in the north of
+Europe (for which <a href="#Footnote_6_6">see next note</a>); but they were originally from
+Africa, being, according to the legend, the descendants of Ham the
+son of Noah.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="smcap">Note 6.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Lochlann: The Lochlanns.</i>
+</p><p>
+Lochlann was the Gaelic designation of the country from which
+came the people who are known in European history as Danes, <i>i.e.</i>
+the country round the southern shores of the Baltic, including the
+south part of Sweden. The Lochlanns, or Lochlannachs, or Danes,
+it need hardly be said, make a very conspicuous figure in our early
+history, and in our mediæval romantic literature.
+</p><p>
+In the Gaelic tales, the chief city of Lochlann is always Berva;
+but whether this represents a real name, or is merely an invention
+of the old story-tellers, I cannot tell.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="smcap">Note 7.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Luga of the Long Arms: The Ildana.</i>
+</p><p>
+Luga of the Long Arms was the son of Ethlenn, daughter of the
+Fomorian king, Balor of the Mighty Blows (<a href="#Footnote_9_9">see note 9</a>). His
+father, Kian (who was slain by the three sons of Turenn), was a
+Dedannan; so that Luga was half Fomorian and half Dedannan.
+But he always took the side of the Dedannans against the
+Fomorians.
+</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span></p><p>
+Luga is often called The Ildana, the Man of many sciences, to
+signify his accomplishments as a warrior and a man of general
+knowledge.
+</p><p>
+It had been foretold that Balor would be slain by his own
+grandson. Accordingly, when Luga was born, Balor sent him off to
+be drowned. But Luga escaped, and lived to revenge the unnatural
+conduct of his grandfather, whom he slew in the second battle of
+Moytura (<a href="#Footnote_11_11">see note 11</a>), after Balor had slain the Dedannan king,
+Nuada of the Silver Hand. Luga succeeded Nuada as king of
+Ireland, and reigned, according to the chronology of the Four
+Masters, from <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> 3330 to 3370.
+</p><p>
+It was by Luga that the celebrated yearly assembly of Tailltenn
+was instituted, in honour of his foster mother <i>Taillte</i>, after whom
+the place was called. (<a href="#Footnote_LI._79">See note page 93, <i>supra.</i></a>)</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="smcap">Note 8.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Land of Promise: Fairyland.</i>
+</p><p>
+In ancient Gaelic romantic tales, mention is often made of <i>Tir
+Tairrngire</i>, the Land of Promise, Fairyland, as being one of the
+chief dwelling-places of the Dedannans or fairy host. In many
+passages this Land of Promise is identified with <i>Inis-Manann</i>, or
+the Isle of Man, which was ruled over by Mannanan Mac Lir, the
+sea-god, and named from him.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="smcap">Note 9.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Balor of the Mighty Blows.</i>
+</p><p>
+Balor was king of the Fomorians from Lochlann in the north;
+his wife was Kethlenda; and his son, Bres. Balor is often called
+Balor of the Mighty Blows; and also Balor of the Evil Eye, for
+he had one eye which would strike people dead or turn them into
+stone, so that he kept it covered, except when he wished to use it
+against his enemies. Balor is remembered very vividly in tradition
+by the peasantry of Ireland, especially in Donegal and in Tory
+Island, where a very high, tower-like rock is called to this day
+Balor's Castle.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="smcap">Note 10.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Eric.</i>
+</p><p>
+The eric was a fine paid as compensation for murder or homicide.
+The friends of the murdered person might accept an eric, or they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span>
+might refuse it and seek instead the death of the murderer. An
+eric was often paid for other crimes or injuries against the individual,
+as well as for homicide.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="smcap">Note 11.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Battle of Moytura.</i>
+</p><p>
+There were two great battles, each called the battle of Moytura.
+</p><p>
+<i>First Battle of Moytura.</i> When the Dedannans came to invade
+Erin, they found the country occupied by the Firbolgs, who were
+by no means inclined to give up quiet possession to the newcomers.
+After some parleying and man&oelig;uvring, a great battle
+was fought between them, <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> 3303, at Moytura, near Cong, in
+Mayo, lasting for four days, in which the Firbolgs were defeated
+with great slaughter, and their king slain; after which the
+Dedannans took possession of the country, leaving Connaught,
+however, to a powerful remnant of the Firbolgs who survived the
+battle. This is called the First Battle of Moytura, or the
+Battle of the Southern Moytura. On the plain where it was
+fought, there are still great numbers of mounds, cromlechs, and
+other sepulchral monuments. (See Sir William Wilde's "Lough
+Corrib," page 210.)
+</p><p>
+<i>Second Battle of Moytura.</i> King Nuada, who led the Dedannans
+in the first battle of Moytura, had his arm cut off by
+Sreng, one of the Firbolg champions. He was under cure for
+seven years; during which time Bres, the son of Elatha, who was
+a Fomorian by his father and a Dedannan by his mother, ruled
+Ireland as regent. But at the end of the seven years, Bres had to
+retire in favour of Nuada. Whereupon he repaired in anger to
+his father in Lochlann; and at his instigation an army of Fomorians
+was raised, after some years, for the invasion of Ireland, and placed
+under the command of Balor of the Mighty Blows.
+</p><p>
+Luga of the Long Arms seems to have foreseen this invasion.
+He knew that Bres would have to abdicate whenever Nuada's arm
+came to be healed, and he conjectured truly that he would not
+resign the sovereignty without a struggle. But the old tales would
+lead to the inference that Luga had some preternatural foreknowledge
+of the battle. Anyhow, the legend says that for many
+years he made preparations for the coming struggle; and it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span>
+with this intention that he imposed the celebrated eric-fine on the
+sons of Turenn.
+</p><p>
+The Fomorians landed, and were met by the Dedannan army
+at the Northern Moytura, or, as it is often called, Moytura of the
+Fomorians, situated in the parish of Kilmactranny, barony of Tirerrill,
+county Sligo. The battle was fought on the eve of Samin, <i>i.e.</i> on
+the last day of October, <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> 3330; and the Fomorians were defeated
+with the slaughter of their principal men and the best part of their
+army. In the course of the battle, Nuada of the Silver Hand, the
+Dedannan king, was slain by Balor; but soon after, Balor himself
+was killed by his grandson, Luga. Luga, we are told, flung a
+stone at him from a crann-tavall or sling (<a href="#Footnote_CIII._131">see note, page 240</a>), and
+struck him in the evil eye with so much force that the stone went
+clean through his head and out at the back.
+</p><p>
+The site of this battle, like that of the Southern Moytura,
+abounds to this day in sepulchral monuments.
+</p><p>
+These two battles of Moytura form the subjects of two historic
+tales, which are still in existence, though they have never been
+published.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="smcap">Note 12.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Gesa.</i>
+</p><p>
+"Gesa" (pronounced <i>gessa</i>, the <i>g</i> hard, as in <i>get</i>) is plural:
+singular <i>geis</i>, plural <i>geasa</i> or <i>gesa</i>. Gesa means solemn vows, conjurations,
+injunctions, prohibitions. "I put you under gesa" means,
+I adjure you solemnly, so solemnly that you dare not disobey. It
+would appear that individuals were often under gesa or solemn
+vows to observe, or to refrain from, certain lines of conduct&mdash;the
+vows being either taken on themselves voluntarily, or imposed on
+them, with their consent, by others. Thus Dermat O'Dyna was
+under gesa never to pass through a wicket gate when entering or
+leaving a palace (<a href="#Page_282">page 282</a>); Finn was under gesa not to sleep at
+Allen more than nine nights in succession <a href="#Page_337">(page 337</a>); Dermat put
+Oisin under gesa not to loose any one whom he bound (<a href="#Page_312">page 312</a>).
+It would appear, also, that if one person went through the form of
+putting another under gesa to grant any reasonable request, the
+abjured person could not refuse without loss of honour and reputation.
+Thus Midac places Finn under gesa to come to the banquet
+in the Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees (<a href="#Page_189">page 189</a>); and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>
+witch-lady places gesa on Finn to search for the ring in the lake
+(<a href="#Page_354">page 354</a>). And sometimes, on very solemn or urgent occasions,
+the gesa seem to have been imposed with spells, so as to draw down
+ill luck as well as loss of honour on the person who disregarded the
+injunction (<a href="#Page_281">page 281</a>).
+</p><p>
+Geis or gesa also means a charm or spell.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="smcap">Note 13.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Tir-fa-tonn.</i>
+</p><p>
+The Gaelic tales abound in allusions to a beautiful country
+situated under the sea&mdash;an enchanted land sunk at some remote time,
+and still held under spell. In some romantic writings it is called
+<i>Tir-fa-tonn</i>, the land beneath the wave; and occasionally one or
+more of the heroes find their way to it, and meet with many strange
+adventures (<a href="#Page_253">page 253</a>). Sometimes it is <i>O'Brasil</i>, that dim land
+which appears over the water once every seven years&mdash;"on the
+verge of the azure sea"&mdash;and which would be freed from the spell,
+and would remain permanently over water, if any one could succeed
+in throwing fire on it. (See Gerald Griffin's beautiful ballad,
+"O'Brasil, the Isle of the Blest.") The Island of Fincara (<a href="#Page_87">page 87</a>),
+and the beautiful country seen beneath the waves by Maildun
+(<a href="#Page_147">page 147</a>), are remnants of the same superstition.
+</p><p>
+This very old Celtic tradition is obviously the same as the
+legend of the continent of Atlantis, mentioned by Plato, which at
+some remote time was overwhelmed and sunk under the Atlantic
+Ocean. And it would seem that they have the same shadowy
+tradition in the East; for in "Lalla Rookh" Moore makes the
+Peri say, in her soliloquy:
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"I know where the Isles of Perfume are,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Many a fathom down in the sea,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To the south of sun-bright Araby."<br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="smcap">Note 14.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Enchanted Well.</i>
+</p><p>
+Res autem sic revera evenit. Cum Angus magus equum
+giganteum Eochaidio et popularibus traderet, monebat homines
+nec stabulandi neque omnino requiescendi copiam equo faciendam;
+ne forte quiescendo urinam demitteret, quod si fieret exitio
+omnibus fore. Postea vero quam at Planitiem Silvulæ Cinereæ
+pervenissent, intenti adeo sarcinis ingentis equi dorso detrahendis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span>
+incumbebant, ut monitorum Angi obliviscerentur; restitit autem
+equus, et subinde urinam demisit. Extemplo hinc fons ortus;
+qui cum scaturiisset, submersit omnes, sicuti in historiâ narratur.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="smcap">Note 15.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Conal Carna of the Red Branch.</i>
+</p><p>
+The Red Branch Knights of Ulster, a sort of militia in the service
+of the monarch, much like the Fena of later date (<a href="#Footnote_23_23">see note 23</a>),
+flourished in the first century of the Christian era. Their home
+was the palace of Emania, near the city of Armagh; and they
+received their name from one of the houses of the palace in which
+they resided, which was called <i>Craebh-ruadh</i>, or Red Branch.
+They attained their greatest glory in the reign of Conor Mac Nessa,
+king of Ulster in the first century; and Conal Carna, mentioned
+in the story of "Liban the Mermaid," was one of their most
+illustrious champions.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="smcap">Note 16.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Ecca the Son of Marid: Comgall of Bangor.</i>
+</p><p>
+This Marid was king of Munster about the beginning of the
+second century of the Christian era. St. Comgall, one of the greatest
+saints of the early Irish Church, flourished in the sixth century, and
+was the founder of the celebrated monastery of Bangor in the
+county of Down.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="smcap">Note 17.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Curragh.</i>
+</p><p>
+It would appear that in Ireland, and indeed in England and
+Scotland as well, navigation was carried on in ancient times chiefly
+by means of curraghs. The curragh was a boat or canoe, consisting
+of a light framework of wood, covered over with the skins of
+animals. Curraghs are still used on many parts of the western
+coast of Ireland; but they are now covered with tarred canvas
+instead of skins.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="smcap">Note 18.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Conn the Hundred-fighter.</i>
+</p><p>
+Conn Ced-cathach or Conn the Fighter of a Hundred (not
+Conn of the Hundred Battles, as the name is generally translated),
+was king of Ireland from <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 123 to 158.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span></p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="smcap">Note 19.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Land of the Living: Land of Life, etc.</i>
+</p><p>
+The ancient Irish had a sort of dim, vague belief that there was
+a land where people were always youthful, and free from care and
+trouble, suffered no disease, and lived for ever. This country they
+called by various names:&mdash;<i>Tir-na-mbeo</i>, the land of the [ever-]living;
+<i>Tir-na-nóg</i>, the land of the [ever-]youthful; <i>Moy-Mell</i>, the plain of
+pleasure, etc. It had its own inhabitants&mdash;fairies; but mortals were
+sometimes brought there; and while they lived in it, were gifted
+with the everlasting youth and beauty of the fairy people themselves,
+and partook of their pleasures. As to the exact place where
+Tirnanoge was situated, the references are shadowy and variable,
+but they often place it far out in the Atlantic Ocean, as far as the
+eye can reach from the high cliffs of the western coast. And here
+it is identical with O'Brasil, of which mention has been made in
+<a href="#Footnote_13_13">note 13</a>.
+</p><p>
+I have already remarked (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">see note 1</a>) that the fairies were also
+supposed to live in palaces in the interior of pleasant green hills,
+and that they were hence called Aes-shee or Deena-shee, i.e. people of
+the <i>shee</i> or fairy hills; and hence also the word "banshee" <i>i.e.</i> a
+woman (<i>bean</i>) of the fairy hills. Tirnanoge was often regarded as
+identical with these bright, subterranean palaces. In my boyhood
+days, the peasantry believed that the great limestone cavern near
+Mitchelstown, in the county Cork, was one of the entrances to
+Tirnanoge.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="smcap">Note 20.</span></a> &mdash;<i>St. Brendan of Birra.</i>
+</p><p>
+I have already, in the preface (<a href="#Page_xiii">page xiii.</a>), spoken of the celebrated
+voyage of St. Brendan of Birra (Birr, in King's County), undertaken
+in the sixth century. He set out from near Brandon Mountain, in
+Kerry, sailing westwards into the Atlantic Ocean, and, according to
+the belief of some, landed on the shore of America. He had many
+imitators, who ventured out on the great ocean in their curraghs as
+pilgrims; but none were so enterprising as himself, or met with
+such a variety of strange lands, if we except Maildun and the three
+sons of O'Corra, whose adventures are quite as surprising as those
+of Brendan.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span></p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="smcap">Note 21.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Brendan's Satchel.</i>
+</p><p>
+The ancient Irish saints, when on their missionary journeys
+through the country, kept their precious books, as well as the
+portable sacred utensils, in leather satchels, which they brought
+with them from place to place. These satchels were often highly
+ornamented, and, like other relics, were held in extraordinary veneration
+after the death of the owners. The Gaelic term for this
+kind of satchel is <i>polaire</i>. (See Petrie, "Round Towers," page 336.)</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="smcap">Note 22.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Cormac Mac Art.</i>
+</p><p>
+Cormac Mac Art, the most illustrious of the Irish kings, who
+began his reign <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 254, was the son of Art the Lonely, who was
+son of Conn the Hundred-fighter. During his reign flourished the
+Fena or militia, spoken of in <a href="#Footnote_23_23">the next note</a>; and the old chroniclers
+never tire of dwelling on the magnificence of his court at Tara, and
+the prosperity of the country during his reign. He was renowned
+for learning and wisdom, and he wrote a book called <i>Tegusc-righ</i>, or
+instruction for kings, copies of which are extant in the Books of
+Leinster and Ballymote. He also caused the records of the kingdom
+to be collected and written down in one great book called
+the Psalter of Tara, but no portion of this book is now known to
+exist; and he established three schools at Tara&mdash;one for military
+science, one for law, and one for history and chronology. He spent
+the last years of his life in retirement and study at Cletty on the
+Boyne, and died <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 277, forty years after he had ascended the
+throne.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="smcap">Note 23.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Finn and the Fena.</i>
+</p><p>
+The Fena or "Fena of Erin" were a sort of militia or standing
+army, permanently maintained by the monarch for the support of
+the throne, and regularly trained to military service. They
+attained their greatest glory in the reign of Cormac Mac Art (<a href="#Footnote_22_22">see
+previous note</a>). Each province had its own militia under its own
+captain, but all were under the command of one general-in-chief.
+Their most renowned commander was Finn the son of Cumal, who
+of all the heroes of ancient Ireland is most vividly remembered in
+popular tradition. Finn had his palace on the top of the Hill of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
+Allen, a remarkable flat-topped hill, lying about four miles to the
+right of the railway as you pass Newbridge and approach Kildare,
+rendered more conspicuous of late years by a tall pillar erected
+on the top, on the very site of Finn's palace. Before the erection
+of the pillar, there were considerable remains of the old fort on the
+hill, but at present nearly every vestige is obliterated, cleared away
+partly to make room for the foundation of the pillar, and partly by
+cultivation; for the land has been tilled and cropped to the very
+summit. The whole neighbourhood, however, teems with living
+traditions of Finn and the Fena.
+</p><p>
+The Fena were divided into distinct tribes or clanns, belonging
+to the several provinces, each under its own commander. Of
+these, the Clann Baskin of Leinster, under the immediate command
+of Finn; and the Clann Morna of Connaught, commanded by Gaul
+Mac Morna, were rival tribes, and, for reasons stated in <a href="#Footnote_27_27">note 27</a>,
+regarded each other with hatred and distrust.
+</p><p>
+The following are some of the principal characters celebrated in
+the romantic literature of the Fena.
+</p><p>
+Finn the son of Cumal, commander-in-chief of the Fena under
+king Cormac Mac Art (<a href="#Footnote_22_22">see note 22</a>); brave, wise, and far-seeing, a man
+of supreme military ability. His foresight seemed so extraordinary,
+that the people believed it was a preternatural gift of divination,
+and the shanachies invented a legend to account for it (<a href="#Footnote_25_25">see note 25</a>).
+Like many great commanders, he had a little of the tyrant in his
+character, and was unforgiving to those who injured him. But in
+the story of Dermat and Grania, he is drawn in too unfavourable
+a light. In his old age he was killed by a fisherman at a place
+called Athbrea on the Boyne, <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 284, as recorded in the Annals
+of Tighernach, of the Four Masters, and of Innisfallen.
+</p><p>
+Oisin or Ossian, Finn's son, the renowned hero-poet, to whom
+the bards attribute many poems still extant.
+</p><p>
+Oscar, the son of Oisin, youthful and handsome, kind-hearted,
+and one of the most valiant of the Fena.
+</p><p>
+Dermat O'Dyna, noble-minded, generous, of untarnished honour,
+and the bravest of the brave. He was as handsome as he was
+valiant, whence he is often styled Dermat of the Bright Face,
+Dermat of the White Teeth, etc. He was the idol of the ladies of
+Ireland, and hence he is often called Dermat-na-man, or Dermat of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
+the Women (<a href="#Page_210">page 210</a>). The Munster traditions represent him
+as a native of Kerry; but he was in reality a Leinsterman, though
+his descendants migrated to Munster at a very early period.
+Mr. O'Grady, in his edition of the story of Dermat and Grania
+(<a href="#Page_294">page 294</a>), has given an ancient poetical genealogy of Dermat.
+This hero is equally celebrated in popular story in the Highlands
+of Scotland. According to Highland tradition, the great and
+illustrious Clann Campbell, represented by the Duke of Argyll,
+descend from him; and their crest is a boar's head, in memory of
+the manner of Dermat's death.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXX._208" id="FNanchor_CLXXX._208"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXX._208" class="fnanchor">[CLXXX.]</a> Dermat O'Dyna is, on the whole,
+the finest type of hero among the Fena&mdash;as fine indeed as can be
+found in any literature; and his noble character is very well
+maintained throughout the Ossianic tales.
+</p><p>
+Kylta Mac Ronan, Finn's nephew, renowned for his fleetness
+of foot.
+</p><p>
+Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, who was not only a brave
+warrior, but also "a man of knowledge," gifted with some insight
+into futurity.
+</p><p>
+Ligan Lumina, also celebrated for swiftness of foot.
+</p><p>
+Fergus Finnvel, poet, warrior, and frequent adviser of the Fena.
+</p><p>
+Gaul Mac Morna, the leader of the Clann Morna or Connaught
+Fena, one of the mightiest of all the heroes. He served under Finn,
+but the two chiefs bore no love to each other, for Gaul had slain
+Finn's father, Cumal, in the battle of Knocka (<a href="#Footnote_27_27">see note 27</a>).
+</p><p>
+Conan Mail or Conan the Bald, the best-marked and best-sustained
+character in the Ossianic romances; large-bodied, a great
+boaster, a great coward, and a great glutton. He had a venomous
+tongue, and hardly ever spoke a good word of any one. He belonged
+to the Clann Morna, and was always reviling the Clann
+Baskin. He was the butt for the gibes and mockery of the Fena,
+but they dreaded his foul tongue. The story-tellers never lose an
+opportunity of having a fling at Conan, and of turning him into
+ridicule for his cowardice, his big talk, and his gluttony.</p></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="smcap">Note 24.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Cooking-Places.</i>
+</p><p>
+The Fena, as related in the beginning of the story of the Gilla
+Dacker, were quartered on the principal householders during the
+winter half-year; and maintained themselves chiefly by the chase
+during the summer months. When they were on their hunting
+expeditions, we are told that they ate only one meal a day; and
+for this meal they cooked the flesh of the animals brought down in
+the chase, in the following manner. They first dug a deep pit in
+the earth near their camping-place, and, having lighted a great fire
+beside it, they heated a number of round stones. They next
+covered the bottom of the pit with the hot stones, on which they
+placed the meat, bound up with sedge and grass ropes, and on this
+again they put another layer of heated stones; and, having closely
+covered up the whole with branches, they let it stand till the meat
+was sufficiently cooked. The remains of these old earth-ovens are
+still to be seen, and are called by the peasantry <i>fulachta-na-bhfiann</i>,
+the cooking-places of the Fena.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="smcap">Note 25.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Finn's Tooth of Knowledge.</i>
+</p><p>
+It had been prophesied of old that a man named Finn would
+be the first to eat of the salmon of knowledge, which swam in the
+pool of Linn-Fec, in the Boyne (near the present village of Slane);
+and that he would thereby obtain the gifts of knowledge and of
+divination. A certain old poet named Finn, knowing this, hoped
+that he might be the lucky man; so he took up his abode on the
+shore of Linn-Fec; and he fished in the pool every day from morn
+till night, in the hope of catching the salmon of knowledge. At
+this time, Finn the son of Cumal was a boy, fleeing from place
+to place from his hereditary enemies, the Clann Morna, disguised,
+and bearing the assumed name of Demna; and, happening to come
+to Linn-Fec, the old poet took him as his servant.
+</p><p>
+After long watching and waiting, Finn the poet hooked the
+salmon at last, and gave it to Demna to broil, warning him very
+strictly not to eat or even taste of it. Demna proceeded to broil
+the fish; and soon the heat of the fire raised a great blister from its
+side, which the boy pressed with his thumb to keep it down, thereby
+scalding himself so severely that he unthinkingly thrust his thumb
+into his mouth.
+</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span></p><p>
+When the salmon was cooked, the poet asked Demna had he
+eaten of it. "No," replied the boy; "but I scalded my thumb on
+the fish, and put it into my mouth." "Thy name is not Demna,
+but Finn," exclaimed the poet: "in thee has the prophecy been
+fulfilled; and thou art now a diviner and a man of knowledge!"
+</p><p>
+In this manner Finn obtained the gift of divination, so that
+ever after, when he wished to look into futurity, he put his thumb
+under his tooth of knowledge, as he did when cooking the salmon
+of Linn-Fec, and the whole future was revealed to him. There
+appears to have been some sort of ceremony used, however (<a href="#Page_339">see
+page 339, <i>supra</i></a>); and it would seem that the process was attended
+with pain (<a href="#Page_194">page 194</a>), so that it was only on very solemn and
+trying occasions he put his thumb under his tooth of knowledge.<a name="FNanchor_CLXXXI._209" id="FNanchor_CLXXXI._209"></a><a href="#Footnote_CLXXXI._209" class="fnanchor">[CLXXXI.]</a></p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="smcap">Note 26.</span></a> &mdash;<i>The Game of Chess.</i>
+</p><p>
+Chess-playing was one of the favourite amusements of the
+ancient Irish chiefs. The game is constantly mentioned in the
+very oldest Gaelic tales; as, for instance, in the "Cattle-Spoil of
+Cooley," in "The Book of the Dun Cow" (<span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1100). (See
+O'Donovan's "Introduction to the Book of Rights," page lxi.)</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="smcap">Note 27.</span></a> &mdash;<i>Battle of Knocka.</i>
+</p><p>
+The battle of Knocka or <i>Cnucha</i> (now Castleknock, near Dublin)
+was fought in the reign of Conn the Hundred-fighter (<a href="#Footnote_18_18">see note 18</a>).<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span>
+The contending parties were, on the one side, Conn with his royal
+forces, and the renowned hero, Gaul Mac Morna, with his Connaught
+Fena, the Clann Morna; and on the other side, Cumal, the father of
+Finn, with the Clann Baskin and the Leinster forces in general, aided
+by Owen More, heir to the throne of Munster, with a large army of
+Munstermen. The Leinster and Munster armies were defeated,
+chiefly through the valour of Gaul, who slew Cumal with his own
+hand. This was the cause of the irreconcilable enmity that existed
+ever after between the Clann Baskin and the Clann Morna.
+</p><p>
+When Finn the son of Cumal grew up to man's estate, he
+succeeded to the position held by his father as leader of the Fena.
+But though he made peace with Gaul Mac Morna, and though Gaul
+submitted to his command, there was always a feeling of ill-concealed
+hatred and distrust between them.</p></div>
+
+
+<div class="note"><p class="center p2 b1"><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><span class="smcap">Note 28.</span> &mdash;<i>Battle of Gavra.</i>
+</p><p>
+When Carbri of the Liffey, son of Cormac Mac Art, ascended
+the throne of Ireland, one of his first acts was to disband and outlaw
+the Clann Baskin; and he took into his service in their place their
+rivals and deadly enemies, the Clann Morna from Connaught.
+Whereupon the Clann Baskin marched southwards, and entered
+the service of Fercorb, king of Munster, Finn's grandson, in direct
+disobedience to king Carbri's commands. This led to the bloody
+battle of Gavra, celebrated in Ossianic literature, which was fought
+<span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 284, at Garristown, in the north-west of the county Dublin,
+where the rival clanns slaughtered each other almost to annihilation.
+In the heat of the battle, Carbri and Oscar met in single combat;
+and, after a long and terrible fight, the heroic Oscar fell pierced by
+Carbri's spear, and died on the evening of the same day. But
+Carbri himself was dreadfully wounded; and, while retiring from
+the field, his own kinsman, Semeon, whom he had previously
+banished from Tara, fell on him, and despatched him with a single
+blow.
+</p><p>
+This battle is the subject of a poem which the bards ascribe to
+Oisin, and which has been published, with translation, in the first
+volume of the Ossianic Transactions. In this poem there is an
+affecting description of the death of Oscar, surrounded by his few
+surviving companions, and in presence of his father Oisin.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="LIST_OF_PROPER_NAMES" id="LIST_OF_PROPER_NAMES"></a>LIST OF PROPER NAMES.</h2>
+
+<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="smcap">Alphabetical List of the Principal Proper Names occurring
+in this Volume, with their Original Gaelic Forms, and,
+in many cases, their Meanings.</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="p2">Every writer who attempts to popularise the Gaelic literature of
+Ireland and Scotland, finds the proper names a serious difficulty.
+If they are given in their original Gaelic forms, they are not unfrequently
+unpronounceable and repulsive to the English reader;
+if they are written phonetically, they are often strange and barbarous
+looking. In this book, I have not followed any general principle
+in reducing the names to forms suitable to readers of English. I
+have dealt with each, as it were, on its own merits. Sometimes&mdash;very
+often, indeed&mdash;I have given the original spelling; sometimes
+I have given the names phonetically; and frequently I have
+mixed the two modes. But all through I have avoided any great
+departure from the original forms, as will be seen by a glance
+at the following list.</p>
+
+<p>In all cases the names occurring through the book may be
+pronounced just as the letters would indicate to the English reader.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center p4">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="proper names">
+<tr><td align="left">Aed,</td><td align="left"><i>Aedh</i>, a flame of fire.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ahaclee,</td><td align="left"><i>Ath-cliath</i>, hurdle-ford.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ailna,</td><td align="left"><i>Ailne</i>, beauty, joy.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Aina,</td><td align="left"><i>Aine</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Allil,</td><td align="left"><i>Ailioll</i>, <i>Ailell</i>, or <i>Oilioll</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Allil Ocar Aga,</td><td align="left"><i>Ailell Ochair Aga</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Alva,</td><td align="left"><i>Ailbhe</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Balor,</td><td align="left"><i>Balar</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Baskin,</td><td align="left"><i>Baoiscne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Begallta,</td><td align="left"><i>Beagalltach</i>, little fury.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ben-Damis,</td><td align="left"><i>Beann-Damhuis</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Beoc,</td><td align="left"><i>Beóc</i>, <i>Dabheóc</i>, and <i>Beoán</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Berva,</td><td align="left"><i>Berbhe</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Borba,</td><td align="left"><i>Borb</i>, proud.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bran,</td><td align="left"><i>Bran</i>, a raven.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bres,</td><td align="left"><i>Breas</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Brian,</td><td align="left"><i>Brian</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Brickna,</td><td align="left"><i>Briccne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bruga of the Boyne,</td><td align="left"><i>Brugh-na-Boinne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Canta,</td><td align="left"><i>Cainte</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Carn-Arenn,</td><td align="left"><i>Carnn-Airenn</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Carricknarone,</td><td align="left"><i>Carraic-na-rón</i>, the rock of the seals.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Clann Navin,</td><td align="left"><i>Clann-Neamhuinn</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Cloghan Kincat,</td><td align="left"><i>Clochan-chinn-chait</i>, the stepping-stones of the cat's head.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Coil Croda,</td><td align="left"><i>Cael-crodha</i>, the slender valiant [man].</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Colga,</td><td align="left"><i>Colga</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Colman,</td><td align="left"><i>Colman</i>, little dove.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Comgall,</td><td align="left"><i>Comhghall</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Conal Carna,</td><td align="left"><i>Conall Cernach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Conan Mail,</td><td align="left"><i>Conan Mael</i>, Conan the Bald. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Conang,</td><td align="left"><i>Conaing</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Conn the Hundred-fighter</td><td align="left">(not Conn of the Hundred Battles, as it is usually translated), <i>Conn-Cédcathach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Connla,</td><td align="left"><i>Connla</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Coran,</td><td align="left"><i>Coran</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Cormac Mac Art,</td><td align="left"><i>Cormac Mac Airt</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Corr the Swift-footed,</td><td align="left"><i>Coir Cos-luath</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Cuan,</td><td align="left"><i>Cuan</i> or <i>Cuadhan</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Culand,</td><td align="left"><i>Culand</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Curnan the Simpleton,</td><td align="left"><i>Curnan Onmit</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Curoi Mac Dara,</td><td align="left"><i>Curoi Mac Dáire</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dagda,</td><td align="left"><i>Dagda</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dara Donn,</td><td align="left"><i>Dáire Donn</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Darvra, Lake,</td><td align="left"><i>Loch Dairbhreach</i>, the lake of oaks.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dathkeen,</td><td align="left"><i>Dathchaoin</i>, bright-complexioned.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Decca,</td><td align="left"><i>Deoch</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dedannans,</td><td align="left"><i>Tuatha De Danann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Derdri of the Black Mountain,</td><td align="left"><i>Deirdre Duibhshleibhe</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dering,</td><td align="left"><i>Diorraing</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dermat O'Dyna,</td><td align="left"><i>Diarmait O'Duibhne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dianket,</td><td align="left"><i>Diancecht</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Diuran Lekerd,</td><td align="left"><i>Diuran Lecerd</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dobar O'Baskin,</td><td align="left"><i>Dobhar O'Baoiscne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dooclone,</td><td align="left"><i>Dubhchluain</i>, dark-coloured meadow.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dord-Fian,</td><td align="left"><i>Dord-Fiann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Dryantore,</td><td align="left"><i>Draoigheantóir</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ducoss,</td><td align="left"><i>Dubhchosach</i>, black-foot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Eas-Dara,</td><td align="left"><i>Eas-Dara</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ebb,</td><td align="left"><i>Eab</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ebliu,</td><td align="left"><i>Ebliu</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ebric,</td><td align="left"><i>Aibhric</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ecca,</td><td align="left"><i>Eochaidh</i>, a horseman.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Enbarr,</td><td align="left"><i>Aenbharr</i>, splendid mane.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Encoss,</td><td align="left"><i>Aenchos</i>, one foot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ethnea,</td><td align="left"><i>Eithne</i>, sweet nut-kernel.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Etta,</td><td align="left"><i>Eitche</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Eva,</td><td align="left"><i>Aeife</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Eve,</td><td align="left"><i>Aebh</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Failinis,</td><td align="left"><i>Failinis</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fatha Conan,</td><td align="left"><i>Fatha Chonain</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Femin,</td><td align="left"><i>Feimeann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fena,</td><td align="left"><i>Fianna</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ferdana,</td><td align="left"><i>Feardána</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fergor,</td><td align="left"><i>Fearghoir</i>, manly or strong voice.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fergus,</td><td align="left"><i>Fearghus</i>, manly strength.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fiaca Findamnas,</td><td align="left"><i>Fiacha Findamnais</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ficna,</td><td align="left"><i>Fiachna</i>, little raven.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ficra,</td><td align="left"><i>Fiachra</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fincara,</td><td align="left"><i>Fianchaire</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Fincoss,</td><td align="left"><i>Finnchosach</i>, white-foot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Finn,</td><td align="left"><i>Finn</i> or <i>Fionn</i>, fair-haired.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Finnin,</td><td align="left"><i>Finghín</i>, fair offspring.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Finola,</td><td align="left"><i>Fionnghuala</i>, white shoulder.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Flidas,</td><td align="left"><i>Flidas</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Foltlebar,</td><td align="left"><i>Folt-leabhar</i>, long hair.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Frevan,</td><td align="left"><i>Freamhainn</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ga-boi,</td><td align="left"><i>Ga-buidhe</i>, yellow javelin.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ga-derg,</td><td align="left"><i>Ga-dearg</i>, red javelin.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Gael Glas,</td><td align="left"><i>Gaodhal-Glas</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Garva,</td><td align="left"><i>Garbh</i>, rough.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Gaul Mac Morna,</td><td align="left"><i>Goll Mac Morna</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Germane,</td><td align="left"><i>Germane</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Gilla Dacker,</td><td align="left"><i>Giolla Deacair</i>, lazy fellow.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Glanlua,</td><td align="left"><i>Glanluadh</i>, pure-spoken.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Glas Mac Encarda,</td><td align="left"><i>Glas Mac Aeinchearda</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Glore,</td><td align="left"><i>Glór</i>, a voice.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ilbrec,</td><td align="left"><i>Ilbhreach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ildana,</td><td align="left"><i>Ioldhanach</i>. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Inis Glora,</td><td align="left"><i>Inis Gluaire</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Innia,</td><td align="left"><i>Innia</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Innsa,</td><td align="left"><i>Inse</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Inver-tre-Kenand,</td><td align="left"><i>Inbher-Tre-Cenand</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Iraun,</td><td align="left"><i>Irann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Iroda,</td><td align="left"><i>Ioruaidhe</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Irros Domnann,</td><td align="left"><i>Iorrus Domnann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Island of the Torrent,</td><td align="left"><i>Inis Tuile</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kemoc,</td><td align="left"><i>Caemhoc</i> or <i>Mochoemhoc</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kenn-Avrat,</td><td align="left"><i>Ceann-Abhrat</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kenri,</td><td align="left"><i>Caenraighe</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kethen,</td><td align="left"><i>Cethen</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kethlenda,</td><td align="left"><i>Ceithleann</i> or <i>Ceithleand</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kian,</td><td align="left"><i>Cian</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Kylta Mac Ronan,</td><td align="left"><i>Caeilte Mac Ronain</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Largnen,</td><td align="left"><i>Lairgnen</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lavaran,</td><td align="left"><i>Lobharan</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Liban,</td><td align="left"><i>Liban</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lidas,</td><td align="left"><i>Liadhas</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ligan Lumina,</td><td align="left"><i>Liagan Luaimneach</i>, Ligan the Bounding.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lir,</td><td align="left"><i>Lir</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lobas,</td><td align="left"><i>Lobais</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lochlann,</td><td align="left"><i>Lochlann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Loskenn of the Bare Knees,</td><td align="left"><i>Loiscinn Lomghlúineach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Luath,</td><td align="left"><i>Luaith</i>, swift.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Luga of the Long Arms,</td><td align="left"><i>Lugh Lamh-fada</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mac-an-Lona,</td><td align="left"><i>Mac-an-Luin</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mac Luga,</td><td align="left"><i>Mac Luigheach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mac-na-Corra,</td><td align="left"><i>Mac-na-Corra</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Maildun,</td><td align="left"><i>Mail Duin</i>, chief of the fort.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Manissa,</td><td align="left"><i>Maighneis</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mannanan Mac Lir,</td><td align="left"><i>Manannan Mac Lir</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Marid Mac Carido,</td><td align="left"><i>Mairid Mac Cairedo</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mergah,</td><td align="left"><i>Meargach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Micorta,</td><td align="left"><i>Miodhchuarta</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Midac,</td><td align="left"><i>Miodhach</i> or <i>Mioch</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Midir,</td><td align="left"><i>Midhir</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Midkena,</td><td align="left"><i>Miodhchaoin</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Milucra,</td><td align="left"><i>Miluchradh</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Modan,</td><td align="left"><i>Muadhan</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Morallta,</td><td align="left"><i>Moralltach</i>, great fury.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Moyle,</td><td align="left"><i>Mael</i>, a bare hill.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Moy-Mell,</td><td align="left"><i>Magh-Mell</i>, plain of pleasures.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Moytura,</td><td align="left"><i>Magh-tuireadh</i>, plain of towers.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Muman,</td><td align="left"><i>Mumha</i>, gen. <i>Mumhan</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Muridach,</td><td align="left"><i>Muridach</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Murthemna,</td><td align="left"><i>Muirthemhne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Niam,</td><td align="left"><i>Niamh</i>, beauty.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Nuada of the Silver Hand,</td><td align="left"><i>Nuadha Airgeatlaimh</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Nuca,</td><td align="left"><i>Nuca</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oisin,</td><td align="left"><i>Oisin</i> (pronounced <i>Isheen</i> in Munster, and <i>Osh'in</i> in Ulster and in Scotland).</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oscar,</td><td align="left"><i>Oscar</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Owenaght,</td><td align="left"><i>Eoghanacht</i>, descendants of Owen.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pezar,</td><td align="left"><i>Pisear</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Racad,</td><td align="left"><i>Rachadh</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rib,</td><td align="left"><i>Rib</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Sencab,</td><td align="left"><i>Seanchab</i>, old mouth.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Sharvan,</td><td align="left"><i>Searbhan</i>, a surly person.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Shee Finnaha,</td><td align="left"><i>Sidh-Fionnachaidh</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Skeabrac,</td><td align="left"><i>Sciath-bhreac</i>, speckled shield.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Skolan,</td><td align="left"><i>Sceolaing</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Slana,</td><td align="left"><i>Slánach</i>, healthy.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Sorca,</td><td align="left"><i>Sorcha</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Sotal of the Large Heels,</td><td align="left"><i>Sotal Sálmhór</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Taillkenn,</td><td align="left"><i>Tailcenn</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tinna the Mighty,</td><td align="left"><i>Tinne Mór</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tir-fa-tonn,</td><td align="left"><i>Tir-fa-thuinn</i>, country beneath the wave. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tirnanoge,</td><td align="left"><i>Tir na n-óg</i>, land of youths.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Trencoss,</td><td align="left"><i>Treunchosach</i>, strongfoot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Trenmore O'Baskin,</td><td align="left"><i>Treunmór O'Baoiscne</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Triscadal,</td><td align="left"><i>Triscadal</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tuis,</td><td align="left"><i>Tuis</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Turenn,</td><td align="left"><i>Tuireann</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Ur,</td><td align="left"><i>Uar</i>.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Urcar,</td><td align="left"><i>Urchar</i>.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_END" id="THE_END"></a>THE END</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_I._29" id="Footnote_I._29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I._29"><span class="label">[I.]</span></a> In the Book of Leinster, a manuscript now in Trinity College,
+Dublin, which was transcribed about the year 1130, there is a very
+interesting list of ancient historic tales&mdash;187 in all&mdash;classified in the
+manner indicated above, which an ollave was obliged to master,
+so as to be able to repeat any one of them from memory, whenever
+his patron required him to do so. (See O'Curry, "Lectures on the
+MS. Materials of Irish History," pages 243 and 584.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_II._30" id="Footnote_II._30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_II._30"><span class="label">[II.]</span></a> Macpherson never sinned in this way. He caught the true keynote;
+and his "Poems of Ossian," however perverted in other
+respects, are always dignified in thought and expression. Among
+other examples of the true interpretation of the spirit of these old
+romances, prose and poetry, I may mention Miss Brooke's "Reliques
+of Irish Poetry," published in the end of the last century; the Rev.
+Dr. Drummond's "Ancient Irish Minstrelsy," published in 1852;
+Lady Ferguson's graceful and interesting book, "The Story of the
+Irish before the Conquest" (1868); and Mr. Standish O'Grady's ably
+written volume, the "History of Ireland" (Vol. I., The Heroic Period
+1878).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_III._31" id="Footnote_III._31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_III._31"><span class="label">[III.]</span></a> With one partial exception. In "The Book of the Dun Cow,"
+"The Voyage of Maildun" is divided into parts or chapters, which
+are numbered on the margin in Roman numerals, each chapter
+relating to one particular island; but no spaces are left, and the
+chapters have no headings. In this tale I have followed the old
+sub-division.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_IV._32" id="Footnote_IV._32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_IV._32"><span class="label">[IV.]</span></a> "Deirdrè," by Robert D. Joyce, M.D., M.R.I.A. Boston:
+Roberts Brothers. Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_V._33" id="Footnote_V._33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_V._33"><span class="label">[V.]</span></a> O'Curry, <i>Atlantis</i>, Nos. vii. and viii., page 390.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_VI._34" id="Footnote_VI._34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_VI._34"><span class="label">[VI.]</span></a> See the ballad and air of "The Fairy King's Courtship," in the
+author's "Ancient Irish Music," page 1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_VII._35" id="Footnote_VII._35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_VII._35"><span class="label">[VII.]</span></a> Now Teltown, on the river Blackwater, between Kells and
+Navan, in Meath. (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at the end, for this battle.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_VIII._36" id="Footnote_VIII._36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_VIII._36"><span class="label">[VIII.]</span></a> The numbers refer to the notes at the end of the book.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_IX._37" id="Footnote_IX._37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_IX._37"><span class="label">[IX.]</span></a> At the end of the book will be found an alphabetical list of all
+the names of persons and places mentioned through the volume, with
+their Gaelic forms, and, in many cases, their meanings.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_X._38" id="Footnote_X._38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_X._38"><span class="label">[X.]</span></a> Shee Finnaha, Lir's residence, is thought to have been situated
+near the boundary of Armagh and Monaghan, not far from Newtown
+Hamilton.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XI._39" id="Footnote_XI._39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XI._39"><span class="label">[XI.]</span></a> Ara, the islands of Aran, in Galway Bay.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XII._40" id="Footnote_XII._40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XII._40"><span class="label">[XII.]</span></a> The Great Lake, <i>i.e.</i> Lough Derg, on the Shannon, above
+Killaloe.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XIII._41" id="Footnote_XIII._41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XIII._41"><span class="label">[XIII.]</span></a> The word "fratricide" is the nearest English equivalent to the
+original word, <i>fionghal,</i> which means the murder of a relative.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XIV._42" id="Footnote_XIV._42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XIV._42"><span class="label">[XIV.]</span></a> Lake Darvra, now Lough Derravaragh, in Westmeath.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XV._43" id="Footnote_XV._43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XV._43"><span class="label">[XV.]</span></a> The sea between Erin and Alban (Ireland and Scotland) was
+anciently called the Sea of Moyle, from the Moyle, or Mull, of
+Cantire.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XVI._44" id="Footnote_XVI._44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XVI._44"><span class="label">[XVI.]</span></a> Irros Domnann; Erris, in the county Mayo. Inis Glora;
+a small island about five miles west from Belmullet, in the same
+county, still known by the same name.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XVII._45" id="Footnote_XVII._45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XVII._45"><span class="label">[XVII.]</span></a> Taillkenn, a name given by the druids to St. Patrick.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XVIII._46" id="Footnote_XVIII._46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XVIII._46"><span class="label">[XVIII.]</span></a> demon of the air was held in great abhorrence by the ancient
+Irish.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XIX._47" id="Footnote_XIX._47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XIX._47"><span class="label">[XIX.]</span></a> The Milesian people; the colony who conquered and succeeded
+the Dedannans. (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XX._48" id="Footnote_XX._48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XX._48"><span class="label">[XX.]</span></a> The Dedannans were regarded as gods, and were immortal or semi-immortal.
+(<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXI._49" id="Footnote_XXI._49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXI._49"><span class="label">[XXI.]</span></a> It must be remembered that the children of Lir had some obscure
+foreknowledge of the coming of Christianity.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXII._50" id="Footnote_XXII._50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXII._50"><span class="label">[XXII.]</span></a> Many of these old poems begin and end with the same line
+or couplet.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXIII._51" id="Footnote_XXIII._51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXIII._51"><span class="label">[XXIII.]</span></a> Fairy host; <i>i.e.</i> the Dedannans. (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at the end of the
+book.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXIV._52" id="Footnote_XXIV._52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXIV._52"><span class="label">[XXIV.]</span></a> Iniskea; a little rocky island near the coast of Erris, in Mayo.
+"The lonely crane of Iniskea" was one of the "Wonders of Ireland."
+According to an ancient legend, which still lives among the peasantry
+of Mayo, a crane&mdash;one lonely bird&mdash;has lived on the island since the
+beginning of the world, and will live there till the day of judgment.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXV._53" id="Footnote_XXV._53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXV._53"><span class="label">[XXV.]</span></a> Donn's Sea Rocks&mdash;called in the text <i>Teach-Dhuinn</i>, or Donn's
+House, which is also the present Irish name; a group of three rocks
+off Kenmare Bay, where Donn, one of the Milesian brothers, was
+drowned. These remarkable rocks are now called in English the
+"Bull, Cow, and Calf."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXVI._54" id="Footnote_XXVI._54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXVI._54"><span class="label">[XXVI.]</span></a> These are well-known historical personages, who flourished
+in the seventh century.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXVII._55" id="Footnote_XXVII._55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXVII._55"><span class="label">[XXVII.]</span></a> Among the ancient Celtic nations, the dead were often buried
+standing up in the grave. It was in this way Finola and her brothers
+were buried.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXVIII._56" id="Footnote_XXVIII._56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXVIII._56"><span class="label">[XXVIII.]</span></a> Ogam, a sort of writing, often used on sepulchral stones to
+mark the names of the persons buried.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXIX._57" id="Footnote_XXIX._57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXIX._57"><span class="label">[XXIX.]</span></a> The Hill of Usna, in the parish of Conry, in Westmeath, one of
+the royal residences of Ireland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXX._58" id="Footnote_XXX._58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXX._58"><span class="label">[XXX.]</span></a> Luga of the Long Arms is often called The Ildana, <i>i.e.</i> the
+Man of many sciences, to signify his various accomplishments.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXI._59" id="Footnote_XXXI._59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXI._59"><span class="label">[XXXI.]</span></a> Eas-Dara, now Ballysodare, in the county Sligo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXII._60" id="Footnote_XXXII._60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXII._60"><span class="label">[XXXII.]</span></a><a href="#Page_1"> See page 1.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXIII._61" id="Footnote_XXXIII._61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXIII._61"><span class="label">[XXXIII.]</span></a> Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the kings of Ireland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXIV._62" id="Footnote_XXXIV._62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXIV._62"><span class="label">[XXXIV.]</span></a> Fairy Host, <i>i.e.</i> the Dedannans. (See notes 1 and 8 at end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXV._63" id="Footnote_XXXV._63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXV._63"><span class="label">[XXXV.]</span></a> Moy Murthemna, a plain in the county of Louth.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXVI._64" id="Footnote_XXXVI._64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXVI._64"><span class="label">[XXXVI.]</span></a> Fratricide; Gaelic, <i>fionghal</i>, the murder of a relative. (<a href="#Footnote_XIII._41">See note,
+page 7.</a>) The sons of Turenn and the sons of Canta appear to have been
+related to each other (<a href="#Page_94">see the third stanza of the poem, page 94</a>).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXVII._65" id="Footnote_XXXVII._65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXVII._65"><span class="label">[XXXVII.]</span></a> <i>Ath-Luan</i>, now Athlone; <i>Ros-Coman</i>, now Roscommon; <i>Moy-Lurg</i>,
+a plain in the county Roscommon; Curlieu Hills, a range of
+hills near Boyle, in Roscommon; Kesh-Corran, a well-known
+mountain in Sligo. The "Great Plain of the Assembly" must have
+been near Ballysodare, in Sligo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXVIII._66" id="Footnote_XXXVIII._66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXVIII._66"><span class="label">[XXXVIII.]</span></a> A usual form of oath among the ancient Irish. (See, for an
+account of this oath, the author's "Origin and History of Irish
+Names of Places," Series II. chap. XIV.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XXXIX._67" id="Footnote_XXXIX._67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XXXIX._67"><span class="label">[XXXIX.]</span></a> A kind of writing. (<a href="#Footnote_XXVIII._56">See note, page 36.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XL._68" id="Footnote_XL._68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XL._68"><span class="label">[XL.]</span></a> Chain of silence; a chain, probably hung with little bells, which
+the lord of a mansion shook when he wished to get silence and
+attention.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLI._69" id="Footnote_XLI._69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLI._69"><span class="label">[XLI.]</span></a> Mic&#333;'rta; the name of the great banqueting hall of Tara, the
+ruins of which are to be seen to this day.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLII._70" id="Footnote_XLII._70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLII._70"><span class="label">[XLII.]</span></a> The Garden of the Hesperides.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLIII._71" id="Footnote_XLIII._71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLIII._71"><span class="label">[XLIII.]</span></a> Sigar, <i>i.e.</i> Sicily.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLIV._72" id="Footnote_XLIV._72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLIV._72"><span class="label">[XLIV.]</span></a> Iroda was the name given by the Irish to some country in the
+far north of Europe, probably Norway.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLV._73" id="Footnote_XLV._73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLV._73"><span class="label">[XLV.]</span></a> Bruga of the Boyne, the palace of Angus, the great Dedannan
+magician, was situated on the north shore of the Boyne, not far from
+Slane. (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLVI._74" id="Footnote_XLVI._74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLVI._74"><span class="label">[XLVI.]</span></a> Ferdana, a poet; literally, "a man of verse."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLVII._75" id="Footnote_XLVII._75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLVII._75"><span class="label">[XLVII.]</span></a> Caher-Crofinn, otherwise called Rath-ree, the principal fortress
+at Tara, the remains of which are still to be seen.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLVIII._76" id="Footnote_XLVIII._76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLVIII._76"><span class="label">[XLVIII.]</span></a> Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin. Dun Turenn, the
+fortress of their father Turenn.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XLIX._77" id="Footnote_XLIX._77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XLIX._77"><span class="label">[XLIX.]</span></a> Dianket, the great Dedannan physician. His son Midac and
+his daughter Armedda were still more skilful than their father. (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See
+note 1</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_L._78" id="Footnote_L._78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_L._78"><span class="label">[L.]</span></a> Bregia, the plain lying between the Liffey and the Boyne.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LI._79" id="Footnote_LI._79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LI._79"><span class="label">[LI.]</span></a> Tailltenn, now Teltown, on the Blackwater, about midway between
+Navan and Kells, in Meath. Here annual meetings were held
+from the most ancient times, on the first of August, and for some
+days before and after, at which games were celebrated, like the
+Olympic games of Greece.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LII._80" id="Footnote_LII._80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LII._80"><span class="label">[LII.]</span></a> Bruga on the Boyne, where Angus or Mac Indoc, the great
+Dedannan enchanter, had his "mystic mansion hoar." (<a href="#Footnote_1_1">See note 1</a> at
+the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LIII._81" id="Footnote_LIII._81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LIII._81"><span class="label">[LIII.]</span></a> Ahaclee, the old name of Dublin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LIV._82" id="Footnote_LIV._82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LIV._82"><span class="label">[LIV.]</span></a> Frevan, now the hill of Frewen, rising over Lough Owei, near
+Mullingar, where the ancient Irish kings had one of their palaces.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LV._83" id="Footnote_LV._83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LV._83"><span class="label">[LV.]</span></a> Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the Irish kings.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LVI._84" id="Footnote_LVI._84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LVI._84"><span class="label">[LVI.]</span></a> Banba, one of the ancient names of Ireland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LVII._85" id="Footnote_LVII._85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LVII._85"><span class="label">[LVII.]</span></a> Muman, <i>i.e.</i> Munster.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LVIII._86" id="Footnote_LVIII._86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LVIII._86"><span class="label">[LVIII.]</span></a> Slieve Eblinne, now Slieve Eelim or Slieve Phelim, in Tipperary,
+sometimes called the Twelve Hills of Evlinn. "Eblinne" is
+the genitive of "Ebliu."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LIX._87" id="Footnote_LIX._87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LIX._87"><span class="label">[LIX.]</span></a> Now Lough Ree, on the Shannon.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LX._88" id="Footnote_LX._88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LX._88"><span class="label">[LX.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_XLV._73">See note, page 62</a>; <a href="#Footnote_1_1">see also note 1</a> at the end of the book.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXI._89" id="Footnote_LXI._89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXI._89"><span class="label">[LXI.]</span></a> The Plain of the Grey Copse, according to the legend, was the
+name of the plain now covered by Lough Neagh.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXII._90" id="Footnote_LXII._90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXII._90"><span class="label">[LXII.]</span></a> Ulad, <i>i.e.</i> Ulster.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXIII._91" id="Footnote_LXIII._91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXIII._91"><span class="label">[LXIII.]</span></a> Lough Necca, now Lough Neagh.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXIV._92" id="Footnote_LXIV._92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXIV._92"><span class="label">[LXIV.]</span></a> Gregory, <i>i.e.</i> Pope Gregory.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXV._93" id="Footnote_LXV._93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXV._93"><span class="label">[LXV.]</span></a> Dalaradia, the old name of a territory which included the
+southern half of the county Antrim and a part of Down.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXVI._94" id="Footnote_LXVI._94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXVI._94"><span class="label">[LXVI.]</span></a> Inver Ollarba, <i>i.e.</i> the <i>inver</i>, or mouth of the river Ollarba,
+which was the ancient name of the Larne Water, in Antrim.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXVII._95" id="Footnote_LXVII._95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXVII._95"><span class="label">[LXVII.]</span></a> Miluc, or Meelick, the name of an ancient ecclesiastical establishment
+in the county Antrim. See "Ecclesiastical Antiquities of
+Down, Connor, and Dromore" (page 3), by the Rev. William Reeves,
+M.B., M.R.I.A.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXVIII._96" id="Footnote_LXVIII._96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXVIII._96"><span class="label">[LXVIII.]</span></a> Hill of Usna. (<a href="#Footnote_XXIX._57">See note, page 37.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXIX._97" id="Footnote_LXIX._97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXIX._97"><span class="label">[LXIX.]</span></a> This is an expansion, rather than a translation, of the original,
+which is very short, and in some places very obscure.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXX._98" id="Footnote_LXX._98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXX._98"><span class="label">[LXX.]</span></a> There were several tribes named Owenaght in the south of
+Ireland. This particular tribe were called, as in the text, the
+Owenaght of Ninus, and also, according to an interlined gloss in the
+"Book of the Dun Cow," the Owenaght of the Aras, <i>i.e.</i> of the Aran
+Islands. Their territory was situated in the north-west of the
+county Clare, opposite the Islands of Aran.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXI._99" id="Footnote_LXXI._99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXI._99"><span class="label">[LXXI.]</span></a> Corcomroe, an ancient territory, now a barony in the north-west
+of the county Clare. (For the meaning and history of this
+name, see the author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places,"
+Series I. Part i. Chapter ii.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXII._100" id="Footnote_LXXII._100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXII._100"><span class="label">[LXXII.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_LXXIII._101">See note, page 128.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXIII._101" id="Footnote_LXXIII._101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXIII._101"><span class="label">[LXXIII.]</span></a> The verse in the original is quite serious; but I could not resist
+the temptation to give it a humorous turn. The same observation
+applies to the verse at <a href="#Page_122">page 122</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXIV._102" id="Footnote_LXXIV._102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXIV._102"><span class="label">[LXXIV.]</span></a> The incident of the big miller occurs in the Voyage of the Sons
+of O'Corra, as well as in the Voyage of Maildun. The two accounts
+are somewhat different; and I have combined both here.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXV._103" id="Footnote_LXXV._103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXV._103"><span class="label">[LXXV.]</span></a> Encos means "one foot."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXVI._104" id="Footnote_LXXVI._104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXVI._104"><span class="label">[LXXVI.]</span></a> Tory Island, off the coast of Donegal, where there was a
+monastery dedicated to St. Columkille.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXVII._105" id="Footnote_LXXVII._105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXVII._105"><span class="label">[LXXVII.]</span></a> The quicken tree, or quickbeam, or mountain ash, or roan-tree;
+Gaelic, <i>caerthainn</i>. Many mystic virtues were anciently
+attributed to this tree.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXVIII._106" id="Footnote_LXXVIII._106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXVIII._106"><span class="label">[LXXVIII.]</span></a> Ulad, <i>i.e.</i> Ulster.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXIX._107" id="Footnote_LXXIX._107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXIX._107"><span class="label">[LXXIX.]</span></a> The Hill of Allen, in the county Kildare, where Finn had his
+palace. (<a href="#Footnote_23_23">See note 23</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXX._108" id="Footnote_LXXX._108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXX._108"><span class="label">[LXXX.]</span></a> The cantreds of Kenri and Islands are now two baronies: the
+former the barony of Kenry, in Limerick, a little below the city;
+the latter the barony of Islands, in Clare, on the opposite side of
+the Shannon, including the mouth of the river Fergus, with its
+numerous <i>islands</i>, from which the barony has its name.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXI._109" id="Footnote_LXXXI._109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXI._109"><span class="label">[LXXXI.]</span></a> Brugaid, a sort of local officer, who was allowed a tract of land
+free, on condition that he maintained a large establishment as a house
+of public hospitality. Many of the brugaids were very rich.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXII._110" id="Footnote_LXXXII._110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXII._110"><span class="label">[LXXXII.]</span></a> Fermorc and Hy Conall Gavra are now the baronies of Upper
+and Lower Connello, in the county Limerick.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXIII._111" id="Footnote_LXXXIII._111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXIII._111"><span class="label">[LXXXIII.]</span></a> Knockfierna, a conspicuous hill, celebrated for its fairy lore,
+near Croom, in the county Limerick; very near Kenri, Midac's
+territory.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXIV._112" id="Footnote_LXXXIV._112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXIV._112"><span class="label">[LXXXIV.]</span></a> Ferdana, a poet.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXV._113" id="Footnote_LXXXV._113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXV._113"><span class="label">[LXXXV.]</span></a> Bruga of the Boyne. (<a href="#Footnote_XLV._73">See note, page 62.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXVI._114" id="Footnote_LXXXVI._114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXVI._114"><span class="label">[LXXXVI.]</span></a> The poets were much given to proposing poetical puzzles of this
+kind; and it was considered a mark of superior education, and of
+great acuteness in a champion to be able to explain them. (For
+another example, see the enigmatical verse about the skin of the pig,
+in the story of "The Children of Turenn," <a href="#Page_69">page 69</a>.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXVII._115" id="Footnote_LXXXVII._115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXVII._115"><span class="label">[LXXXVII.]</span></a> Bregia or Magh Breagh, the ancient name of the plain extending
+from the Liffey northwards to the borders of the county Louth. (For
+this name, see the author's "Irish Names of Places," Series II.
+Part IV. chap. II.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXVIII._116" id="Footnote_LXXXVIII._116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXVIII._116"><span class="label">[LXXXVIII.]</span></a> The houses of the ancient Irish were circular, and generally
+made of wood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_LXXXIX._117" id="Footnote_LXXXIX._117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_LXXXIX._117"><span class="label">[LXXXIX.]</span></a> "As cold as the snow of one night;" "As white as the snow
+of one night," are usual comparisons in Gaelic. The first night's snow
+seems particularly cold and white when you see it in the morning
+on account of the contrast with the green fields of the day before.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XC._118" id="Footnote_XC._118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XC._118"><span class="label">[XC.]</span></a> Dord-Fian, or Dord-Fiansa, a sort of musical war-cry, usually
+performed by several persons in chorus.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCI._119" id="Footnote_XCI._119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCI._119"><span class="label">[XCI.]</span></a> Irla, <i>i.e.</i> an earl, a chief.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCII._120" id="Footnote_XCII._120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCII._120"><span class="label">[XCII.]</span></a> A satirical allusion to Conan's well-known cowardice.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCIII._121" id="Footnote_XCIII._121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCIII._121"><span class="label">[XCIII.]</span></a> Beltane, the first of May; Samin, the first of November.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCIV._122" id="Footnote_XCIV._122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCIV._122"><span class="label">[XCIV.]</span></a> Beta, a public house of hospitality.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCV._123" id="Footnote_XCV._123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCV._123"><span class="label">[XCV.]</span></a> Offaly, now the name of two baronies in the county Kildare.
+</p><p>
+Fera-call, or Fircal, an ancient territory in the present King's
+County.
+</p><p>
+Brosna, a small river rising in the Slieve Bloma, or Slieve Bloom
+mountains, which flows by Birr, and falls into the Shannon near
+Banagher; usually called the Little Brosna, to distinguish it from the
+Great Brosna, which flows through King's County into the Shannon.
+</p><p>
+The Twelve Mountains of Evlinn. (<a href="#Footnote_LVIII._86">See note, page 97.</a>)
+</p><p>
+Knockainy, a small hill much celebrated in fairy lore, in the
+county Limerick, giving name to the village of Knockainy at its
+base. It appears from the text that it was more anciently called
+Collkilla, or hazel-wood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCVI._124" id="Footnote_XCVI._124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCVI._124"><span class="label">[XCVI.]</span></a> Ardpatrick, a beautiful green hill, with a remarkable church
+ruin and graveyard on its summit, two miles from Kilfinane, county
+Limerick.
+</p><p>
+Kenn-Avrat was the ancient name of Seefin mountain, rising
+over the village of Glenosheen, two miles from Ardpatrick. Slieve-Keen,
+the old name of the hill of Carrigeennamroanty, near Seefin.
+</p><p>
+Fermoy, a well-known town and barony in the county Cork. It
+appears from the text that the district was anciently known by the
+name of Coill-na-drua, or the wood of the druids.
+</p><p>
+Lehan, the ancient name of the district round Castlelyons, in the
+county Cork.
+</p><p>
+Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. (<a href="#Footnote_LXXXII._110">See note,
+page 184.</a>)
+</p><p>
+Curoi Mac Dara, a celebrated chief who flourished in the time of
+the Red Branch Knights of Ulster, viz., in the first century of the
+Christian era. Curoi had his residence on a mountain near Tralee,
+still called Caherconree (the fortress of Curoi), and his "patrimony"
+was South Munster. The remains of Curoi's great stone fortress
+are still to be seen on Caherconree.
+</p><p>
+Loch Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.
+</p><p>
+Caher-Dun-Isca, now the town of Caher, on the Suir, in Tipperary.
+</p><p>
+Femin was the name of the great plain lying to the south and west
+of the mountain of Slievenaman, or Slieve-na-man-finn, near Clonmel,
+in Tipperary.
+</p><p>
+Balla-Gavran, or the pass of Gavran, an ancient road, which ran
+by Gavran (now Gowran), in the county Kilkenny.
+</p><p>
+Cratloe, a well-known district on the Clare side of the Shannon,
+near Limerick.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCVII._125" id="Footnote_XCVII._125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCVII._125"><span class="label">[XCVII.]</span></a> Cliach, the old name of the plain lying round Knockainy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCVIII._126" id="Footnote_XCVIII._126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCVIII._126"><span class="label">[XCVIII.]</span></a> Fomor, a gigantic warrior, a giant; its primitive meaning is
+"a sea-robber," commonly called a Fomorian. (<a href="#Footnote_5_5">See note 5</a> at the
+end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_XCIX._127" id="Footnote_XCIX._127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_XCIX._127"><span class="label">[XCIX.]</span></a> Gilla Dacker means "a slothful fellow"&mdash;a fellow hard to
+move, hard to manage, hard to have anything to do with.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C._128" id="Footnote_C._128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C._128"><span class="label">[C.]</span></a> Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. Slieve
+Lougher, a celebrated mountain near Castle Island, in Kerry. Corca
+Divna, now the barony of Corkaguiny, the long peninsula lying west
+of Tralee, and containing the town of Dingle, and the mountain range
+of Slieve Mish. Cloghan Kincat, now called Cloghan, a small village
+on the northern coast of the peninsula.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CI._129" id="Footnote_CI._129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CI._129"><span class="label">[CI.]</span></a> Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CII._130" id="Footnote_CII._130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CII._130"><span class="label">[CII.]</span></a> Gael Glas, the traditional ancestor of the Gaels.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CIII._131" id="Footnote_CIII._131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CIII._131"><span class="label">[CIII.]</span></a> Crann-tav'all, a sort of sling for projecting stones, made of an
+elastic piece of wood, and strung somewhat like a cross-bow.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CIV._132" id="Footnote_CIV._132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CIV._132"><span class="label">[CIV.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_CXVIII._146">See note, page 302.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CV._133" id="Footnote_CV._133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CV._133"><span class="label">[CV.]</span></a> The original word, which I have translated "wizard-champion,"
+is <i>gruagach</i>. This word literally means "hairy," "a hairy fellow;"
+and it is often used in the sense of "giant." But in these romantic
+tales it is commonly used to signify a champion who has always
+something of the supernatural about him, yet not to such a degree
+as to shield him completely from the valour of a great mortal
+hero like Dermat O'Dyna.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CVI._134" id="Footnote_CVI._134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CVI._134"><span class="label">[CVI.]</span></a> Tir-fa-tonn, literally "the country beneath the wave." (<a href="#Footnote_13_13">See
+note 13</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CVII._135" id="Footnote_CVII._135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CVII._135"><span class="label">[CVII.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_XLI._69">See foot-note, page 55.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CVIII._136" id="Footnote_CVIII._136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CVIII._136"><span class="label">[CVIII.]</span></a> Ath-Luan, now Athlone, on the Shannon. In ancient times the
+river had to be crossed by a ford, where the bridge is now built.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CIX._137" id="Footnote_CIX._137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CIX._137"><span class="label">[CIX.]</span></a> The Wood of the two Tents was situated in the territory of
+Clanrickard, in the county Galway.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CX._138" id="Footnote_CX._138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CX._138"><span class="label">[CX.]</span></a> Original: "It was little but that the salmon of her life fled
+through her mouth with joy before Dermat."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXI._139" id="Footnote_CXI._139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXI._139"><span class="label">[CXI.]</span></a> The river Laune, flowing from the Lakes of Killarney into
+Dingle Bay.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXII._140" id="Footnote_CXII._140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXII._140"><span class="label">[CXII.]</span></a> The Grey Moor of Finnlia (<i>Bogach-Fhinnléithe</i> in the original)
+was somewhere between the river Laune and the river Caragh, but the
+name is now forgotten.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXIII._141" id="Footnote_CXIII._141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXIII._141"><span class="label">[CXIII.]</span></a> The river of Carra, the Caragh river, flowing into Dingle Bay
+from the beautiful lake Caragh, twenty miles west of Killarney.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXIV._142" id="Footnote_CXIV._142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXIV._142"><span class="label">[CXIV.]</span></a> Beha, the river Behy, about a mile and a half west from the
+Caragh, flowing through Glanbehy into Rossbehy creek.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXV._143" id="Footnote_CXV._143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXV._143"><span class="label">[CXV.]</span></a> Tonn Toma, the wave of Toma (a woman). The word Tonn (a
+wave or billow) was often applied to the sea-waves that break over
+certain sandbanks and rocks with an exceptionally loud roaring.
+Tonn Toma is the name of a sandbank at the head of Dingle Bay,
+just outside the extreme point of Rossbehy peninsula; and in the
+winter storms, the sea thunders on this sandbank, and indeed on the
+whole length of the beach of the peninsula, so as often to be heard
+twenty miles inland. This roaring is popularly believed to predict rain.
+</p><p>
+There is a chain of three hills, Stookaniller, Knockatinna, and
+Knockboy, lying between Behy bridge on the east and Drung mountain
+on the west, and isolated from the hills to the south-east by the
+valley of Glanbehy. These hills rise directly over Tonn Toma; and
+the old Gaelic name, Currach-Cinn-Adhmuid (the moor of the head [or
+hill] of timber) must have been anciently applied to one or all of them.
+</p><p>
+(See, for an account of the great historical <i>tonns</i> of Ireland, the
+author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places," series ii.
+page 251.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXVI._144" id="Footnote_CXVI._144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXVI._144"><span class="label">[CXVI.]</span></a> Iccian Sea (Irish, <i>Muir nIcht</i>), the Irish name for the sea
+between England and France.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXVII._145" id="Footnote_CXVII._145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXVII._145"><span class="label">[CXVII.]</span></a> Ducoss, Fincoss, and Trencoss, <i>i.e.</i> Blackfoot, Whitefoot, and
+Strongfoot.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXVIII._146" id="Footnote_CXVIII._146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXVIII._146"><span class="label">[CXVIII.]</span></a> Dermat had two spears, the great one called the Ga-derg or
+Crann-derg (red javelin), and the small one called Ga-boi or Crann-boi
+(yellow javelin): he had also two swords: the Morallta (great
+fury), and the Begallta (little fury). These spears and swords he
+got from Mannanan Mac Lir and from Angus of the Bruga. He
+carried the great spear and sword in affairs of life and death; and
+the smaller in adventures of less danger.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXIX._147" id="Footnote_CXIX._147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXIX._147"><span class="label">[CXIX.]</span></a> A usual form of challenge among the ancient Irish warriors. It
+is very curious that this custom is remembered to the present day in
+the <i>patois</i> of the peasantry, even where the Irish language is no
+longer spoken. In the south, and in parts of the west, they call a
+distinguished fighting man a <i>buailim sciach</i>, an expression which
+means literally, "I strike the shield."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXX._148" id="Footnote_CXX._148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXX._148"><span class="label">[CXX.]</span></a> Slieve Lougher, a mountain near Castle Island. (<a href="#Footnote_C._128">See note,
+page 237.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXI._149" id="Footnote_CXXI._149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXI._149"><span class="label">[CXXI.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_XXVIII._56">See note, page 36.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXII._150" id="Footnote_CXXII._150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXII._150"><span class="label">[CXXII.]</span></a> Hy Ficra, now the barony of Tireragh, in Sligo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXIII._151" id="Footnote_CXXIII._151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXIII._151"><span class="label">[CXXIII.]</span></a> The Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth, <i>i.e.</i> Loch Lein, or the
+Lakes of Killarney.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXIV._152" id="Footnote_CXXIV._152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXIV._152"><span class="label">[CXXIV.]</span></a> The Land of Promise, or Fairyland. (<a href="#Footnote_8_8">See note 8</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXV._153" id="Footnote_CXXV._153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXV._153"><span class="label">[CXXV.]</span></a> Quicken tree. (<a href="#Footnote_LXXVII._105">See note, page 177.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXVI._154" id="Footnote_CXXVI._154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXVI._154"><span class="label">[CXXVI.]</span></a> Fomor, a giant. (<a href="#Footnote_XCVIII._126">See note, page 227.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXVII._155" id="Footnote_CXXVII._155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXVII._155"><span class="label">[CXXVII.]</span></a> Slieve Cua, the ancient name of the highest of the Knockmeal-down
+mountains, in Waterford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXVIII._156" id="Footnote_CXXVIII._156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXVIII._156"><span class="label">[CXXVIII.]</span></a> Slieve Crot, the ancient name of the Galty mountains.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXIX._157" id="Footnote_CXXIX._157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXIX._157"><span class="label">[CXXIX.]</span></a> Slieve Gora, a mountainous district in the barony of Clankee,
+County Cavan.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXX._158" id="Footnote_CXXX._158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXX._158"><span class="label">[CXXX.]</span></a> Slieve Mucka, now Slievenamuck (the mountain of the pig), a
+long mountain ridge in Tipperary, separated from the Galties by the
+Glen of Aherlow. Slieve Luga, a mountainous district, formerly
+belonging to the O'Garas, in the barony of Costello, county Mayo.
+Slieve Mish, a mountain range west of Tralee.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXI._159" id="Footnote_CXXXI._159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXI._159"><span class="label">[CXXXI.]</span></a> The cantred of O'Dyna, now the barony of Corkaguiny, in Kerry.
+(<a href="#Footnote_C._128">See note, page 237.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXII._160" id="Footnote_CXXXII._160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXII._160"><span class="label">[CXXXII.]</span></a> The cantred of Ben-Damis, or Ducarn of Leinster, probably the
+district round Douce mountain, in the county Wicklow.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXIII._161" id="Footnote_CXXXIII._161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXIII._161"><span class="label">[CXXXIII.]</span></a> The district round the mountain of Kesh-Corran, in Sligo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXIV._162" id="Footnote_CXXXIV._162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXIV._162"><span class="label">[CXXXIV.]</span></a> <a href="#Footnote_CXVIII._146">See note, page 302.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXV._163" id="Footnote_CXXXV._163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXV._163"><span class="label">[CXXXV.]</span></a> Now Benbulbin, a mountain five miles north of the town of Sligo.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXVI._164" id="Footnote_CXXXVI._164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXVI._164"><span class="label">[CXXXVI.]</span></a> See this story told at length, <a href="#Page_177">page 177.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXVII._165" id="Footnote_CXXXVII._165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXVII._165"><span class="label">[CXXXVII.]</span></a> A prophetic allusion to the battle of Gavra. (<a href="#Footnote_28_28">See note 28</a> at
+the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXVIII._166" id="Footnote_CXXXVIII._166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXVIII._166"><span class="label">[CXXXVIII.]</span></a> A prophetic allusion to the events related in the story of "Oisin
+in Tirnanoge," <a href="#Page_385">page 385.</a></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXXXIX._167" id="Footnote_CXXXIX._167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXXXIX._167"><span class="label">[CXXXIX.]</span></a> It is necessary to remind the reader that this story and the two
+following are related by Oisin, in his old age, to St. Patrick. (See
+the <a href="#OISIN_IN_TIRNANOGECXLIX">prefatory note</a> to the story of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," p. 385; and
+<a href="#Footnote_23_23">see also note 23</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXL._168" id="Footnote_CXL._168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXL._168"><span class="label">[CXL.]</span></a> Now Slieve Gullion, a lofty, isolated mountain in the south of
+the county Armagh, celebrated in legendary lore.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLI._169" id="Footnote_CXLI._169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLI._169"><span class="label">[CXLI.]</span></a> The Hill of Allen, in Kildare, where Finn had his palace. (<a href="#Footnote_23_23">See
+note 23</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLII._170" id="Footnote_CXLII._170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLII._170"><span class="label">[CXLII.]</span></a> The little lake for which this legendary origin is assigned lies
+near the top of Slieve Gullion. There were several wells in Ireland
+which, according to the belief of old times, had the property of turning
+the hair grey. Giraldus Cambrensis tells us of such a well in
+Munster; and he states that he once saw a man who had washed a
+part of his head in this well, and that the part washed was white,
+while the rest was black!
+</p><p>
+It is to be observed that the peasantry of the district retain
+to this day a lingering belief in the power of the lake of Slieve
+Gullion to turn the hair grey.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLIII._171" id="Footnote_CXLIII._171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLIII._171"><span class="label">[CXLIII.]</span></a> Knocka, now Castleknock, near Dublin. (<a href="#Footnote_27_27">See note 27</a> at the
+end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLIV._172" id="Footnote_CXLIV._172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLIV._172"><span class="label">[CXLIV.]</span></a> This story is told by Oisin to St. Patrick. (<a href="#OISIN_IN_TIRNANOGECXLIX">See the prefatory
+note</a> to the next story, "Oisin in Tirnanoge," <a href="#Page_385">page 385.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLV._173" id="Footnote_CXLV._173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLV._173"><span class="label">[CXLV.]</span></a> Slieve Fuad was the ancient name of the highest of the Fews
+mountains, near Newtown Hamilton, in Armagh; but the name is
+now lost.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLVI._174" id="Footnote_CXLVI._174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLVI._174"><span class="label">[CXLVI.]</span></a> Now probably the village of Carrigans, on the river Foyle, five
+miles south-west of Londonderry.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLVII._175" id="Footnote_CXLVII._175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLVII._175"><span class="label">[CXLVII.]</span></a> Dord-Fian, a sort of musical war-cry. (<a href="#Footnote_XC._118">See note, page 195.</a>)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLVIII._176" id="Footnote_CXLVIII._176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLVIII._176"><span class="label">[CXLVIII.]</span></a> Knockanare (the hill of slaughter), where a great battle was
+fought between the Fena under Finn, and the foreigners under
+Mergah of the Sharp Spears, in which Mergah was defeated and
+slain. This battle forms the subject of a poetical romance. It may
+be as well to observe that this hill is <i>not</i> Knockanare in Kerry, near
+the mouth of the Shannon, as some say.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CXLIX._177" id="Footnote_CXLIX._177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CXLIX._177"><span class="label">[CXLIX.]</span></a> Tirnanoge, the Land of Youth. (<a href="#Footnote_19_19">See note 19</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CL._178" id="Footnote_CL._178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CL._178"><span class="label">[CL.]</span></a> Gavra, now Garristown, in the north-west of the county Dublin.
+(For an account of this battle, <a href="#Footnote_28_28">see note 28</a> at the end.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLI._179" id="Footnote_CLI._179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLI._179"><span class="label">[CLI.]</span></a> Lough Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLII._180" id="Footnote_CLII._180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLII._180"><span class="label">[CLII.]</span></a> Greenan, a summer-house; a house in a bright, sunny spot.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLIII._181" id="Footnote_CLIII._181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLIII._181"><span class="label">[CLIII.]</span></a> The gigantic race of the Fena had all passed away, and Erin
+was now inhabited by people who looked very small in Oisin's eyes.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLIV._182" id="Footnote_CLIV._182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLIV._182"><span class="label">[CLIV.]</span></a> Glenasmole, a fine valley about seven miles south of Dublin,
+through which the river Dodder flows.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLV._183" id="Footnote_CLV._183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLV._183"><span class="label">[CLV.]</span></a> I translated this tale fifteen years ago (as mentioned in Preface,
+<a href="#Page_xiii">page xiii</a>) from two Royal Irish Academy MSS., 23. N. 15 and 23.
+M. 50; and I subsequently made some modifications after I had an
+opportunity of consulting the more correct text of the Book of Fermoy.
+This last text has since been published, with literal translation, by
+Dr. Whitley Stokes, in the <i>Revue Celtique</i> (Jan. 1893). After comparing
+my somewhat free version with Dr. Stokes's close translation,
+I have not thought it necessary to make any changes.
+</p><p>
+A few of the adventures in this tale are identical with those described
+in the Voyage of Maildun: the description of these I have omitted
+here. Lochan, Enna, and Silvester, the chief characters in this extraordinary
+fiction, are historical: they were saints of the primitive Irish
+church, and lived in the sixth century.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLVI._184" id="Footnote_CLVI._184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLVI._184"><span class="label">[CLVI.]</span></a> <i>Brugaid</i>, a sort of local officer who maintained a large establishment
+as keeper of a house of public hospitality. See my "Short History of
+Ireland," p. 57.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLVII._185" id="Footnote_CLVII._185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLVII._185"><span class="label">[CLVII.]</span></a> Chess-playing was a favourite amusement among the ancient
+Irish.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLVIII._186" id="Footnote_CLVIII._186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLVIII._186"><span class="label">[CLVIII.]</span></a> Cairderga: original <i>Caer-derg</i>, red berry.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLIX._187" id="Footnote_CLIX._187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLIX._187"><span class="label">[CLIX.]</span></a> <i>Erenach</i>, the holder or <i>impropriator</i> of a church and its lands:
+usually a layman.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLX._188" id="Footnote_CLX._188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLX._188"><span class="label">[CLX.]</span></a> Clogher in Tyrone where there was a monastery.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXI._189" id="Footnote_CLXI._189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXI._189"><span class="label">[CLXI.]</span></a> Tuam-da-Gualann, where was formerly a celebrated ecclesiastical
+establishment: now Tuam in Galway.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXII._190" id="Footnote_CLXII._190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXII._190"><span class="label">[CLXII.]</span></a> Greenan: original <i>grianan</i>, literally a sunny place: a summer-house:
+the most lightsome, airy, and pleasant apartment of a house.
+See this word discussed in my "Irish Names of Places," vol. i. p. 291.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXIII._191" id="Footnote_CLXIII._191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXIII._191"><span class="label">[CLXIII.]</span></a> For St. Finnen of Clonard in the County Meath, see my "Short
+History of Ireland," p. 175</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXIV._192" id="Footnote_CLXIV._192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXIV._192"><span class="label">[CLXIV.]</span></a> <i>Kenn-Mara</i>, now Kinvarra on Galway bay.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXV._193" id="Footnote_CLXV._193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXV._193"><span class="label">[CLXV.]</span></a> <i>Curragh</i>, <a href="#Footnote_17_17">see note 17</a> at end. Some curraghs were made with two&mdash;some
+with three&mdash;hides, one outside another, for the better security.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXVI._194" id="Footnote_CLXVI._194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXVI._194"><span class="label">[CLXVI.]</span></a> <i>Crossans</i>: travelling gleemen: the clothes, musical instruments, &amp;c.,
+were the property of the company. This word is the origin of the
+Scotch and Irish family name MacCrossan, now often changed to
+Crosbie. A company of crossans had always among them a <i>fuirseoir</i>, i.e.
+a juggler or buffoon.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXVII._195" id="Footnote_CLXVII._195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXVII._195"><span class="label">[CLXVII.]</span></a> According to very ancient legends, which are still vividly remembered
+and recounted all over the country, almost every lake in Ireland
+has a tremendous hairy reptile in its waters. Some say they are demons,
+sent by St. Patrick to reside at the bottom of the lakes to the Day of
+Judgment.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXVIII._196" id="Footnote_CLXVIII._196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXVIII._196"><span class="label">[CLXVIII.]</span></a> St. Ailbe, the patron of Munster, was a contemporary of St.
+Patrick. He founded his great monastery and school at Emly in the
+County Limerick.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXIX._197" id="Footnote_CLXIX._197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXIX._197"><span class="label">[CLXIX.]</span></a> The translation that follows is my own, and is of course copyright,
+like all the other translations in this book. On this fine story is
+founded the epic poem of "Deirdre," by Robert Dwyer Joyce, <span class="smcap">M.D.</span></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXX._198" id="Footnote_CLXX._198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXX._198"><span class="label">[CLXX.]</span></a> Ulaid (pronounced <i>Ulla</i>), Ulster.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXI._199" id="Footnote_CLXXI._199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXI._199"><span class="label">[CLXXI.]</span></a> For Concobar and the Red Branch Knights, <a href="#Footnote_15_15">see note 15</a> farther
+on: and for much fuller information, see my "Social History of
+Ancient Ireland," vol. i, page 83; or the Smaller Soc. Hist., page 38.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXII._200" id="Footnote_CLXXII._200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXII._200"><span class="label">[CLXXII.]</span></a> The druids professed to be able to foretell by observing the stars
+and clouds. See Smaller Social History, p. 98.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXIII._201" id="Footnote_CLXXIII._201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXIII._201"><span class="label">[CLXXIII.]</span></a> "Deirdre" is said to mean "alarm."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXIV._202" id="Footnote_CLXXIV._202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXIV._202"><span class="label">[CLXXIV.]</span></a> That is 1665. This inverted method of enumeration was often
+used in Ireland. But they also used direct enumeration like ours.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXV._203" id="Footnote_CLXXV._203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXV._203"><span class="label">[CLXXV.]</span></a> This and the other places named in Deirdre's Farewell are all in
+the west of Scotland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXVI._204" id="Footnote_CLXXVI._204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXVI._204"><span class="label">[CLXXVI.]</span></a> Irish name, <i>Drum-Sailech</i>; the ridge on which Armagh was
+afterwards built.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXVII._205" id="Footnote_CLXXVII._205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXVII._205"><span class="label">[CLXXVII.]</span></a> These champions, as well as their wives, took care never to show
+any signs of fear or alarm even in the time of greatest danger: so Naisi
+and Deirdre kept playing quietly as if nothing was going on outside,
+though they heard the din of battle resounding.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXVIII._206" id="Footnote_CLXXVIII._206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXVIII._206"><span class="label">[CLXXVIII.]</span></a> The "Three <i>Tonns</i> or Waves of Erin" were the Wave of Tuath
+outside the mouth of the river Bann, off the coast of Derry; the Wave
+of Rury in Dundrum Bay, off the county Down; and the Wave of
+Cleena in Glandore Harbour in the south of Cork. In stormy weather,
+when the wind blows from certain directions, the sea at those places, as
+it tumbles over the sandbanks, or among the caves and fissures of the
+rocks, utters a loud and solemn roar, which in old times was believed to
+forebode the death of some king.
+</p><p>
+The legends also tell that the shield belonging to a king moaned
+when the person who wore it in battle&mdash;whether the king himself or a
+member of his family&mdash;was in danger of death: the moan was heard all
+over Ireland; and the "Three Waves of Erin" roared in response. See
+"Irish Names of Places," Vol. II., Chap. XVI.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXIX._207" id="Footnote_CLXXIX._207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXIX._207"><span class="label">[CLXXIX.]</span></a> Slieve Cullinn, now Slieve Gullion mountain in Armagh.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXX._208" id="Footnote_CLXXX._208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXX._208"><span class="label">[CLXXX.]</span></a> For a full account of the Highland traditions regarding Dermat,
+and of the Highland monuments that commemorate his name, see
+"Loch Etive and the Sons of Uisnach" (p. 255), a very valuable and
+interesting book, recently published, which came into my hands after
+I had written the above.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_CLXXXI._209" id="Footnote_CLXXXI._209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_CLXXXI._209"><span class="label">[CLXXXI.]</span></a> The above legend is taken from "The Boyish Exploits of Finn
+Mac Cumal," published, with translation, by John O'Donovan, LL.D.,
+in the fourth volume of the Ossianic Society's Transactions, from a
+MS. <i>transcribed</i> in 1453, now lying in the Bodleian Library at Oxford.
+But the internal evidence of the language shows that the piece is far
+more ancient than the fifteenth century. The legend of Finn and
+the Salmon of Knowledge is still current among the peasantry; and
+a modern popular version of it may be seen in the <i>Dublin Penny
+Journal</i>, Vol. I. page 110.
+</p><p>
+As to the process of putting his thumb under his tooth of knowledge,
+even the English-speaking peasantry of the south still retain
+a tradition that it was painful; for they say that Finn "chewed his
+thumb from the skin to the flesh, from the flesh to the bone, from
+the bone to the marrow, and from the marrow to the <i>smoosagh</i>."</p></div>
+</div>
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<p><b>Transcriber's Notes:</b><br />
+Footnotes formatted in Roman.<br />
+Endnotes formatted in Arabic.<br />
+Inconsistent and archaic spelling retained.<br /></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 38041-h.htm or 38041-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/4/38041/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/38041-h/images/cover.jpg b/38041-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..daee687
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/38041.txt b/38041.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..34c16e3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,15510 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Old Celtic Romances
+
+Author: Unknown
+
+Translator: P. W. Joyce
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2011 [EBook #38041]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLD CELTIC ROMANCES
+
+
+
+
+ OLD
+ CELTIC ROMANCES
+
+ translated from the gaelic
+
+ BY
+
+ P.W. JOYCE, M.A., LL.D., T.C.D.
+ M.R.I.A.
+
+ _One of the Commissioners for the Publication of
+ the Ancient Laws of Ireland
+ President of the Royal Society of Antiquaries, Ireland_
+
+ Author of
+
+ "A SOCIAL HISTORY OF ANCIENT IRELAND"
+ "THE STORY OF ANCIENT IRISH CIVILISATION"
+ "A SHORT HISTORY OF IRELAND"
+ "A CHILD'S HISTORY OF IRELAND"
+ "IRISH NAMES OF PLACES"
+ "ANCIENT IRISH MUSIC"
+ AND OTHER WORKS RELATING TO IRELAND
+
+ "I shall tell you a pretty tale"
+ --Coriolanus.
+
+ DUBLIN
+ THE EDUCATIONAL CO.
+ OF IRELAND, LIMITED
+ 89 TALBOT STREET
+
+ LONDON
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND
+ COMPANY
+ 39 PATERNOSTER ROW
+
+ 1920
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+Among the Celtic people of Ireland and the north-west of Scotland,
+story-telling has always been a favourite amusement. In the olden time,
+they had professional story-tellers, variously designated according to
+rank--ollaves, shanachies, files, bards, etc.--whose duty it was to know
+by heart a number of old tales, poems, and historical pieces, and to
+recite them at festive gatherings, for the entertainment of the chiefs
+and their guests. These story-tellers were always well received at the
+houses of princes and chiefs, and treated with much consideration; and
+on occasions when they acquitted themselves well, so as to draw down the
+applause of the audience, they were often rewarded with costly presents.
+
+To meet the demand for this sort of entertainment, ingenious "men of
+learning," taking legends or historical events as themes, composed
+stories from time to time; of which those that struck the popular fancy
+were caught up and remembered, and handed down from one generation of
+story-tellers to another. In course of time, a body of romantic
+literature grew up, consisting chiefly of prose tales, which were
+classified, according to subject, into Battles, Voyages, Tragedies,
+Military Expeditions, Cattle-Raids, Courtships, Pursuits, Adventures,
+Visions, etc.[I.]
+
+Some of these tales were historical, _i.e._ founded on historical
+events, and corresponded closely with what is now called the historical
+romance; while others were altogether fictitious--pure creations of the
+imagination. But it is to be observed that even in the fictitious tales,
+the main characters are always historical, or such as were considered
+so. The old ollaves wove their fictions round Conor Mac Nessa and his
+Red Branch Knights, or Finn and his Fena, or Luga of the Long Arms and
+his Dedannans, or Conn the Hundred-fighter, or Cormac Mac Art; like the
+Welsh legends of Arthur and his Round Table, or the Arabian romances of
+Haroun-al-Raschid and his Court.
+
+The greater number of the tales were, as I have said, in prose. But some
+were in poetry; and in many of the prose tales the leading characters
+are often made to express themselves in verse, or some striking incident
+of the story is repeated in a poetical form. Not unfrequently the
+fragments of verse introduced into a prose tale are quotations from an
+older poetical version of the same tale; and hence it often happens that
+while the prose may be plain enough, the poetry is often archaic and
+obscure.
+
+At some very early period in Ireland--how early we have now no means of
+determining with certainty--Celtic thought began to be committed to
+writing; and as everything seems to have been written down that was
+considered worth preserving, manuscripts accumulated in course of time,
+which were kept either in monasteries, or in the houses of the
+hereditary professors of learning. But in the dark time of the Danish
+ravages, and during the troubled centuries that followed the
+Anglo-Norman invasion, the manuscript collections were gradually
+dispersed, and a large proportion lost or destroyed. Yet we have
+remaining--rescued by good fortune from the general wreck--a great body
+of manuscript literature. Our two most important collections are those
+in Trinity College and in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin; where we have
+manuscripts of various ages, from the year 1100 down to the present
+century, on every conceivable subject--Annals, History, Biography,
+Theology, Romance, Legend, Science, etc. These manuscripts, which, it
+should be remarked, are nearly all copies from older books, contain a
+vast collection of romantic literature: it may, indeed, be said that
+there is scarcely one important event in our early history, or one
+important native personage or native legend, that has not been made the
+subject of some fanciful story.
+
+The volume I now offer to the notice of the public contains eleven
+tales, selected and translated from the manuscripts of Trinity College
+and of the Royal Irish Academy. Some have been already published, with
+original text and _literal_ translation, and are to be found in the
+Transactions of various literary societies, where, however, they are
+inaccessible to the general run of readers; and even if they were
+accessible, they are almost unreadable, the translations having been
+executed, not for literary, but for linguistic purposes. Others have
+never been translated or given to the public in any shape or form till
+now.
+
+Of the whole collection of eleven tales, therefore, it may be said that
+they are quite new to the general mass of the reading public. And
+furthermore, this is the first collection of the old Gaelic prose
+romances that has ever been published in fair English translation.
+
+Scraps and fragments of some of these tales have been given to the world
+in popular publications, by writers who, not being able to read the
+originals, took their information from printed books in the English
+language. But I am forced to say that many of these specimens have been
+presented in a very unfavourable and unjust light--distorted to make
+them look _funny_, and their characters debased to the mere modern
+conventional stage Irishman. There is none of this silly and odious
+vulgarity in the originals of these fine old tales, which are high and
+dignified in tone and feeling--quite as much so as the old romantic
+tales of Greece and Rome.[II.]
+
+A translation may either follow the very words, or reproduce the life
+and spirit, of the original; but no translation can do both. If you
+render word for word, you lose the spirit; if you wish to give the
+spirit and manner, you must depart from the exact words, and frame your
+own phrases. I have chosen this latter course. My translation follows
+the original closely enough in narrative and incident; but so far as
+mere phraseology is concerned, I have used the English language freely,
+not allowing myself to be trammelled by too close an adherence to the
+very words of the text. The originals are in general simple in style;
+and I have done my best to render them into simple, plain, homely
+English. In short, I have tried to tell the stories as I conceive the
+old shanachies themselves would have told them, if they had used English
+instead of Gaelic.
+
+In the originals, the stories run on without break or subdivision;[III.]
+but I have thought it better to divide the longer ones into chapters,
+with appropriate headings.
+
+In almost all cases I had at my command several copies of the same
+story, some of them differing in phraseology and in minor points of
+detail, though agreeing, in the main, in narrative and incident. I found
+this a considerable advantage, as it gave me more freedom in the choice
+of expression.
+
+I have made full use of the literal translations of those tales that
+have been already published in the Transactions of the Ossianic Society,
+in the _Atlantis_, in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, and in
+the Journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of
+Ireland. But, in order to secure the advantage of various readings, I
+compared, in every case, the published text with at least one copy of
+the story, in the Royal Irish Academy, in Trinity College, or in my own
+private manuscript collection.
+
+
+The ancient institution of professional story-telling held its ground
+both in Ireland and in Scotland down to a very recent period; and it is
+questionable if it be even yet quite extinct. Within my own memory,
+this sort of entertainment was quite usual among the farming classes of
+the south of Ireland. The family and workmen, and any neighbours that
+chose to drop in, would sit round the kitchen fire after the day's
+work--or perhaps gather in a barn on a summer or autumn evening--to
+listen to some local shanachie reciting one of his innumerable Gaelic
+tales. The story-teller never chose his own words--he always had the
+story by heart, and recited the words from memory, often gliding into a
+sort of recitative in poetical passages, or when he came to some
+favourite grandiose description abounding in high-sounding alliterative
+adjectives. And very interesting it was to mark the rapt attention of
+the audience, and to hear their excited exclamations when the speaker
+came to relate some mighty combat, some great exploit of the hero, or
+some other striking incident. Three years ago, I met a man in Kilkee,
+who had a great number of these stories by heart, and who actually
+repeated for me, without the slightest hitch or hesitation, more than
+half--and if I had not stopped him would have given me the whole--of
+"Cuirt an Mheadhon-Oidhche" ("The Midnight Court"), a poem about six
+times as long as Gray's "Elegy."
+
+I will now proceed to give a few particulars concerning these tales,
+including a short account of the manuscript or manuscripts from which
+each has been translated.
+
+
+THE THREE TRAGIC STORIES OF ERIN.
+
+Among the ancient Gaelic tales, three were known as "the three most
+sorrowful (tales) of story-telling," or "The Three Tragic Stories of
+Erin;" viz., "The Fate of the Children of Usna," "The Fate of the
+Children of Lir," and "The Fate of the Children of Turenn." I have not
+included the first in this volume, but a poetical version of it has been
+written and published by my brother.[IV.]
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR.
+
+Two translations of this tale have been published: one literal, with the
+Gaelic text, by Professor O'Curry, in the _Atlantis_ (Nos. vii. and
+viii.); and another, less literal, by Gerald Griffin, in his "Tales of a
+Jury-Room."
+
+The oldest known copies of the tale are, one in the Catholic University,
+Dublin, made by Andrew Mac Curtin, a well-known Gaelic scholar and
+scribe of the county Clare, who lived between 1680 and 1740; one in
+Trinity College, Dublin, made by Hugh O'Daly, in 1758; and one in the
+British Museum, made by Richard Tipper of Dublin, in 1718.[V.] There is
+also a very good copy in the Royal Irish Academy (23. C. 26), of which I
+made considerable use, written in or about 1782, by Peter O'Connell, a
+good Gaelic scholar of the county Clare. From a comparison of several of
+these versions, O'Curry made his copy of the text as published in the
+_Atlantis_.
+
+There may be, and there probably are, older copies, in Trinity College,
+in the British Museum, or elsewhere, if we knew only where to find them.
+And this observation applies to several of the tales that follow, of
+which we have at hand only modern copies.
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN.
+
+In the Book of Lecan (folio 28), which was compiled by the Mac Firbises,
+about A.D. 1416, is a short account, partly in prose and partly in
+verse, of the celebrated eric-fine imposed on the three sons of Turenn,
+by Luga of the Long Arms, for killing his father Kian; but this old book
+does not give the story of the quest for the fine. The full tale, text
+and literal translation, has been published by O'Curry in the
+_Atlantis_. There are several good copies in the Royal Irish Academy:
+one in 23. G. 10, transcribed by Patrick Brown of the county Clare, in
+1805; another in 23. E. 16, written out by Michael Oge O'Longan, in
+1797; and a third (imperfect) in 23. M. 47, copied by Andrew Mac Curtin,
+in 1734.
+
+There are references to these three sons of Turenn, and to the manner of
+their death, in two very old authorities, viz., Cormac's "Glossary"
+(about A.D. 900); and a poem by Flann of Monaster-boice (who died A.D.
+1056), a copy of which is in the Book of Leinster, written about A.D.
+1130.
+
+In the older references to the sons of Turenn, they are called Brian,
+Iuchar, Iucharba; but in some comparatively modern copies of the tale
+the names are a little different--for instance, Peter O'Connell calls
+them Uar, Iuchar, and Iucharba; and they vary still further in other
+copies. I have taken advantage of this variety to give the names in a
+more pronounceable form in my translation.
+
+In the original, this tale is introduced by an anecdote of Nuada of the
+Silver Hand and the two great Dedannan leeches, Midac and Armedda (see
+page 92, _infra_), which has nothing whatever to do with the story, and
+which I have omitted.
+
+
+THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH.
+
+"Leabhar na h-Uidhre," or "The Book of the Dun Cow," from which this and
+the two following tales are taken, is the oldest manuscript of
+miscellaneous Gaelic literature we possess. It was transcribed from
+older books by Maelmuire Mac Ceilechair, who died A.D. 1106; and it is
+now deposited in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin--or rather, I should
+say, a large fragment of it, for the book has suffered much mutilation.
+This venerable book may now be said to be in the hands of the public, as
+it has been lately reproduced in lithograph fac-simile, and published by
+the Council of the Royal Irish Academy, at the Government expense.
+
+The story of "The Overflowing of Lough Neagh" (called in the original
+"The Destruction of Eocho Mac Mairedo") has been published, with text
+and literal translation, by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe, in the Kilkenny
+Archaeological Journal volume for 1870-1.
+
+In this story I have been obliged to make a few transpositions in the
+mere order of the incidents, for the narrative in the original is in
+some places very ill arranged.
+
+It is now nearly eight hundred years since this story was _transcribed_
+from some old authority into "The Book of the Dun Cow;" and it is
+singular that the tradition of the formation of Lough Neagh, by the
+overflow of an enchanted well which was neglected by the woman in charge
+of it, still maintains a vivid existence among the peasantry. (See on
+this subject the author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places,"
+Series I. 4th edition, page 176.)
+
+
+CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR, AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.
+
+This tale (called in the original "Echtra Condla Cain," "The Adventures
+of Connla the Comely") is taken from "The Book of the Dun Cow." It has
+been published, with text and literal translation, by the late J.
+O'Beirne Crowe, in the Kilkenny Archaeological Journal (volume 1874-5,
+page 128).
+
+This is one of the many tales that illustrate the ancient and widespread
+superstition that fairies sometimes take away mortals to their palaces
+in the fairy forts and pleasant green hills;[19] of which the last story
+in this book--"Oisin in Tirnanoge"--is another example. This
+superstition prevailed in Ireland and the Scottish Highlands as far back
+as either history or tradition reaches; it flourished in full vigour
+within my own memory; and it is scarcely quite extinct--in Ireland at
+least--at the present day.[VI.] In connection with the antiquity of this
+superstition, it must be borne in mind that the present story was
+transcribed into "The Book of the Dun Cow" in or about the year 1100,
+from some older book; and that it relates to the time of Conn the
+Hundred-fighter, king of Ireland, who reigned in the second century of
+the Christian era.
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+Of this tale (which is now given to the public for the first time) the
+oldest copy is in "The Book of the Dun Cow" (about the year 1100); but
+it is imperfect at both beginning and end--a portion having been torn
+away when the book was mutilated at some former time. There is a perfect
+copy in the Yellow Book of Lecan, in Trinity College, Dublin, and
+another in the British Museum (MS. Harl. 5280).
+
+After I had made a rough translation of the greater part of this piece,
+I discovered a good literal translation in manuscript in the Royal Irish
+Academy, made by the late J. O'Beirne Crowe, which was of great use to
+me, as it helped to explain some strange terms, and to clear up some
+obscure passages.
+
+This voyage would appear from internal evidence to have been made in the
+beginning of the eighth century (O'Curry says about the year 700); for I
+think it likely that Maildun did actually go on a voyage, which was
+afterwards made the framework of the story. On my translation of this
+tale, Lord Tennyson founded his poem "The Voyage of Maeldune."
+
+Of the _Imrama_ or voluntary sea expeditions (to which the present story
+belongs) there are, according to O'Curry (Lect. MS. Mat. 289), only four
+remaining, all very ancient. Of these the best known is the "Voyage of
+St. Brendan," undertaken in the sixth century, which was at one time
+celebrated all over Europe, and which has been lately made the theme of
+a fine poem by Denis Florence McCarthy.
+
+Another of these _Imrama_ is the "Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra," which
+has been described at some length by Professor O'Curry (Lect. MS. Mat.
+289). Of this I have a copy which I made from the MS. 23. M. 50, Royal
+Irish Academy (and which I afterwards carefully compared with another
+copy lent me by my friend, Mr. W.M. Hennessy). I made a translation of
+this story, intending to print it in the present volume; but as there is
+a much older and better copy in the ancient "Book of Fermoy," which I
+had not time to consult in detail, I have thought it better to hold back
+for the present the strange adventures of the sons of O'Corra. A
+beautiful poetical translation of the whole tale has been made by Mr.
+T.D. Sullivan of Dublin, and published in his volume of Poems.
+
+
+THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.
+
+The "Bruighean Caerthainn," or "The Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees,"
+which is now translated for the first time, is one of the most popular
+of the Gaelic romances. I had three of the Royal Irish Academy MSS.
+before me when translating it--viz., 23. C. 30, transcribed in 1733, by
+the Irish writer and lexicographer, Andrew Mac Curtin of the county
+Clare; 24. B. 15, written in 1841; and 23. L. 24, copied in 1766, by
+Dermot O'Mulqueen of the county Clare.
+
+This is one of a type of stories very common in Gaelic romantic
+literature:--One or more of the heroes are entrapped by some enchanter
+and held under a spell in a castle, or a cave, or a dungeon; till, after
+a series of adventures, they are released by the bravery or mother-wit
+of some of their companions. "The Chase of Slieve Fuad" and "The Chase
+of Slieve Cullinn" are two other examples of this class of Gaelic tales.
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+This is a humorous story of a trick--a very serious practical
+joke--played by Avarta, a Dedannan enchanter, on sixteen of the Fena,
+whom he carried off to "The Land of Promise;" and of the adventures of
+Finn, Dermat O'Dyna, and the others, in their pursuit of Avarta (who had
+taken the shape of the Gilla Dacker) to recover their companions. It may
+be regarded as belonging to the same class as the last story.
+
+O'Curry described the opening of this tale in his Lectures (MS. Mat.
+316); and he was the first, so far as I know, to draw attention to it. I
+think it strange that such a story should not have been noticed before
+by writers on Gaelic literature; for as a work of imagination, it seems
+to me a marvellous and very beautiful creation.
+
+The battles fought by the king of Sorca, aided by Finn and his Fena,
+against the King of the World, are described at much length in the
+original; but I have cut them down to a very short compass; and I have
+omitted altogether a long episode towards the end, which travels away
+from the main story.
+
+This tale has never been translated till now. I translated it chiefly
+from the Royal Irish Academy MS., 24. B. 28, a well-written manuscript,
+which was copied out by Edmond Terry, in 1728: but I kept another good
+copy beside me for comparison, viz., that contained in the Royal Irish
+Academy MS., 23. G. 21, written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan of
+Cork, father of Mr. Joseph O'Longan, now the Irish scribe in the Royal
+Irish Academy, and the transcriber in fac-simile of "Leabhar na
+h-Uidhre," "Leabhar Breac," and "Leabhar Laighneach."
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+This tale is one of those mentioned in the list contained in the Book of
+Leinster, which was written about A.D. 1130 (see note, page iv.); but
+though this proves the tale to be an ancient one, I have never come
+across a copy older than the last century.
+
+"The Pursuit of Dermat and Grania" has been published, with text and a
+very racy idiomatic literal translation, by Mr. Standish Hayes O'Grady,
+in the Transactions of the Ossianic Society for 1855, from a comparison
+of two manuscripts, one of 1780 and the other of 1842. In addition to
+Mr. O'Grady's published text, I made use of another good copy (MS. Royal
+Irish Academy, 23. G. 21) written in 1795, by Michael Oge O'Longan,
+already spoken of.
+
+I cannot help believing that this fine story originally ended with the
+death of Dermat; though in all the current versions (including Mr.
+O'Grady's printed text) there is an additional part recounting the
+further proceedings of Grania and her sons, after the death of the hero.
+But this part is in every respect inferior to the rest--in language, in
+feeling, and in play of imagination. It seems to me very clear that it
+was patched on to the original story by some unskilful hand; and I have
+accordingly omitted it, and ended the story with the death of Dermat. I
+have also omitted two short episodes--that of the _cnumh_ or reptile of
+Corca Divna, as a mere excrescence; and Finn's expedition to Scotland
+for aid against Dermat. And, for the sake of clearness, I have slightly
+changed the place of that part of the tale which recounts the origin of
+the Fairy Quicken Tree of Dooros. There are one or two other trifling
+but very necessary modifications, which need not be mentioned here.
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN: THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD: OISIN IN
+TIRNANOGE.
+
+In the original Gaelic these are three poetical tales. All three have
+been printed, with Gaelic text and literal translation, in the
+Transactions of the Ossianic Society: the two first by the late John
+O'Daly, and "Oisin in Tirnanoge" by Professor O'Looney. There are many
+good copies of these tales in the manuscripts of the Royal Irish
+Academy; though of not one of them have I seen a copy older than the
+last century.
+
+"The Chase of Slieve Cullinn" (commonly known as "The Poem of the
+Chase") has been translated into English verse by Miss Brooke; and there
+is another metrical translation in the _Irish Penny Journal_ (page 93).
+And of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," Mr. T.D. Sullivan has given a graceful
+poetical rendering in his volume of Poems, already mentioned.
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
+
+In this edition there is an additional tale, "The Fate of the Sons of
+Usna," a notice of which will be found at page x, above.
+
+LYRE-NA-GRENA, LEINSTER ROAD, RATHMINES, 1907.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[I.] In the Book of Leinster, a manuscript now in Trinity College,
+Dublin, which was transcribed about the year 1130, there is a very
+interesting list of ancient historic tales--187 in all--classified in
+the manner indicated above, which an ollave was obliged to master, so as
+to be able to repeat any one of them from memory, whenever his patron
+required him to do so. (See O'Curry, "Lectures on the MS. Materials of
+Irish History," pages 243 and 584.)
+
+[II.] Macpherson never sinned in this way. He caught the true keynote;
+and his "Poems of Ossian," however perverted in other respects, are
+always dignified in thought and expression. Among other examples of the
+true interpretation of the spirit of these old romances, prose and
+poetry, I may mention Miss Brooke's "Reliques of Irish Poetry,"
+published in the end of the last century; the Rev. Dr. Drummond's
+"Ancient Irish Minstrelsy," published in 1852; Lady Ferguson's graceful
+and interesting book, "The Story of the Irish before the Conquest"
+(1868); and Mr. Standish O'Grady's ably written volume, the "History of
+Ireland" (Vol. I., The Heroic Period 1878).
+
+[III.] With one partial exception. In "The Book of the Dun Cow," "The
+Voyage of Maildun" is divided into parts or chapters, which are numbered
+on the margin in Roman numerals, each chapter relating to one particular
+island; but no spaces are left, and the chapters have no headings. In
+this tale I have followed the old sub-division.
+
+[IV.] "Deirdre," by Robert D. Joyce, M.D., M.R.I.A. Boston: Roberts
+Brothers. Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son.
+
+[V.] O'Curry, _Atlantis_, Nos. vii. and viii., page 390.
+
+[VI.] See the ballad and air of "The Fairy King's Courtship," in the
+author's "Ancient Irish Music," page 1.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR; OR, THE FOUR WHITE SWANS.
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. Bove Derg chosen King of the Dedannans, 1
+
+ II. The Children of Lir, 4
+
+ III. The Four Children of Lir are turned into Four White 6
+ Swans by their Stepmother,
+
+ IV. The Four White Swans on Lake Darvra, 10
+
+ V. The Four White Swans on the Sea of Moyle, 18
+
+ VI. The Four White Swans on the Western Sea, 26
+
+ VII. The Children of Lir regain their Human Shape and die, 32
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN; OR, THE QUEST FOR THE ERIC-FINE.
+
+
+ I. The Lochlanns invade Erin, 37
+
+ II. The Murder of Kian, 42
+
+ III. Defeat and Flight of the Lochlanns, 47
+
+ IV. The Eric-Fine on the Sons of Turenn for the Slaying of 51
+ Kian,
+
+ V. The Sons of Turenn obtain Mannanan's Canoe, the 60
+ Wave-Sweeper,
+
+ VI. The Apples of the Garden of Hisberna, 63
+
+ VII. The Gifted Skin of the Pig, 67
+
+ VIII. The Blazing Spear of the King of Persia, 71
+
+ IX. The Chariot and Steeds of the King of Sigar, 74
+
+ X. The Seven Pigs of the King of the Golden Pillars, 78
+
+ XI. The Hound-Whelp of the King of Iroda, 81
+
+ XII. Return of the Sons of Turenn, with part of the 84
+ Eric-Fine,
+
+ XIII. The Cooking-Spit of the Women of Fincara, 87
+
+ XIV. The Three Shouts on Midkena's Hill, 89
+
+ XV. Return and Death of the Sons of Turenn, 91
+
+
+ THE OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH, AND THE STORY OF LIBAN
+ THE MERMAID. 97
+
+
+ CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN. 106
+
+
+ THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+
+ I. Maildun's Childhood and Youth. He begins his Voyage in 112
+ Quest of the Plunderers who slew his Father,
+
+ II. The First Island. Tidings of the Plunderers, 117
+
+ III. The Island of the Monstrous Ants, 119
+
+ IV. The Terraced Isle of Birds, 120
+
+ V. A Monster, 121
+
+ VI. The Demon Horse-Race, 122
+
+ VII. The Palace of Solitude, 124
+
+ VIII. The Island of the Wonderful Apple Tree, 125
+
+ IX. The Island of Bloodthirsty Quadrupeds, 126
+
+ X. An Extraordinary Monster, 127
+
+ XI. The Isle of Red-Hot Animals, 129
+
+ XII. The Palace of the Little Cat, 131
+
+ XIII. An Island that dyed Black and White, 133
+
+ XIV. The Island of the Burning River, 135
+
+ XV. The Miller of Hell, 136
+
+ XVI. The Isle of Weeping, 137
+
+ XVII. The Isle of the Four Precious Walls, 139
+
+ XVIII. The Palace of the Crystal Bridge, 139
+
+ XIX. The Isle of Speaking Birds, 143
+
+ XX. The Aged Hermit and the Human Souls, 143
+
+ XXI. The Island of the Big Blacksmiths, 145
+
+ XXII. The Crystal Sea, 147
+
+ XXIII. A Lovely Country beneath the Waves, 147
+
+ XXIV. An Island guarded by a Wall of Water, 148
+
+ XXV. A Water-Arch in the Air, 149
+
+ XXVI. The Silver Pillar of the Sea, 150
+
+ XXVII. An Island standing on One Pillar, 151
+
+ XXVIII. The Island Queen detains them with her Magic 152
+ Thread-Clew,
+
+ XXIX. The Isle of Intoxicating Wine-Fruits, 156
+
+ XXX. The Isle of the Mystic Lake, 157
+
+ XXXI. The Isle of Laughing, 163
+
+ XXXII. The Isle of the Blest, 164
+
+ XXXIII. The Hermit of the Sea-Rock, 164
+
+ XXXIV. Signs of Home, 174
+
+ XXXV. Maildun meets his Enemy, and arrives Home, 175
+
+
+ THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+ I. Colga, King of Lochlann, invades Erin, and is slain, 177
+
+ II. Midac, the Son of Colga, meditates Revenge, 181
+
+ III. Finn is entrapped by Midac, and held by Enchantment in 189
+ the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+
+ IV. Innsa, Finn's Foster Son, defends the Ford leading to 196
+ the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+
+ V. Ficna, the Son of Finn, defends the Ford, 203
+
+ VI. Dermat O'Dyna slays the Three Kings of the Island of 213
+ the Torrent, breaks the Spell with their Blood, and
+ frees Finn,
+
+ VII. The Fight at the Ford with the Foreign Army, 219
+
+
+ THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+ I. Arrival of the Gilla Dacker and his Horse, 223
+
+ II. Conan and Fifteen of the Fena are carried off by the 235
+ Gilla Dacker's Horse,
+
+ III. Pursuit, 239
+
+ IV. Dermat O'Dyna, in Quest of the Gilla Dacker, 245
+ encounters the Wizard-Champion at the Well,
+
+ V. Dermat O'Dyna in Tir-fa-tonn, 253
+
+ VI. Finn, in Quest of Dermat, fights many Battles, 259
+
+ VII. Finn and Dermat meet, 265
+
+ VIII. Conan and his Companions found and rescued, 267
+
+
+ THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+ I. Finn, the Son of Cumal, seeks the Princess Grania to 274
+ Wife,
+
+ II. Dermat O'Dyna secretly espouses the Princess Grania, 277
+
+ III. Flight and Pursuit, 285
+
+ IV. The Fastness of the Seven Narrow Doors, 289
+
+ V. The Three Sea-Champions and their Three Venomous 296
+ Hounds on the Track of Dermat and Grania,
+
+ VI. What Befell the Three Sea-Champions and their Three 305
+ Venomous Hounds,
+
+ VII. Sharvan, the Surly Giant, and the Fairy Quicken Tree 313
+ of Dooros,
+
+ VIII. The Attack of the Witch-Hag, 330
+
+ IX. Peace and Rest at Last, 332
+
+ X. The Death of Dermat, 334
+
+
+ THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN, 351
+
+
+ THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD, 362
+
+
+ OISIN IN TIRNANOGE; OR, THE LAST OF THE FENA, 385
+
+
+ THE VOYAGE OF THE SONS OF O'CORRA, 400
+
+
+ THE FATE OF THE SONS OF USNA, 427
+
+
+ NOTES, 455
+
+
+ LIST OF PROPER NAMES, 471
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF LIR;
+OR,
+_THE FOUR WHITE SWANS._
+
+ Silent, O Moyle, be the roar of thy water;
+ Break not, ye breezes, your chain of repose;
+ While murmuring mournfully, Lir's lonely daughter
+ Tells to the night-star her tale of woes.
+
+ MOORE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+BOVE DERG CHOSEN KING OF THE DEDANNANS.
+
+
+After the battle of Tailltenn,[VII.] the Dedannans[1][VIII.] of the five
+provinces of Erin assembled in one place of meeting, to consider on
+their state, and to choose a king. For their chiefs said it was better
+for them to have one king over all, than to be divided, as they were,
+serving sundry lords and princes.
+
+Now of those who expected the sovereignty for themselves, the following
+chiefs were the noblest, namely:--Bove Derg,[IX.] son of the Dagda; his
+brother Angus, of Bruga on the Boyne, who, however, had no earnest wish
+to become king, preferring to remain as he was; Ilbrec of Assaroe; Lir
+of Shee Finnaha; and Midir the Haughty of Bri-Leth.[1]
+
+Then the chief people went into council, all except the five above
+named; and the decision they came to was to elect Bove Derg, son of the
+Dagda, king over the whole of the Dedannan race. When the election was
+made known, none of those who were disappointed took the matter to heart
+except Lir of Shee Finnaha alone. And when Lir found that the chiefs had
+chosen Bove Derg, he was greatly offended, and straightway left the
+assembly in anger, without taking leave of any one, and without showing
+any mark of respect or obedience to the new king.
+
+When the chiefs heard this, they were wroth; and they said they would
+follow him to Shee Finnaha,[X.] and slay him with spear and sword, and
+burn his house, because he did not yield obedience to the king they had
+elected in lawful council.
+
+But Bove Derg would not permit them to do so. "This man," he said, "will
+defend his territory, and many will be slain; and I am none the less
+your king, although he has not submitted to me."
+
+Matters remained so for a long time. But at last a great misfortune
+happened to Lir, for his wife died after an illness of three days. This
+weighed heavily on him, and his heart was weary with sorrow after her.
+Her death, moreover, was a great event at that time, and was much spoken
+of throughout Erin.
+
+When the tidings reached the mansion of Bove Derg, where the chief men
+of the Dedannans were then assembled, the king said--
+
+"As Lir's wife is now dead, my friendship would be of service to him, if
+he were willing to accept it. For I have in my house three maidens, the
+most beautiful and the best instructed in all Erin, namely, Eve, Eva,
+and Alva, my own foster children, and daughters of Allil of Ara."[XI.]
+
+The Dedannans agreed to this, and said that their king had spoken wisely
+and truly.
+
+Messengers were accordingly sent to Lir, and they were told to say to
+him--
+
+"If thou art willing to submit to the king, he will give thee for a wife
+one of his three foster children; and thou shalt have his friendship for
+ever."
+
+It was pleasing to Lir to make this alliance; and accordingly he set out
+next day from Shee Finnaha with a company of fifty chariots; and they
+never halted or turned aside till they reached the palace of Bove Derg,
+on the shore of the Great Lake.[XII.] Their arrival gave much joy and
+happiness to the king and his household; for although Lir did not submit
+at first to Bove Derg, he was a good man, and was greatly beloved by
+the king himself and by all his subjects. So Lir and his followers got a
+kindly welcome; and they were supplied with everything necessary, and
+were well attended to that night.
+
+Next day, the three daughters of Allil of Ara sat on the same couch with
+the queen their foster mother; and the king said to Lir--
+
+"Take thy choice of the three maidens, and whichever thou choosest, she
+shall be thy wife."
+
+"They are all beautiful," said Lir, "and I cannot tell which of them is
+best; but I will take the eldest, for she must be the noblest of the
+three."
+
+Then the king said, "Eve is the eldest, and she shall be given to thee
+if it be thy wish."
+
+So Lir chose Eve for his wife, and they were wedded that day.
+
+Lir remained a fortnight in the king's palace, and then departed with
+his wife to his own house, Shee Finnaha, where he celebrated his
+marriage by a great royal wedding feast.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[VII.] Now Teltown, on the river Blackwater, between Kells and Navan, in
+Meath. (See note 1 at the end, for this battle.)
+
+[VIII.] The numbers refer to the notes at the end of the book.
+
+[IX.] At the end of the book will be found an alphabetical list of all
+the names of persons and places mentioned through the volume, with their
+Gaelic forms, and, in many cases, their meanings.
+
+[X.] Shee Finnaha, Lir's residence, is thought to have been situated
+near the boundary of Armagh and Monaghan, not far from Newtown Hamilton.
+
+[XI.] Ara, the islands of Aran, in Galway Bay.
+
+[XII.] The Great Lake, _i.e._ Lough Derg, on the Shannon, above
+Killaloe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE CHILDREN OF LIR.
+
+
+In course of time, Lir's wife bore him two children at a birth, a
+daughter and a son, whose names were Finola and Aed. A second time she
+brought forth twins, two sons, who were named Ficra and Conn: and she
+died in giving them birth. This was a cause of great anguish to Lir; and
+he would almost have died of grief, only that his mind was turned from
+his sorrow by his great love for his four little children.
+
+When the news of Eve's death reached the mansion of Bove Derg, the king
+was in deep grief, and the people of his household raised three great
+cries of lamentation for her. And when their mourning was ended, the
+king said--
+
+"We grieve for our foster child, both on her own account, and for the
+sake of the good man to whom we gave her; for we are thankful for his
+alliance and his friendship. But our acquaintance shall not be ended,
+and our alliance shall not be broken; for I will give him her sister to
+wife, my second foster child, Eva."
+
+Messengers were sent to Lir to Shee Finnaha, to tell him of this; and he
+consented. So after some time he came to the king's house to espouse
+her, and they were united; and he brought her home with him to his own
+house.
+
+The four children grew up under Eva's care. She nursed them with great
+tenderness, and her love for them increased every day. They slept near
+their father; and he would often rise from his own bed at the dawn of
+morning, and go to their beds, to talk with them and to fondle them.
+
+The king, Bove Derg, loved them almost as well as did their father. He
+went many times every year to Shee Finnaha to see them; and he used to
+bring them often to his palace, where he kept them as long as he could
+on each occasion, and he always felt sad when he sent them home.
+
+At this time, too, the Dedannans used to celebrate the Feast of Age[2]
+at the houses of their chiefs by turns; and whenever it happened that
+the festival was held at Shee Finnaha, these children were the delight
+and joy of the Dedannans. For nowhere could four lovelier children be
+found; so that those who saw them were always delighted with their
+beauty and their gentleness, and could not help loving them with their
+whole heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE FOUR CHILDREN OF LIR ARE TURNED INTO FOUR WHITE SWANS BY THEIR
+STEPMOTHER.
+
+
+Now when Eva saw that the children of Lir received such attention and
+affection from their father, and from all others that came to his house,
+she fancied she was neglected on their account; and a poisonous dart of
+jealousy entered her heart, which turned her love to hatred; and she
+began to have feelings of bitter enmity for her sister's children.
+
+Her jealousy so preyed on her that she feigned illness, and lay in bed
+for nearly a year, filled with gall and brooding mischief; and at the
+end of that time she committed a foul and cruel deed of treachery on the
+children of Lir.
+
+One day she ordered her horses to be yoked to her chariot, and she set
+out for the palace of Bove Derg, bringing the four children with her.
+
+Finola did not wish to go, for it was revealed to her darkly in a dream
+that Eva was bent on some dreadful deed of fratricide;[XIII.] and she
+knew well that her stepmother intended to kill her and her brothers that
+day, or in some other way to bring ruin on them. But she was not able to
+avoid the fate that awaited her.
+
+When they had gone some distance from Shee Finnaha on their way to the
+palace, Eva tried to persuade her attendants to kill the children. "Kill
+them, and you shall be rewarded with all the worldly wealth you may
+desire; for their father loves me no longer, and has neglected and
+forsaken me on account of his great love for these children."
+
+But they heard her with horror, and refused, saying, "We will not kill
+them. Fearful is the deed thou hast contemplated, O Eva; and evil will
+surely befall thee for having even thought of killing them."
+
+Then she took the sword to slay them herself; but her woman's weakness
+prevented her, and she was not able to strike them.
+
+So they set out once more, and fared on till they came to the shore of
+Lake Darvra,[XIV.] where they alighted, and the horses were unyoked.
+
+She led the children to the edge of the lake, and told them to go to
+bathe; and as soon as they had got into the clear water, she struck them
+one by one with a druidical[3] fairy wand, and turned them into four
+beautiful snow-white swans. And she addressed them in these words--
+
+ Out to your home, ye swans, on Darvra's wave;
+ With clamorous birds begin your life of gloom:
+ Your friends shall weep your fate, but none can save;
+ For I've pronounced the dreadful words of doom.
+
+After this, the four children of Lir turned their faces to their
+stepmother; and Finola spoke--
+
+"Evil is the deed thou hast done, O Eva; thy friendship to us has been a
+friendship of treachery; and thou hast ruined us without cause. But the
+deed will be avenged; for the power of thy witchcraft is not greater
+than the druidical power of our friends to punish thee; and the doom
+that awaits thee shall be worse than ours."
+
+ Our stepmother loved us long ago;
+ Our stepmother now has wrought us woe:
+ With magical wand and fearful words,
+ She changed us to beautiful snow-white birds;
+ And we live on the waters for evermore,
+ By tempests driven from shore to shore.
+
+Finola again spoke and said, "Tell us now how long we shall be in the
+shape of swans, so that we may know when our miseries shall come to an
+end."
+
+"It would be better for you if you had not put that question," said Eva;
+"but I shall declare the truth to you, as you have asked me. Three
+hundred years on smooth Lake Darvra; three hundred years on the Sea of
+Moyle, between Erin and Alban;[XV.] three hundred years at Irros Domnann
+and Inis Glora[XVI.] on the Western Sea. Until the union of Largnen, the
+prince from the north, with Decca, the princess from the south; until
+the Taillkenn[XVII.] shall come to Erin, bringing the light of a pure
+faith; and until ye hear the voice of the Christian bell. And neither by
+your own power, nor by mine, nor by the power of your friends, can ye be
+freed till the time comes."
+
+Then Eva repented what she had done; and she said, "Since I cannot
+afford you any other relief, I will allow you to keep your own Gaelic
+speech; and ye shall be able to sing sweet, plaintive, fairy music,
+which shall excel all the music of the world, and which shall lull to
+sleep all that listen to it. Moreover, ye shall retain your human
+reason; and ye shall not be in grief on account of being in the shape of
+swans."
+
+And she chanted this lay--
+
+ Depart from me, ye graceful swans;
+ The waters are now your home:
+ Your palace shall be the pearly cave,
+ Your couch the crest of the crystal wave,
+ And your mantle the milk-white foam!
+
+ Depart from me, ye snow-white swans
+ With your music and Gaelic speech:
+ The crystal Darvra, the wintry Moyle,
+ The billowy margin of Glora's isle;--
+ Three hundred years on each!
+
+ Victorious Lir, your hapless sire,
+ His lov'd ones in vain shall call;
+ His weary heart is a husk of gore,
+ His home is joyless for evermore,
+ And his anger on me shall fall!
+
+ Through circling ages of gloom and fear
+ Your anguish no tongue can tell;
+ Till Faith shall shed her heavenly rays,
+ Till ye hear the Taillkenn's anthem of praise,
+ And the voice of the Christian bell!
+
+Then ordering her steeds to be yoked to her chariot she departed
+westwards, leaving the four white swans swimming on the lake.
+
+ Our father shall watch and weep in vain;
+ He never shall see us return again.
+ Four pretty children, happy at home;
+ Four white swans on the feathery foam;
+ And we live on the waters for evermore,
+ By tempests driven from shore to shore.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XIII.] The word "fratricide" is the nearest English equivalent to the
+original word, _fionghal_, which means the murder of a relative.
+
+[XIV.] Lake Darvra, now Lough Derravaragh, in Westmeath.
+
+[XV.] The sea between Erin and Alban (Ireland and Scotland) was
+anciently called the Sea of Moyle, from the Moyle, or Mull, of Cantire.
+
+[XVI.] Irros Domnann; Erris, in the county Mayo. Inis Glora; a small
+island about five miles west from Belmullet, in the same county, still
+known by the same name.
+
+[XVII.] Taillkenn, a name given by the druids to St. Patrick.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON LAKE DARVRA.
+
+
+When Eva arrived at the house of Bove Derg, the chiefs bade her welcome;
+and the king asked her why she had not brought the Children of Lir to
+him.
+
+"Because," she replied, "Lir no longer loves thee; and he does not wish
+to intrust his children to thee, lest thou shouldst harm them."
+
+The king was greatly astonished and troubled at this, and he said, "How
+can that be? For I love those children better than I love my own."
+
+But he thought in his own mind that Eva had played some treachery on
+them. And he sent messengers with all speed northwards to Shee Finnaha,
+to inquire for the children, and to ask that they might be sent to him.
+
+When the messengers had told their errand, Lir was startled; and he
+asked, "Have the children not reached the palace with Eva?"
+
+They answered, "Eva arrived alone, and she told the king that you
+refused to let the children come."
+
+A sad and sorrowful heart had Lir when he heard this; and he now felt
+sure that Eva had destroyed his four lovely children. So, early next
+morning, his chariot was yoked for him, and he set out with his
+attendants for the king's palace; and they travelled with all speed till
+they arrived at the shore of Lake Darvra.
+
+The children of Lir saw the cavalcade approaching; and Finola spoke
+these words--
+
+ I see a mystic warrior band
+ From yonder brow approach the strand;
+ I see them winding down the vale,
+ Their bending chariots slow advancing;
+ I see their shields and gilded mail,
+ Their spears and helmets brightly glancing.
+
+ Ah! well I know that proud array;
+ I know too well their thoughts to-day:
+ The Dannan host and royal Lir;
+ Four rosy children they are seeking:
+ Too soon, alas! they find us here,
+ Four snowy swans like children speaking!
+
+ Come, brothers dear, approach the coast,
+ To welcome Lir's mysterious host.
+ Oh, woful welcome! woful day,
+ That never brings a bright to-morrow!
+ Unhappy father, doomed for aye
+ To mourn our fate in hopeless sorrow!
+
+When Lir came to the shore, he heard the birds speaking, and, wondering
+greatly, he asked them how it came to pass that they had human voices.
+
+"Know, O Lir," said Finola, "that we are thy four children, who have
+been changed into swans and ruined by the witchcraft of our stepmother,
+our own mother's sister, Eva, through her baleful jealousy."
+
+When Lir and his people heard this, they uttered three long mournful
+cries of grief and lamentation.
+
+After a time, their father asked them, "Is it possible to restore you to
+your own shapes?"
+
+"It is not possible," replied Finola; "no man has the power to release
+us until Largnen from the north and Decca from the south are united.
+Three hundred years we shall be on Lake Darvra; three hundred years on
+the sea-stream of Moyle; three hundred years on the Sea of Glora in the
+west. And we shall not regain our human shape till the Taillkenn come
+with his pure faith into Erin, and until we hear the voice of the
+Christian bell."
+
+And again the people raised three great cries of sorrow.
+
+"As you have your speech and your reason," said Lir, "come now to land,
+and ye shall live at home, conversing with me and my people."
+
+"We are not permitted to leave the waters of the lake, and we cannot
+live with our people any more. But the wicked Eva has allowed us to
+retain our human reason, and our own Gaelic speech; and we have also the
+power to chant plaintive, fairy music, so sweet that those who listen to
+us would never desire any other happiness. Remain with us to-night, and
+we will chant our music for you."
+
+Lir and his people remained on the shore of the lake; and the swans sang
+their slow, fairy music, which was so sweet and sad, that the people, as
+they listened, fell into a calm, gentle sleep.
+
+At the glimmer of dawn next morning, Lir arose, and he bade farewell to
+his children for a while, to seek out Eva.
+
+ The time has come for me to part:--
+ No more, alas! my children dear,
+ Your rosy smiles shall glad my heart,
+ Or light the gloomy home of Lir.
+
+ Dark was the day when first I brought
+ This Eva in my home to dwell!
+ Hard was the woman's heart that wrought
+ This cruel and malignant spell!
+
+ I lay me down to rest in vain;
+ For, through the livelong, sleepless night,
+ My little lov'd ones, pictured plain,
+ Stand ever there before my sight.
+
+ Finola, once my pride and joy;
+ Dark Aed, adventurous and bold;
+ Bright Ficra, gentle, playful boy;
+ And little Conn, with curls of gold;--
+
+ Struck down on Darvra's reedy shore,
+ By wicked Eva's magic power:
+ Oh, children, children, never more
+ My heart shall know one peaceful hour!
+
+Lir then departed, and travelled south-west till he arrived at the
+king's palace, where he was welcomed; and Bove Derg began to reproach
+him, in presence of Eva, for not bringing the children.
+
+"Alas!" said Lir; "it was not by me that the children were prevented
+from coming. But Eva, your own foster child, the sister of their mother,
+has played treachery on them; and has changed them by her sorcery into
+four white swans on Lake Darvra."
+
+The king was confounded and grieved at this news; and when he looked at
+Eva, he knew by her countenance that what Lir had told him was true; and
+he began to upbraid her in a fierce and angry voice.
+
+"The wicked deed thou hast committed," said he, "will be worse for thee
+than for the children of Lir; for their suffering shall come to an end,
+and they shall be happy at last."
+
+Again he spoke to her more fiercely than before; and he asked her what
+shape of all others, on the earth, or above the earth, or beneath the
+earth, she most abhorred, and into which she most dreaded to be
+transformed.
+
+And she, being forced to answer truly, said, "A demon of the
+air."[XVIII.]
+
+"That is the form you shall take," said Bove Derg; and as he spoke he
+struck her with a druidical magic wand, and turned her into a demon of
+the air. She opened her wings, and flew with a scream upwards and away
+through the clouds; and she is still a demon of the air, and she shall
+be a demon of the air till the end of time.
+
+Then Bove Derg and the Dedannans assembled on the shore of the lake, and
+encamped there; for they wished to remain with the birds, and to listen
+to their music. The Milesian people[XIX.] came and formed an encampment
+there in like manner; for historians say that no music that was ever
+heard in Erin could be compared with the singing of these swans.
+
+And so the swans passed their time. During the day they conversed with
+the men of Erin, both Dedannans and Milesians, and discoursed lovingly
+with their friends and fellow nurselings; and at night they chanted
+their slow, sweet, fairy music, the most delightful that was ever heard
+by men; so that all who listened to it, even those who were in grief, or
+sickness, or pain, forgot their sorrows and their sufferings, and fell
+into a gentle, sweet sleep, from which they awoke bright and happy.
+
+So they continued, the Dedannans and the Milesians, in their
+encampments, and the swans on the lake, for three hundred years.[XX.]
+And at the end of that time, Finola said to her brothers--
+
+"Do you know, my dear brothers, that we have come to the end of our time
+here; and that we have only this one night to spend on Lake Darvra?"
+
+When the three sons of Lir heard this, they were in great distress and
+sorrow; for they were almost as happy on Lake Darvra, surrounded by
+their friends, and conversing with them day by day, as if they had been
+in their father's house in their own natural shapes; whereas they should
+now live on the gloomy and tempestuous Sea of Moyle, far away from all
+human society.
+
+Early next morning, they came to the margin of the lake, to speak to
+their Father and their friends for the last time, and to bid them
+farewell; and Finola chanted this lay--
+
+ I.
+
+ Farewell, farewell, our father dear!
+ The last sad hour has come:
+ Farewell, Bove Derg! farewell to all,
+ Till the dreadful day of doom![XXI.]
+ We go from friends and scenes beloved,
+ To a home of grief and pain;
+ And that day of woe
+ Shall come and go,
+ Before we meet again!
+
+ II.
+
+ We live for ages on stormy Moyle,
+ In loneliness and fear;
+ The kindly words of loving friends
+ We never more shall hear.
+ Four joyous children long ago;
+ Four snow-white swans to-day;
+ And on Moyle's wild sea
+ Our robe shall be
+ The cold and briny spray.
+
+ III.
+
+ Far down on the misty stream of time,
+ When three hundred years are o'er,
+ Three hundred more in storm and cold,
+ By Glora's desolate shore;
+ Till Decca fair is Largnen's spouse;
+ Till north and south unite;
+ Till the hymns are sung,
+ And the bells are rung,
+ At the dawn of the pure faith's light.
+
+ IV.
+
+ Arise, my brothers, from Darvra's wave,
+ On the wings of the southern wind;
+ We leave our father and friends to-day
+ In measureless grief behind.
+ Ah! sad the parting, and sad our flight
+ To Moyle's tempestuous main;
+ For the day of woe
+ Shall come and go,
+ Before we meet again!
+
+The four swans then spread their wings, and rose from the surface of the
+water in sight of all their friends, till they reached a great height in
+the air, then resting, and looking downwards for a moment, they flew
+straight to the north, till they alighted on the Sea of Moyle between
+Erin and Alban.
+
+The men of Erin were grieved at their departure, and they made a law,
+and proclaimed it throughout the land, that no one should kill a swan in
+Erin from that time forth.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XVIII.] demon of the air was held in great abhorrence by the ancient
+Irish.
+
+[XIX.] The Milesian people; the colony who conquered and succeeded the
+Dedannans. (See note 1 at end.)
+
+[XX.] The Dedannans were regarded as gods, and were immortal or
+semi-immortal. (See note 1 at the end.)
+
+[XXI.] It must be remembered that the children of Lir had some obscure
+foreknowledge of the coming of Christianity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE SEA OF MOYLE.
+
+
+As to the children of Lir, miserable was their abode and evil their
+plight on the Sea of Moyle. Their hearts were wrung with sorrow for
+their father and their friends; and when they looked towards the steep,
+rocky, far-stretching coasts, and saw the great, dark wild sea around
+them, they were overwhelmed with fear and despair. They began also to
+suffer from cold and hunger, so that all the hardships they had endured
+on Lake Darvra appeared as nothing compared with their suffering on the
+sea-current of Moyle.
+
+And so they lived, till one night a great tempest fell upon the sea.
+Finola, when she saw the sky filled with black, threatening clouds, thus
+addressed her brothers--
+
+"Beloved brothers, we have made a bad preparation for this night; for it
+is certain that the coming storm will separate us; and now let us
+appoint a place of meeting, or it may happen that we shall never see
+each other again."
+
+And they answered, "Dear sister, you speak truly and wisely; and let us
+fix on Carricknarone, for that is a rock that we are all very well
+acquainted with."
+
+And they appointed Carricknarone as their place of meeting.
+
+Midnight came, and with it came the beginning of the storm. A wild,
+rough wind swept over the dark sea, the lightnings flashed, and the
+great waves rose, and increased their violence and their thunder.
+
+The swans were soon scattered over the waters, so that not one of them
+knew in what direction the others had been driven. During all that night
+they were tossed about by the roaring winds and waves, and it was with
+much difficulty they preserved their lives.
+
+Towards morning the storm abated, and the sea became again calm and
+smooth; and Finola swam to Carricknarone. But she found none of her
+brothers there, neither could she see any trace of them when she looked
+all round from the summit of the rock over the wide face of the sea.
+
+Then she became terrified, for she thought she should never see them
+again; and she began to lament them plaintively in these words--
+
+ The heart-breaking anguish and woe of this life
+ I am able no longer to bear:
+ My wings are benumbed with this pitiless frost;
+ My three little brothers are scattered and lost;
+ And I am left here to despair.
+
+ My three little brothers I never shall see
+ Till the dead shall arise from the tomb:
+ How I sheltered them oft with my wings and my breast,
+ And I soothed their sorrows and lulled them to rest,
+ As the night fell around us in gloom!
+
+ Ah, where are my brothers, and why have I lived,
+ This last worst affliction to know?
+ What now is there left but a life of despair?--
+ For alas! I am able no longer to bear
+ This heart-breaking anguish and woe.[XXII.]
+
+Soon after this she looked again over the sea, and she saw Conn coming
+towards the rock, with his head drooping, and his feathers all drenched
+with the salt spray; and she welcomed him with joyful heart.
+
+Not long after, Ficra appeared, but he was so faint with wet and cold
+and hardship, that he was scarce able to reach the place where Finola
+and Conn were standing; and when they spoke to him he could not speak
+one word in return. So Finola placed the two under her wings, and she
+said--
+
+"If Aed were here now, all would be happy with us."
+
+In a little time they saw Aed coming towards them, with head erect and
+feathers all dry and radiant and Finola gave him a joyful welcome. She
+then placed him under the feathers of her breast, while Conn and Ficra
+remained under her wings; and she said to them--
+
+"My dear brothers, though ye may think this night very bad, we shall
+have many like it from this time forth."
+
+So they continued for a long time on the Sea of Moyle, suffering
+hardships of every kind, till one winter night came upon them, of great
+wind and of snow and frost so severe, that nothing they ever before
+suffered could be compared to the misery of that night. And Finola
+uttered these words--
+
+ Our life is a life of woe;
+ No shelter or rest we find:
+ How bitterly drives the snow;
+ How cold is this wintry wind!
+
+ From the icy spray of the sea,
+ From the wind of the bleak north east,
+ I shelter my brothers three,
+ Under my wings and breast.
+
+ Our stepmother sent us here,
+ And misery well we know:--
+ In cold and hunger and fear;
+ Our life is a life of woe!
+
+Another year passed away on the Sea of Moyle; and one night in January,
+a dreadful frost came down on the earth and sea, so that the waters were
+frozen into a solid floor of ice all round them. The swans remained on
+Carricknarone all night, and their feet and their wings were frozen to
+the icy surface, so that they had to strive hard to move from their
+places in the morning; and they left the skin of their feet, the quills
+of their wings, and the feathers of their breasts clinging to the rock.
+
+"Sad is our condition this night, my beloved brothers," said Finola,
+"for we are forbidden to leave the Sea of Moyle; and yet we cannot bear
+the salt water, for when it enters our wounds, I fear we shall die of
+pain."
+
+And she spoke this lay--
+
+ Our fate is mournful here to-day;
+ Our bodies bare and chill,
+ Drenched by the bitter, briny spray,
+ And torn on this rocky hill!
+
+ Cruel our stepmother's jealous heart
+ That banished us from home;
+ Transformed to swans by magic art,
+ To swim the ocean foam.
+
+ This bleak and snowy winter day,
+ Our bath is the ocean wide;
+ In thirsty summer's burning ray,
+ Our drink the briny tide.
+
+ And here 'mid rugged rocks we dwell,
+ In this tempestuous bay;
+ Four children bound by magic spell;--
+ Our fate is sad to-day!
+
+They were, however, forced to swim out on the stream of Moyle, all
+wounded and torn as they were; for though the brine was sharp and
+bitter, they were not able to avoid it. They stayed as near the coast as
+they could, till after a long time the feathers of their breasts and
+wings grew again, and their wounds were healed.
+
+After this they lived on for a great number of years, sometimes visiting
+the shores of Erin, and sometimes the headlands of Alban. But they
+always returned to the sea-stream of Moyle, for it was destined to be
+their home till the end of three hundred years.
+
+One day they came to the mouth of the Bann, on the north coast of Erin,
+and looking inland, they saw a stately troop of horsemen approaching
+directly from the south-west. They were mounted on white steeds, and
+clad in bright-coloured garments, and as they wound towards the shore
+their arms glittered in the sun.
+
+"Do ye know yonder cavalcade?" said Finola to her brothers.
+
+"We know them not," they replied; "but it is likely they are a party of
+the Milesians, or perchance a troop of our own people, the Dedannans."
+
+They swam towards the shore, to find out who the strangers were; and the
+cavalcade on their part, when they saw the swans, knew them at once, and
+moved towards them till they were within speaking distance.
+
+Now these were a party of the Dedannans; and the chiefs who commanded
+them were the two sons of Bove Derg, the Dedannan king, namely, Aed the
+Keen-witted, and Fergus the Chess-player, with a third part of the Fairy
+Host.[XXIII.] They had been for a long time searching for the children
+of Lir along the northern shores of Erin, and now that they had found
+them, they were joyful; and they and the swans greeted each other with
+tender expressions of friendship and love. The children of Lir inquired
+after the Dedannans, and particularly after their father Lir, and Bove
+Derg, and all the rest of their friends and acquaintances.
+
+"They are all well," replied the chiefs; "and they and the Dedannans in
+general are now gathered together in the house of your father, at Shee
+Finnaha, celebrating the Feast of Age,[2] pleasantly and agreeably.
+Their happiness would indeed be complete, only that you are not with
+them, and that they know not where you have been since you left Lake
+Darvra."
+
+"Miserable has been our life since that day," said Finola; "and no
+tongue can tell the suffering and sorrow we have endured on the Sea of
+Moyle."
+
+And she chanted these words--
+
+ Ah, happy is Lir's bright home to-day,
+ With mead and music and poet's lay:
+ But gloomy and cold his children's home,
+ For ever tossed on the briny foam.
+
+ Our wreathed feathers are thin and light
+ When the wind blows keen through the wintry night:
+ Yet oft we were robed, long, long ago,
+ In purple mantles and furs of snow.
+
+ On Moyle's bleak current our food and wine
+ Are sandy sea-weed and bitter brine:
+ Yet oft we feasted in days of old,
+ And hazel-mead drank from cups of gold.
+
+ Our beds are rocks in the dripping caves;
+ Our lullaby song the roar of the waves:
+ But soft rich couches once we pressed,
+ And harpers lulled us each night to rest.
+
+ Lonely we swim on the billowy main,
+ Through frost and snow, through storm and rain:
+ Alas for the days when round us moved
+ The chiefs and princes and friends we loved!
+
+ My little twin brothers beneath my wings
+ Lie close when the north wind bitterly stings,
+ And Aed close nestles before my breast;
+ Thus side by side through the night we rest.
+
+ Our father's fond kisses, Bove Derg's embrace,
+ The light of Mannanan's[1] godlike face,
+ The love of Angus[1]--all, all are o'er;
+ And we live on the billows for evermore!
+
+After this they bade each other farewell, for it was not permitted to
+the children of Lir to remain away from the stream of Moyle. As soon as
+they had parted, the Fairy Cavalcade returned to Shee Finnaha, where
+they related to the Dedannan chiefs all that had passed, and described
+the condition of the children of Lir. And the chiefs answered--
+
+"It is not in our power to help them; but we are glad that they are
+living; and we know that in the end the enchantment will be broken, and
+that they will be freed from their sufferings."
+
+As to the children of Lir, they returned to their home on the Sea of
+Moyle, and there they remained till they had fulfilled their term of
+years.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXII.] Many of these old poems begin and end with the same line or
+couplet.
+
+[XXIII.] Fairy host; _i.e._ the Dedannans. (See note 1 at the end of the
+book.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE FOUR WHITE SWANS ON THE WESTERN SEA.
+
+
+And when their three hundred years were ended, Finola said to her
+brothers--
+
+"It is time for us to leave this place, for our period here has come to
+an end."
+
+ The hour has come; the hour has come;
+ Three hundred years have passed:
+ We leave this bleak and gloomy home,
+ And we fly to the west at last!
+
+ We leave for ever the stream of Moyle;
+ On the clear, cold wind we go;
+ Three hundred years round Glora's isle,
+ Where wintry tempests blow!
+
+ No sheltered home, no place of rest,
+ From the tempest's angry blast:
+ Fly, brothers, fly, to the distant west,
+ For the hour has come at last!
+
+So the swans left the Sea of Moyle, and flew westward, till they reached
+Irros Domnann and the sea round the isle of Glora. There they remained
+for a long time, suffering much from storm and cold, and in nothing
+better off than they were on the Sea of Moyle.
+
+It chanced that a young man named Ebric, of good family, the owner of a
+tract of land lying along the shore, observed the birds and heard their
+singing. He took great delight in listening to their plaintive music,
+and he walked down to the shore almost every day, to see them and to
+converse with them; so that he came to love them very much, and they
+also loved him. This young man told his neighbours about the speaking
+swans, so that the matter became noised abroad; and it was he who
+arranged the story, after hearing it from themselves, and related it as
+it is related here.
+
+Again their hardships were renewed, and to describe what they suffered
+on the great open Western Sea would be only to tell over again the story
+of their life on the Moyle. But one particular night came, of frost so
+hard that the whole face of the sea, from Irros Domnann to Achill, was
+frozen into a thick floor of ice; and the snow was driven by a
+north-west wind. On that night it seemed to the three brothers that they
+could not bear their sufferings any longer, and they began to utter loud
+and pitiful complaints. Finola tried to console them, but she was not
+able to do so, for they only lamented the more; and then she herself
+began to lament with the others.
+
+After a time, Finola spoke to them and said, "My dear brothers, believe
+in the great and splendid God of truth, who made the earth with its
+fruits, and the sea with its wonders; put your trust in Him, and He will
+send you help and comfort."
+
+"We believe in Him," said they.
+
+"And I also," said Finola, "believe in God, who is perfect in
+everything, and who knows all things."
+
+And at the destined hour they all believed, and the Lord of heaven sent
+them help and protection; so that neither cold nor tempest molested them
+from that time forth, as long as they abode on the Western Sea.
+
+So they continued at the point of Irros Domnann, till they had fulfilled
+their appointed time there. And Finola addressed the sons of Lir--
+
+"My dear brothers, the end of our time here has come; we shall now go to
+visit our father and our people."
+
+And her brothers were glad when they heard this.
+
+Then they rose lightly from the face of the sea, and flew eastward with
+joyful hopes, till they reached Shee Finnaha. But when they alighted
+they found the place deserted and solitary, its halls all ruined and
+overgrown with rank grass and forests of nettles; no houses, no fire, no
+mark of human habitation.
+
+Then the four swans drew close together, and they uttered three loud
+mournful cries of sorrow.
+
+And Finola chanted this lay--
+
+ What meaneth this sad, this fearful change,
+ That withers my heart with woe?
+ The house of my father all joyless and lone,
+ Its halls and its gardens with weeds overgrown,--
+ A dreadful and strange overthrow!
+
+ No conquering heroes, no hounds for the chase,
+ No shields in array on its walls,
+ No bright silver goblets, no gay cavalcades,
+ No youthful assemblies or high-born maids,
+ To brighten its desolate halls!
+
+ An omen of sadness--the home of our youth
+ All ruined, deserted, and bare.
+ Alas for the chieftain, the gentle and brave;
+ His glories and sorrows are stilled in the grave,
+ And we left to live in despair!
+
+ From ocean to ocean, from age unto age,
+ We have lived to the fulness of time;
+ Through a life such as men never heard of we've passed,
+ In suffering and sorrow our doom has been cast,
+ By our stepmother's pitiless crime!
+
+The children of Lir remained that night in the ruins of the palace--the
+home of their forefathers, where they themselves had been nursed; and
+several times during the night they chanted their sad, sweet, fairy
+music.
+
+Early next morning they left Shee Finnaha, and flew west to Inis Glora,
+where they alighted on a small lake. There they began to sing so sweetly
+that all the birds of the district gathered in flocks round them on the
+lake, and on its shore, to listen to them; so that the little lake came
+to be called the Lake of the Bird-flocks.
+
+During the day the birds used to fly to distant points of the coast to
+feed, now to Iniskea of the lonely crane,[XXIV.] now to Achill, and
+sometimes southwards to Donn's Sea Rocks,[XXV.] and to many other
+islands and headlands along the shore of the Western Sea, but they
+returned to Inis Glora every night.
+
+They lived in this manner till holy Patrick came to Erin with the pure
+faith; and until Saint Kemoc came to Inis Glora.
+
+The first night Kemoc came to the island, the children of Lir heard his
+bell at early matin time, ringing faintly in the distance. And they
+trembled greatly, and started, and ran wildly about; for the sound of
+the bell was strange and dreadful to them, and its tones filled them
+with great fear. The three brothers were more affrighted than Finola, so
+that she was left quite alone; but after a time they came to her, and
+she asked them--
+
+"Do you know, my brothers, what sound is this?"
+
+And they answered, "We have heard a faint, fearful voice, but we know
+not what it is."
+
+"This is the voice of the Christian bell," said Finola; "and now the end
+of our suffering is near; for this bell is the signal that we shall soon
+be freed from our spell, and released from our life of suffering; for
+God has willed it."
+
+And she chanted this lay--
+
+ Listen, ye swans, to the voice of the bell,
+ The sweet bell we've dreamed of for many a year;
+ Its tones floating by on the night breezes, tell
+ That the end of our long life of sorrow is near!
+
+ Listen, ye swans, to the heavenly strain;
+ 'Tis the anchoret tolling his soft matin bell:
+ He has come to release us from sorrow, from pain,
+ From the cold and tempestuous shores where we dwell!
+
+ Trust in the glorious Lord of the sky;
+ He will free us from Eva's druidical spell:
+ Be thankful and glad, for our freedom is nigh,
+ And listen with joy to the voice of the bell!
+
+Then her brothers became calm; and the four swans remained listening to
+the music of the bell, till the cleric had finished his matins.
+
+"Let us sing our music now," said Finola.
+
+And they chanted a low, sweet, plaintive strain of fairy music, to
+praise and thank the great high King of heaven and earth.
+
+Kemoc heard the music from where he stood; and he listened with great
+astonishment. But after a time it was revealed to him that it was the
+children of Lir who sang that music; and he was glad, for it was to seek
+them he had come.
+
+When morning dawned he came to the shore of the lake, and he saw the
+four white swans swimming on the water. He spoke to them, and asked them
+were they the children of Lir.
+
+They replied, "We are indeed the children of Lir, who were changed long
+ago into swans by our wicked stepmother."
+
+"I give God thanks that I have found you," said Kemoc; "for it is on
+your account I have come to this little island in preference to all the
+other islands of Erin. Come ye now to land, and trust in me; for it is
+in this place that you are destined to be freed from your enchantment."
+
+So they, filled with joy on hearing the words of the cleric, came to the
+shore, and placed themselves under his care. He brought them to his own
+house, and, sending for a skilful workman, he caused him to make two
+bright, slender chains of silver; and he put a chain between Finola and
+Aed, and the other chain he put between Ficra and Conn.
+
+So they lived with him, listening to his instructions day by day, and
+joining in his devotions. They were the delight and joy of the cleric,
+and he loved them with his whole heart; and the swans were so happy that
+the memory of all the misery they had suffered during their long life on
+the waters caused them neither distress nor sorrow now.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIV.] Iniskea; a little rocky island near the coast of Erris, in Mayo.
+"The lonely crane of Iniskea" was one of the "Wonders of Ireland."
+According to an ancient legend, which still lives among the peasantry of
+Mayo, a crane--one lonely bird--has lived on the island since the
+beginning of the world, and will live there till the day of judgment.
+
+[XXV.] Donn's Sea Rocks--called in the text _Teach-Dhuinn_, or Donn's
+House, which is also the present Irish name; a group of three rocks off
+Kenmare Bay, where Donn, one of the Milesian brothers, was drowned.
+These remarkable rocks are now called in English the "Bull, Cow, and
+Calf."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE CHILDREN OF LIR REGAIN THEIR HUMAN SHAPE AND DIE.
+
+
+The king who ruled over Connaught at this time was Largnen, the son of
+Colman; and his queen was Decca, the daughter of Finnin,[XXVI.] king of
+Munster,--the same king and queen whom Eva had spoken of in her prophecy
+long ages before.
+
+Now word was brought to queen Decca regarding these wonderful speaking
+swans, and their whole history was related to her; so that even before
+she saw them, she could not help loving them, and she was seized with a
+strong desire to have them herself. So she went to the king, and
+besought him that he would go to Kemoc and get her the swans. But
+Largnen said that he did not wish to ask them from Kemoc. Whereupon
+Decca grew indignant; and she declared that she would not sleep another
+night in the palace till he had obtained the swans for her. So she left
+the palace that very hour, and fled southwards towards her father's
+home.
+
+Largnen, when he found she had gone, sent in haste after her, with word
+that he would try to procure the swans; but the messengers did not
+overtake her till she had reached Killaloe. However, she returned with
+them to the palace; and as soon as she had arrived, the king sent to
+Kemoc to request that he would send the birds to the queen; but Kemoc
+refused to give them.
+
+Largnen became very angry at this; and he set out at once for the
+cleric's house. As soon as he had come, he asked the cleric whether it
+was true that he had refused to give the swans to the queen. And when
+Kemoc answered that it was quite true, the king, being very wroth, went
+up to where the swans stood, and seizing the two silver chains, one in
+each hand, he drew the birds from the altar, and turned towards the door
+of the church, intending to bring them by force to the queen; while
+Kemoc followed him, much alarmed lest they should be injured.
+
+The king had proceeded only a little way, when suddenly the white
+feathery robes faded and disappeared; and the swans regained their human
+shape, Finola being transformed into an extremely old woman, and the
+three sons into three feeble old men, white-haired and bony and
+wrinkled.
+
+When the king saw this, he started with affright, and instantly left the
+place without speaking one word; while Kemoc reproached and denounced
+him very bitterly.
+
+As to the children of Lir, they turned towards Kemoc; and Finola spoke--
+
+"Come, holy cleric, and baptise us without delay, for our death is near.
+You will grieve after us, O Kemoc; but in truth you are not more
+sorrowful at parting from us than we are at parting from you. Make our
+grave here and bury us together; and as I often sheltered my brothers
+when we were swans, so let us be placed in the grave--Conn standing near
+me at my right side, Ficra at my left, and Aed before my face."[XXVII.]
+
+ Come, holy priest, with book and prayer;
+ Baptise and shrive us here:
+ Haste, cleric, haste, for the hour has come,
+ And death at last is near!
+
+ Dig our grave--a deep, deep grave,
+ Near the church we loved so well;
+ This little church, where first we heard
+ The voice of the Christian bell.
+
+ As oft in life my brothers dear
+ Were sooth'd by me to rest--
+ Ficra and Conn beneath my wings,
+ And Aed before my breast;
+
+ So place the two on either hand--
+ Close, like the love that bound me;
+ Place Aed as close before my face,
+ And twine their arms around me.
+
+ Thus shall we rest for evermore,
+ My brothers dear and I:
+ Haste, cleric, haste, baptise and shrive,
+ For death at last is nigh!
+
+Then the children of Lir were baptised, and they died immediately. And
+when they died, Kemoc looked up; and lo, he saw a vision of four lovely
+children, with light, silvery wings, and faces all radiant with joy.
+They gazed on him for a moment; but even as they gazed, they vanished
+upwards, and he saw them no more. And he was filled with gladness, for
+he knew they had gone to heaven; but when he looked down on the four
+bodies lying before him, he became sad and wept.
+
+And Kemoc caused a wide grave to be dug near the little church; and the
+children of Lir were buried together, as Finola had directed--Conn at
+her right hand, Ficra at her left, and Aed standing before her face. And
+he raised a grave-mound over them, placing a tombstone on it, with
+their names graved in Ogam;[XXVIII.] after which he uttered a lament for
+them, and their funeral rites were performed.
+
+
+So far we have related the sorrowful story of the Fate of the Children
+of Lir.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXVI.] These are well-known historical personages, who flourished in
+the seventh century.
+
+[XXVII.] Among the ancient Celtic nations, the dead were often buried
+standing up in the grave. It was in this way Finola and her brothers
+were buried.
+
+[XXVIII.] Ogam, a sort of writing, often used on sepulchral stones to
+mark the names of the persons buried.
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE CHILDREN OF TURENN;
+
+OR,
+
+_THE QUEST FOR THE ERIC-FINE._
+
+ For the blood that we spilled,
+ For the hero we killed,
+ Toil and woe, toil and woe, till the doom is fulfilled!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE LOCHLANNS INVADE ERIN.
+
+
+When the Dedannans[1] held sway in Erin, a prosperous free-born king
+ruled over them, whose name was Nuada of the Silver Hand.[4]
+
+In the time of this king, the Fomorians,[5] from Lochlann,[6] in the
+north, oppressed the Dedannans, and forced them to pay heavy tributes;
+namely, a tax on kneading-troughs, a tax on querns, and a tax on baking
+flags; and besides all this, an ounce of gold for each man of the
+Dedannans. These tributes had to be paid every year at the Hill of
+Usna;[XXIX.] and if any one refused or neglected to pay his part, his
+nose was cut off by the Fomorian tyrants.
+
+At this time a great fair-meeting was held by the king of Ireland, Nuada
+of the Silver Hand, on the Hill of Usna. Not long had the people been
+assembled, when they saw a stately band of warriors, all mounted on
+white steeds, coming towards them from the east; and at their head, high
+in command over all, rode a young champion, tall and comely, with a
+countenance as bright and glorious as the setting sun.
+
+This young warrior was Luga of the Long Arms.[7] He was accompanied by
+his foster brothers, namely, the sons of Mannanan Mac Lir; and the troop
+he led was the Fairy Host from the Land of Promise.[8]
+
+Now in this manner was he arrayed. He rode the steed of Mannanan Mac
+Lir,[8] namely, Enbarr of the Flowing Mane: no warrior was ever killed
+on the back of this steed, for she was as swift as the clear, cold wind
+of spring, and she travelled with equal ease on land and on sea. He wore
+Mannanan's coat of mail: no one could be wounded through it, or above
+it, or below it. He had on his breast Mannanan's breast-plate, which no
+weapon could pierce. His helmet had two glittering precious stones set
+in front, and one behind; and whenever he took it off, his face shone
+like the sun on a dry day in summer. Mannanan's sword, The Answerer,
+hung at his left side: no one ever recovered from its wound; and those
+who were opposed to it in the battle-field were so terrified by looking
+at it, that their strength left them till they became weaker than a
+woman in deadly sickness.
+
+This troop came forward to where the king of Erin sat surrounded by the
+Dedannans, and both parties exchanged friendly greetings.
+
+A short time after this they saw another company approaching, quite
+unlike the first, for they were grim and fierce and surly looking;
+namely, the tax-gatherers of the Fomorians, to the number of nine nines,
+who were coming to demand their yearly tribute from the men of Erin.
+When they reached the place where the king sat, the entire assembly--the
+king himself among the rest--rose up before them. For the whole Dedannan
+race stood in great dread of these Fomorian tax-collectors; so much so
+that no man dared even to chastise his own son without first seeking
+their consent.
+
+Then Luga of the Long Arms spoke to the king and said, "Why have ye
+stood up before this hateful-looking company, when ye did not stand up
+for us?"
+
+"We durst not do otherwise," replied the king; "for if even an infant of
+a month old remained seated before them, they would deem it cause enough
+for killing us all."
+
+When Luga heard this he brooded in silence for a little while, and then
+he said, "Of a truth, I feel a great desire to kill all these men!"
+
+Then he mused again, and after a time, said, "I am strongly urged to
+kill these men!"
+
+"That deed would doubtless bring great evil on us," said the king, "for
+then the Fomorians would be sure to send an army to destroy us all."
+
+But Luga, after another pause, started up, exclaiming, "Long have ye
+been oppressed in this manner!" and so saying, he attacked the
+Fomorians, dealing red slaughter among them. Neither did he hold his
+hand till he had slain them all except nine. These he spared, because
+they ran with all speed and sat nigh the king, that he might protect
+them from Luga's wrath.
+
+Then Luga put his sword back into its scabbard, and said, "I would slay
+you also, only that I wish you to go and tell your king, and the
+foreigners in general, what you have seen."
+
+These nine men accordingly returned to their own country, and they told
+their tale to the Fomorian people from beginning to end--how the
+strange, noble-faced youth had slain all the tax-collectors except nine,
+whom he spared that they might bring home the story.
+
+When they had ended speaking, the king, Balor[9] of the Mighty Blows and
+of the Evil Eye, asked the chiefs, "Do ye know who this youth is?"
+
+And when they answered, "No," Kethlenda,[9] Balor's queen, said--
+
+"I know well who the youth is: he is the Ildana,[XXX.] Luga of the Long
+Arms, the son of your daughter and mine; and it has been long foretold
+that when he should appear in Erin, our sway over the Dedannans should
+come to an end."
+
+Then the chief people of the Fomorians held council; namely, Balor of
+the Mighty Blows, and his twelve sons, and his queen Kethlenda of the
+Crooked Teeth; Ebb and Sencab, the grandsons of Neid; Sotal of the Large
+Heels; Luath the Long-bodied; Luath the Story-teller; Tinna the Mighty,
+of Triscadal; Loskenn of the Bare Knees; Lobas, the druid; besides the
+nine prophetic poets and philosophers of the Fomorians.
+
+After they had debated the matter for some time, Bres, the son of Balor,
+arose and said, "I will go to Erin with seven great battalions of the
+Fomorian army, and I will give battle to the Ildana, and I will bring
+his head to you to our palace of Berva."[6]
+
+The Fomorian chiefs thought well of this proposal, and it was agreed to.
+
+So the ships were got ready for Bres; abundant food and drink and war
+stores were put into them, their seams were calked with pitch, and they
+were filled with sweet-smelling frankincense. Meantime the two Luaths,
+that is to say, Luath the Story-teller and Luath of the Long Body, were
+sent all over Lochlann to summon the army. And when all the fighting men
+were gathered together, they arrayed themselves in their battle-dresses,
+prepared their arms, and set out for Erin.
+
+Balor went with them to the harbour where they were to embark, and when
+they were about to go on board, he said to them--
+
+"Give battle to the Ildana, and cut off his head. And after ye have
+overcome him and his people, put your cables round this island of Erin,
+which gives us so much trouble, and tie it at the sterns of your ships:
+then sail home, bringing the island with you, and place it on the north
+side of Lochlann, whither none of the Dedannans will ever follow it."
+
+Then, having hoisted their many-coloured sails and loosed their
+moorings, they sailed forth from the harbour into the great sea, and
+never slackened speed or turned aside from their course till they
+reached the harbour of Eas-Dara.[XXXI.] And as soon as they landed, they
+sent forth an army through West Connaught, which wasted and spoiled the
+whole province.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXIX.] The Hill of Usna, in the parish of Conry, in Westmeath, one of
+the royal residences of Ireland.
+
+[XXX.] Luga of the Long Arms is often called The Ildana, _i.e._ the Man
+of many sciences, to signify his various accomplishments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE MURDER OF KIAN.
+
+
+Now the king of Connaught at that time was Bove Derg, the son of the
+Dagda,[XXXII.] a friend to Luga of the Long Arms. It chanced that Luga
+was then at Tara,[XXXIII.] and news was brought to him that the
+Fomorians had landed at Eas-Dara, and were spoiling and wasting the
+province. He immediately got ready his steed, Enbarr of the Flowing
+Mane; and early in the morning, when the point of night met the day, he
+went to the king and told him that the foreigners had landed, and that
+they had wasted and plundered the province of Bove Derg.
+
+"I shall give them battle," said Luga; "and I wish to get from thee some
+help of men and arms."
+
+"I will give no help," said the king; "for I do not wish to avenge a
+deed that has not been done against myself."
+
+When Luga heard this reply he was wroth, and departing straightway from
+Tara, he rode westward. He had not travelled long when he saw at a
+distance three warriors, fully armed, riding towards him. Now these were
+three brothers, the sons of Canta; namely, Kian and Cu and Kethen; and
+Kian was Luga's father. And they saluted each other, and conversed
+together for a time.
+
+"Why art thou abroad so early?" said they.
+
+"Cause enough have I," replied Luga; "for the Fomorians have landed in
+Erin, and have wasted the province of Bove Derg, the son of the Dagda.
+It is well indeed that I have met you, for I am about to give them
+battle, and I wish now to know what aid I shall get from you."
+
+"We will go into the battle with you," said they; "and each of us will
+ward off from you a hundred of the Fomorian warriors."
+
+"That, indeed, is good help," said Luga; "but, for the present, I wish
+you to go to the several places throughout Erin where the Fairy
+Host[XXXIV.] are abiding, and summon them all to me."
+
+The three brothers accordingly separated, Cu and Kethen going south,
+while Luga's father, Kian, turned his face northwards, and rode on till
+he came to Moy Murthemna.[XXXV.] He had not been long travelling over
+the plain when he saw three warriors, clad in armour and fully armed,
+coming towards him. These were three Dedannan chiefs, the sons of
+Turenn, and their names were Brian, Ur, and Urcar. Now these three and
+the three sons of Canta were at deadly feud with each other, on account
+of an old quarrel, and whenever they met there was sure to be a fight
+for life or death.
+
+As soon as Kian saw these three, he said, "If my two brothers were now
+with me, we should have a brave fight; but as they are not, and as I am
+only one against three, it is better to avoid the combat." So saying, he
+looked round, and seeing near him a herd of swine he struck himself with
+a golden druidical[3] wand, and changed himself into a pig; and he
+quickly joined the herd.
+
+No sooner had he done so than Brian, the eldest of the sons of Turenn,
+said to his brothers, "Tell me, my brothers, do you know what has become
+of the warrior that we saw just now approaching us on the plain?"
+
+"We saw him," said they, "but we know not whither he has gone."
+
+"You deserve great blame," said he, "that you are not more watchful
+while traversing the country during this time of war. Now I know what
+has happened to this warrior; he has changed himself, by a druidical
+spell, into a pig; and he is now among yonder herd. And whoever he may
+be, of this be sure--he is no friend of ours."
+
+"This is an unlucky matter," said they; "for as these pigs belong to one
+of the Dedannans, it would be wrong for us to kill them; and even if we
+should do so, the enchanted pig might escape after all."
+
+"But," answered Brian, "I think I can manage to distinguish any
+druidical beast from a natural one; and if you had attended well to your
+learning, you would be able to do the same."
+
+Saying this, he struck his brothers one after the other with his golden
+druidical wand, and turned them into two fleet, slender, sharp-nosed
+hounds. The moment he had done so they put their noses to the earth,
+and, yelping eagerly, set off towards the herd on the trail of their
+enemy. When they had come near, the druidical pig fell out from the
+herd, and made towards a thick grove that grew hard by; but Brian was
+there before him, and drove his spear through his chest.
+
+The pig screamed and said, "You have done an ill deed to cast your spear
+at me, for you know well who I am."
+
+"Your voice, methinks, is the voice of a man," said Brian; "but I know
+not who you are."
+
+And the pig answered, "I am Kian, the son of Canta; and now I ask you to
+give me quarter."
+
+Ur and Urcar, who had regained their shape and come up, said, "We will
+give you quarter indeed, and we are sorry for what has happened to you."
+
+But Brian, on the other hand, said, "I swear by the gods of the air,
+that if your life returned to you seven times, I would take it from you
+seven times."
+
+"Then," said Kian, "as you will not grant me quarter, allow me first to
+return to my own shape."
+
+"That we will grant you," said Brian; "for I often feel it easier to
+kill a man than to kill a pig."
+
+Kian accordingly took his own shape; and then he said, "You indeed, ye
+sons of Turenn, are now about to slay me; but even so, I have outwitted
+you. For if you had slain me in the shape of a pig, you would have to
+pay only the eric-fine[10] for a pig; whereas, now that I am in my own
+shape, you shall pay the full fine for a man. And there never yet was
+killed, and there never shall be killed, a man for whom a greater fine
+shall be paid, than you will have to pay for me. The weapons with which
+I am slain shall tell the deed to my son; and he will exact the fine
+from you."
+
+"You shall not be slain with the weapons of a warrior," said Brian; and
+so saying, he and his brothers laid aside their arms, and smote him
+fiercely and rudely with the round stones of the earth, till they had
+reduced his body to a disfigured mass; and in this manner they slew him.
+
+They then buried him a man's height in the earth; but the earth, being
+angry at the fratricide,[XXXVI.] refused to receive the body, and cast
+it up on the surface. They buried him a second time, and again the body
+was thrown up from beneath the clay. Six times the sons of Turenn buried
+the body of Kian a man's height in the earth, and six times did the
+earth cast it up, refusing to receive it. But when they had buried him
+the seventh time, the earth refused no longer, and the body remained in
+the grave.
+
+Then the sons of Turenn prepared to go forward after Luga of the Long
+Arms to the battle. But as they were leaving the grave, they thought
+they heard a faint, muffled voice coming up from the ground beneath
+their feet--
+
+ The blood you have spilled,
+ The hero you've killed,
+ Shall follow your steps till your doom be fulfilled!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXI.] Eas-Dara, now Ballysodare, in the county Sligo.
+
+[XXXII.] See page 1.
+
+[XXXIII.] Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the kings of Ireland.
+
+[XXXIV.] Fairy Host, _i.e._ the Dedannans. (See notes 1 and 8 at end.)
+
+[XXXV.] Moy Murthemna, a plain in the county of Louth.
+
+[XXXVI.] Fratricide; Gaelic, _fionghal_, the murder of a relative. (See
+note, page 7.) The sons of Turenn and the sons of Canta appear to have
+been related to each other (see the third stanza of the poem, page 94).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+DEFEAT AND FLIGHT OF THE LOCHLANNS.
+
+
+Now as to Luga. After parting from his father, he journeyed westward
+till he reached Ath-Luan,[XXXVII.] thence to Ros-Coman, and over
+Moy-Lurg to the Curlieu Hills, and to the mountain of Kesh-Corran, till
+he reached the "Great Plain of the Assembly," where the foreigners were
+encamped, with the spoils of Connaught around them.
+
+As he drew nigh to the Fomorian encampment, Bres, the son of Balor,
+arose and said--
+
+"A wonderful thing has come to pass this day; for the sun, it seems to
+me, has risen in the west."
+
+"It would be better that it were so," said the druids,[3] "than that
+matters should be as they are."
+
+"What else can it be, then?" asked Bres.
+
+"The light you see," replied the druids, "is the brightness of the face,
+and the flashing of the weapons of Luga of the Long Arms, our deadly
+enemy, he who slew our tax-gatherers, and who now approaches."
+
+Then Luga came up peacefully and saluted them.
+
+"How does it come to pass that you salute us," said they, "since you
+are, as we know well, our enemy?"
+
+"I have good cause for saluting you," answered Luga; "for only one half
+of my blood is Dedannan; the other half comes from you; for I am the son
+of the daughter of Balor of the Mighty Blows, your king.[7] And now I
+come in peace, to ask you to give back to the men of Connaught all the
+milch cows you have taken from them."
+
+"May ill luck follow thee," said one of the Fomorian leaders, in a voice
+loud and wrathful, "until thou get one of them, either a milch cow or a
+dry cow!"
+
+And the others spoke in a like strain.
+
+Then Luga put a druidical spell upon the plundered cattle; and he sent
+all the milch cows home, each to the door of her owner's house,
+throughout all that part of Connaught that had been plundered. But the
+dry cows he left, so that the Fomorians might be cumbered, and that they
+might not leave their encampment till the Fairy Host should arrive to
+give them battle.
+
+Luga tarried three days and three nights near them, and at the end of
+that time the Fairy Host arrived, and placed themselves under his
+command. They encamped near the Fomorians, and in a little time Bove
+Derg, son of the Dagda, joined them with twenty-nine hundred men.
+
+Then they made ready for the fight. The Ildana put on Mannanan's coat of
+mail and his breast-plate; he took also his helmet, which was called
+Cannbarr, and it glittered in the sun with dazzling brightness; he slung
+his broad, dark-blue shield from his shoulder at one side; his long,
+keen-edged sword hung at his thigh; and lastly, he took his two long,
+heavy-handled spears, which had been tempered in the poisonous blood of
+adders. The other kings and chiefs of the men of Erin arrayed their men
+in battle ranks; hedges of glittering spears rose high above their
+heads; and their shields, placed edge to edge, formed a firm fence
+around them.
+
+Then at the signal they attacked the Fomorians, and the Fomorians, in no
+degree dismayed, answered their onset. At first a cloud of whizzing
+javelins flew from rank to rank across the open space, and as the
+warriors rushed together in closer conflict, their spears were shivered
+in their hands. Then they drew their gold-hilted swords, and fought foot
+to foot and shield to shield, so that a forest of bright flashes rose
+high above their helmets, from the clashing of their keen-tempered
+weapons.
+
+In the midst of the fight, Luga looked round, and seeing at some
+distance, Bres, surrounded by his Fomorian warriors, dealing havoc and
+death among the Dedannans, he rushed through the press of battle, and
+attacked first Bres's guards so fiercely that in a few moments twenty of
+them fell beneath his blows.
+
+Then he struck at Bres himself, who, unable to withstand his furious
+onset, cried aloud--
+
+"Why should we be enemies, since thou art of my kin? Let there be peace
+between us, for nothing can withstand thy blows. Let there be peace, and
+I will undertake to bring my Fomorians to assist thee at Moytura,[11]
+and I will promise never again to come to fight against thee."
+
+And Bres swore by the sun and the moon, by the sea and land, and by all
+the elements,[XXXVIII.] to fulfil his engagement; and on these
+conditions Luga granted him his life.
+
+Then the Fomorians, seeing their chief overcome, dropped their arms, and
+sued for quarter. The Fomorian druids and men of learning next came to
+Luga to ask him to spare their lives; and Luga answered them--
+
+"So far am I from wishing to slay you, that in truth, if you had taken
+the whole Fomorian race under your protection, I would have spared
+them."
+
+And after this, Bres, the son of Balor, returned to his own country with
+his druids, and with those of his army who had escaped from the battle.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXVII.] _Ath-Luan_, now Athlone; _Ros-Coman_, now Roscommon;
+_Moy-Lurg_, a plain in the county Roscommon; Curlieu Hills, a range of
+hills near Boyle, in Roscommon; Kesh-Corran, a well-known mountain in
+Sligo. The "Great Plain of the Assembly" must have been near
+Ballysodare, in Sligo.
+
+[XXXVIII.] A usual form of oath among the ancient Irish. (See, for an
+account of this oath, the author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of
+Places," Series II. chap. XIV.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE ERIC-FINE ON THE SONS OF TURENN FOR THE SLAYING OF KIAN.
+
+
+Towards the close of the day, when the battle was ended, Luga espied two
+of his near friends; and he asked them if they had seen his father,
+Kian, in the fight. And when they answered, "No," Luga said--
+
+"My father is not alive; for if he lived he would surely have come to
+help me in the battle. And now I swear that neither food nor drink will
+I take till I have found out who has slain him, and the manner of his
+death."
+
+Then Luga set out with a small chosen band of the Fairy Host, and he
+halted not till he reached the place where he had parted from his
+father. And from that he travelled on to the plain of Murthemna, where
+Kian had been forced to take the shape of a pig to avoid the sons of
+Turenn, and where they had slain him.
+
+When he had come near to the very spot, he walked some little way before
+his companions, and the stones of the earth spoke beneath his feet, and
+said--
+
+"Here thy father lies, O Luga. Grievous was Kian's strait when he was
+forced to take the shape of a pig on seeing the three sons of Turenn;
+and here they slew him in his own shape!"
+
+ The blood that they spilled,
+ The hero they killed,
+ Shall darken their lives till their doom be fulfilled!
+
+Luga stood for a while silent, pondering on these words. But as his
+companions came up, he told them what had happened; and having pointed
+out the spot from which the voice came, he caused the ground to be dug
+up. There they found the body, and raised it to the surface; and when
+they had examined it, they saw that it was covered all over with gory
+wounds and bruises.
+
+Then Luga spoke after a long silence, "A cruel and merciless death has
+my beloved father suffered at the hands of the sons of Turenn!"
+
+He kissed his father's face three times, and again spoke, grieving, "Ill
+fare the day on which my father was slain! Woful is this deed to me, for
+my eyes see not, my ears hear not, and my heart's pulse has ceased to
+beat, for grief. Why, O ye gods whom I worship, why was I not present
+when this deed was done? Alas! an evil thing has happened, for the
+Dedannans have slain their brother Dedannan. Ill shall they fare of this
+fratricide, for its consequences shall follow them, and long shall the
+crime of brother against brother continue to be committed in Erin!"
+
+And he spoke this speech--
+
+ A dreadful doom my father found
+ On that ill-omened even-tide;
+ And here I mourn beside the mound,
+ Where, whelmed by numbers, Kian died,--
+ This lonely mound of evil fame,
+ That long shall bear the hero's name!
+
+ Alas! an evil deed is done,
+ And long shall Erin rue the day:
+ There shall be strife 'twixt sire and son,
+ And brothers shall their brothers slay;
+ Vengeance shall smite the murderers too,
+ And vengeance all their race pursue!
+
+ The light has faded from mine eyes;
+ My youthful strength and power have fled
+ Weary my heart with ceaseless sighs;
+ Ambition, hope, and joy are dead;
+ And all the world is draped in gloom--
+ The shadow of my father's tomb!
+
+Then they placed the hero again in the grave, and they raised a tomb
+over him with his name graved in Ogam;[XXXIX.] after which his
+lamentation lays were sung, and his funeral games were performed.
+
+When these rites were ended, Luga said to his people, "Go ye now to
+Tara, where the king of Erin sits on his throne with the Dedannans
+around him; but do not make these things known till I myself have told
+them."
+
+So Luga's people went straightway to Tara, as he had bade them; but of
+the murder of Kian they said naught. Luga himself arrived some time
+after, and was received with great honour, being put to sit high over
+the others, at the king's side; for the fame of his mighty deeds at the
+battle of the Assembly Plain had been noised over the whole country, and
+had come to the ears of the king.
+
+After he was seated, he looked round the hall, and saw the sons of
+Turenn in the assembly. Now these three sons of Turenn exceeded all the
+champions in Tara, in comeliness of person, in swiftness of foot, and in
+feats of arms; and, next to Luga himself, they were the best and bravest
+in the battles against the Fomorians; wherefore they were honoured by
+the king beyond most others.
+
+Luga asked the king that the chain of silence[XL.] should be shaken; and
+when it was shaken, and when all were listening in silence, he stood up
+and spoke--
+
+"I perceive, ye nobles of the Dedannan race, that you have given me your
+attention, and now I have a question to put to each man here present:
+What vengeance would you take of the man who should knowingly and of
+design kill your father?"
+
+They were all struck with amazement on hearing this, and the king of
+Erin said--
+
+"What does this mean? For that your father has not been killed, this we
+all know well!"
+
+"My father has indeed been killed," answered Luga; "and I see now here
+in this hall those who slew him. And furthermore, I know the manner in
+which they put him to death, even as they know it themselves."
+
+The sons of Turenn, hearing all this, said nothing; but the king spoke
+aloud and said--
+
+"If any man should wilfully slay my father, it is not in one hour or in
+one day I would have him put to death; but I would lop off one of his
+members each day, till I saw him die in torment under my hands!"
+
+All the nobles said the same, and the sons of Turenn in like manner.
+
+"The persons who slew my father are here present, and are joining with
+the rest in this judgment," said Luga; "and as the Dedannans are all now
+here to witness, I claim that the three who have done this evil deed
+shall pay me a fitting eric-fine for my father. Should they refuse, I
+shall not indeed transgress the king's law nor violate his protection;
+but of a certainty they shall not leave this hall of Micorta[XLI.] till
+the matter is settled."
+
+And the king of Erin said, "If I had killed your father, I should be
+well content if you were willing to accept an eric-fine from me."
+
+Now the sons of Turenn spoke among themselves; and Ur and Urcar said,
+"It is of us Luga speaks this speech. He has doubtless found out that we
+slew his father; and it is better that we now acknowledge the deed, for
+it will avail us naught to hide it."
+
+Brian, however, at first set his face against this, saying that he
+feared Luga only wanted an acknowledgment from them in presence of the
+other Dedannans, and that afterwards he might not accept a fine. But the
+other two were earnest in pressing him, so that he consented, and then
+he spoke to Luga--
+
+"It is of us thou speakest all these things, Luga; for it has been said
+that we three have been at enmity with the three sons of Canta. Now, as
+to the slaying of thy father Kian, let that matter rest; but we are
+willing to pay an eric-fine for him, even as if we had killed him."
+
+"I shall accept an eric-fine from you," said Luga, "though ye indeed
+fear I shall not. I shall now name before this assembly the fine I ask,
+and if you think it too much, I shall take off a part of it.
+
+"The first part of my eric-fine is three apples; the second part is the
+skin of a pig; the third is a spear; the fourth, two steeds and a
+chariot; the fifth, seven pigs; the sixth, a hound-whelp; the seventh, a
+cooking-spit; and the eighth, three shouts on a hill. That is my eric,"
+said Luga; "and if ye think it too much, say so now, that I may remit a
+part; but if not, then it will be well that ye set about paying it."
+
+"So far," said Brian, "we do not deem it too great. It seems, indeed, so
+small that we fear there is some hidden snare in what you ask, which may
+work us mischief."
+
+"I do not deem my eric too small," said Luga; "and now I engage here,
+before the assembled Dedannans, that I will ask no more, and that I will
+seek no further vengeance for my father's death. But, as I have made
+myself answerable to them for the faithful fulfilment of my promise, I
+demand the same guarantee from you, that you also be faithful to me."
+
+"Alas that you should doubt our plighted word!" said the sons of Turenn.
+"Are we not ourselves sufficient guarantee for the payment of an
+eric-fine greater even than this?"
+
+"I do not deem your word sufficient guarantee," answered Luga; "for
+often have we known great warriors like you to promise a fine before all
+the people, and afterwards to go back of their promise."
+
+And the sons of Turenn consented, though unwillingly, for they grieved
+that their word should be doubted. So they bound themselves on either
+side--Luga not to increase his claims; and the sons of Turenn, on their
+part, to pay him the full fine. And the king of Erin and Bove Derg, son
+of the Dagda, and the nobles of the Dedannans in general, were witnesses
+and sureties of this bond.
+
+Then Luga stood up and said, "It is now time that I give you a full
+knowledge of this eric-fine.
+
+"The three apples I ask are the apples of the Garden of
+Hisberna,[XLII.] in the east of the world, and none others will I have.
+There are no apples in the rest of the world like them, for their beauty
+and for the secret virtues they possess. Their colour is the colour of
+burnished gold; they have the taste of honey; and if a wounded warrior
+or a man in deadly sickness eat of them, he is cured immediately. And
+they are never lessened by being eaten, being as large and perfect at
+the end as at the beginning. Moreover any champion that possesses one of
+them may perform with it whatsoever feat he pleases, by casting it from
+his hand, and the apple will return to him of itself. And though you are
+three brave warriors, ye sons of Turenn, methinks you will not find it
+easy to bring away these apples; for it has been long foretold that
+three young champions from the Island of the West would come to take
+them by force, so that the king has set guards to watch for your coming.
+
+"The pig's skin I seek from you belongs to Tuis, the king of Greece.
+When the pig was alive, every stream of water through which she walked
+was turned into wine for nine days, and all sick and wounded people that
+touched her skin were at once cured, if only the breath of life
+remained. Now the king's druids told him that the virtue lay, not in the
+pig herself, but in her skin; so the king had her killed and skinned,
+and he has her skin now. This, too, ye valiant champions, is a part of
+my eric-fine which you will find it hard to get, either by force or by
+friendship.
+
+"The spear I demand from you is the venomed spear of Pezar, king of
+Persia. Its name is Slaughterer. In time of peace, its blazing, fiery
+head is always kept in a great caldron of water, to prevent it from
+burning down the king's palace; and in time of war, the champion who
+bears it to the battle-field can perform any deed he pleases with it.
+And it will be no easy matter to get this spear from the king of Persia.
+
+"The two steeds and the chariot belong to Dobar, king of Sigar.[XLIII.]
+The chariot exceeds all the chariots in the world for beauty of shape
+and goodliness of workmanship. The two noble steeds have no equal for
+strength and fleetness, and they travel with as much ease on sea as on
+land.
+
+"The seven pigs I demand are the pigs of Asal, the king of the Golden
+Pillars. Whoever eats a part of them shall not suffer from ill health or
+disease; and even though they should be killed and eaten to-day, they
+will be alive and well to-morrow.
+
+"The hound-whelp belongs to the king of Iroda,[XLIV.] and his name is
+Failinis. He shines as brightly as the sun in a summer sky; and every
+wild beast of the forest that sees him falls down to the earth powerless
+before him.
+
+"The cooking-spit belongs to the warlike women of the island of Fincara.
+They are thrice fifty in number, and woe to the champion who approaches
+their house; for each of them is a match for three good warriors in
+single combat; and they never yet gave a cooking-spit to any one without
+being overcome in battle.
+
+"The hill on which I require you to give three shouts is the Hill of
+Midkena, in the north of Lochlann.[6] Midkena and his sons are always
+guarding this hill, for they are under gesa[12] not to allow any one to
+shout on it. Moreover, it was they that instructed my father in
+championship and feats of arms, and they loved him very much; so that
+even if I should forgive you his death they would not. And, though you
+should be able to procure all the rest of the eric-fine, you will not, I
+think, succeed in this, for they will be sure to avenge on you my
+father's death.
+
+"And this, ye sons of Turenn, is the eric-fine I demand from you!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XXXIX.] A kind of writing. (See note, page 36.)
+
+[XL.] Chain of silence; a chain, probably hung with little bells, which
+the lord of a mansion shook when he wished to get silence and attention.
+
+[XLI.] Mic[=o]'rta; the name of the great banqueting hall of Tara, the
+ruins of which are to be seen to this day.
+
+[XLII.] The Garden of the Hesperides.
+
+[XLIII.] Sigar, _i.e._ Sicily.
+
+[XLIV.] Iroda was the name given by the Irish to some country in the far
+north of Europe, probably Norway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE SONS OF TURENN OBTAIN MANNANAN'S CANOE, "THE WAVE-SWEEPER."
+
+
+The sons of Turenn were so astounded on hearing this eric-fine that they
+spoke not one word; but rising up, they left the meeting, and repaired
+to the house of their father Turenn.
+
+He heard their story to the end, and then said, "Your tidings are bad,
+my sons, and I fear me you are doomed to meet your death in seeking what
+the Ildana asks. But the doom is a just one, for it was an evil thing to
+kill Kian. Now as to this eric-fine: it cannot be obtained by any living
+man without the help of either Luga himself or of Mannanan Mac Lir;[8]
+but if Luga wishes to aid you, ye shall be able to get it. Go ye now,
+therefore, and ask him to lend you Mannanan's steed, Enbarr of the
+Flowing Mane. If he wishes you to get the full eric-fine, he will lend
+you the steed; otherwise he will refuse, saying that she does not belong
+to him, and that he cannot lend what he himself has got on loan. Then,
+if ye obtain not the steed, ask him for the loan of Mannanan's canoe,
+the Wave-sweeper, which would be better for you than the steed; and he
+will lend you that, for he is forbidden to refuse a second request."
+
+So the sons of Turenn returned to Luga, and having saluted him, they
+said--
+
+"It is not in the power of any man to obtain this eric-fine without thy
+own aid, O Luga; we ask thee, therefore, to lend us Mannanan's steed,
+Enbarr of the Flowing Mane."
+
+"That steed is not my own," said Luga; "and I cannot lend that which I
+have myself obtained on loan."
+
+"If that be so," said Brian, "then I pray thee lend us Mannanan's canoe,
+the Wave-sweeper."
+
+"I shall lend you that," replied Luga; "it lies at Bruga of the
+Boyne;[XLV.] and ye have my consent to take it."
+
+So they came again to their father, and this time Ethnea, their sister,
+was with him; and they told them that Luga had given them the canoe.
+
+"I have much fear," said Turenn, "that it will avail you little against
+the dangers of your quest. Nevertheless, Luga desires to obtain that
+part of the eric that will be useful to him at the battle of
+Moytura,[11] and so far he will help you. But in seeking that which is
+of no advantage to him, namely, the cooking-spit, and the three shouts
+on Midkena's Hill, therein he will give you no aid, and he will be glad
+if ye perish in your attempts to obtain it."
+
+They then set out for Bruga of the Boyne, accompanied by their sister
+Ethnea, leaving Turenn lamenting after them. The canoe they found lying
+in the river; and Brian went into it and said--
+
+"It seems to me that only one other person can sit here along with me;"
+and he began to complain very bitterly of its smallness. He ceased,
+however, at the bidding of Ethnea, who told him that the canoe would
+turn out large enough when they came to try it, and that it was under
+strict command not to let any one grumble at its smallness. And she went
+on to say--
+
+"Alas, my beloved brothers, it was an evil deed to slay the father of
+Luga of the Long Arms! and I fear you will suffer much woe and hardship
+on account of it."
+
+ ETHNEA.
+
+ The deed was a dark one, a deed full of woe,
+ Your brother Dedannan to slay;
+ And hard and relentless the heart of your foe,
+ The bright-faced Ildana, that forced you to go,
+ This eric of vengeance to pay!
+
+ THE BROTHERS.
+
+ Oh, cease, sister Ethnea, cease thy sad wail;
+ Why yield to this terror and gloom?
+ Long, long shall the poets remember the tale,
+ For our courage and valour and swords shall prevail,
+ Or win us a glorious tomb!
+
+ ETHNEA.
+
+ Then search ye, my brothers, go search land and sea;
+ Go search ye the isles of the East.--
+ Alas, that the cruel Ildana's decree
+ Has banished my three gentle brothers from me,
+ On this fearful and perilous quest!
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLV.] Bruga of the Boyne, the palace of Angus, the great Dedannan
+magician, was situated on the north shore of the Boyne, not far from
+Slane. (See note 1 at end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE APPLES OF THE GARDEN OF HISBERNA.
+
+
+After this the three brothers entered the canoe, which they now found
+large enough to hold themselves and their arms, and whatsoever else they
+wished to bring; for this was one of its secret gifts. They then bade
+their sister farewell, and, leaving her weeping on the shore, they rowed
+swiftly till they had got beyond the beautiful shores and bright
+harbours of Erin, out on the open sea.
+
+Then the two younger brothers said, "Now our quest begins: what course
+shall we take?"
+
+Brian answered, "As the apples are the first part of the fine, we shall
+seek them first."
+
+And then he spoke to the canoe, "Thou canoe of Mannanan, thou Sweeper of
+the waves, we ask thee and we command thee, that thou sail straightway
+to the Garden of Hisberna!"
+
+The canoe was not unmindful of the voice of its master, and obeyed the
+command without delay, according to its wont. It took the shortest way
+across the deep sea-chasms, and, gliding over the green-sided waves more
+swiftly than the clear, cold wind of March, it stayed not in its course
+till it reached the harbour near the land of Hisberna.
+
+Brian now spoke to his brothers, "Be sure that this quest is a perilous
+one, since we know that the best champions of the country, with the king
+at their head, are always guarding the apples. And now in what manner,
+think you, is it best for us to approach the garden?"
+
+"It seems to us," answered his brothers, "that we had better go straight
+and attack these champions, and either bring away the apples, or fall
+fighting for them. For we cannot escape the dangers that lie before us;
+and if we are doomed to fall in one of these adventures, it may,
+perchance, be better for us to die here than to prolong our hardships."
+
+But Brian answered, "Not so, my brothers; for it becomes a warrior to be
+prudent and wary as well as brave. We should now act so that the fame of
+our skill and valour may live after us, and that future men may not say,
+'These sons of Turenn did not deserve to be called brave champions, for
+they were senseless and rash, and sought their own death by their
+folly.' In the present case, then, what I counsel is this: Let us take
+the shape of strong, swift hawks; and as we approach the garden, have ye
+care of the light, sharp lances of the guards, which they will certainly
+hurl at us: avoid them actively and cunningly, and when the men have
+thrown all, let us swoop down and bring away an apple each."
+
+They approved this counsel; and Brian, striking his two brothers and
+himself with a druidical magic wand, all three were changed into three
+beautiful hawks. Then, flying swiftly to the garden, they began to
+descend in circles towards the tops of the trees; but the sharp-eyed
+guards perceived them, and with a great shout they threw showers of
+venomous darts at them. The hawks, however, mindful of Brian's warning,
+watched the spears with keen glances, and escaped them every one, until
+the guards had thrown all their light weapons. Then, swooping suddenly
+down on the trees, the two younger brothers carried off an apple each,
+and Brian two, one between his talons and the other in his beak; and the
+three rose again into the air without wound or hurt of any kind. Then,
+directing their course westward, they flew over the wide sea with the
+speed of an arrow.
+
+The news spread quickly through the city, how three beautiful hawks had
+carried off the apples; and the king and his people were in great wrath.
+Now the king had three daughters, very skilful in magic and cunning in
+counsel; and they forthwith transformed themselves into three
+swift-winged, sharp-taloned griffins, and pursued the hawks over the
+sea. But the hawks, when they saw they were pursued, increased their
+speed, and flew like the wind, and left their pursuers so far behind
+that they appeared to the griffins like three specks on the sky. Then
+the angry griffins let fly from their eyes, and from their open beaks,
+bright flashes of flame straight forward, which overtook and blinded the
+hawks, and scorched them, so that they could bear the heat no longer.
+
+"Evil is our state now," said Ur and Urcar, "for these sheets of flame
+are burning us, and we shall perish if we do not get relief."
+
+"I will try whether I cannot relieve you," said Brian; and with that he
+struck his brothers and himself with his golden druidical wand; and all
+three were instantly turned into swans. The swans dropped down on the
+sea; and when the griffins saw the hawks no longer straight before them,
+they gave up the chase. And the sons of Turenn went safely to their
+canoe, bringing the apples with them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE GIFTED SKIN OF THE PIG.
+
+
+After resting a little while, they held council as to their next
+journey; and what they resolved on was to go to Greece, to seek the skin
+of the pig, and to bring it away, either by consent or by force. So they
+went into the canoe, and Brian spoke--
+
+"Thou canoe of Mannanan, thou Sweeper of the Waves, we ask thee and we
+command thee that thou sail with us straightway to Greece!"
+
+And the canoe, obeying as before, glided swiftly and smoothly over the
+waves, till the sons of Turenn landed near the palace of the king of
+Greece.
+
+"In what shape, think you, should we go to this court?" said Brian.
+
+"We think it best," answered the others, "to go in our own shapes; that
+is to say, as three bold champions."
+
+"Not so," said Brian. "It seems best to me that we should go in the
+guise of learned poets from Erin; for poets are held in much honour and
+respect by the great nobles of Greece."
+
+"It is, indeed, hard for us to do that," answered his brothers, "for as
+to poems, we neither have any, nor do we know how to compose them."
+
+However, as Brian would have it so, they consented, though unwillingly;
+and, tying up their hair after the manner of poets, they knocked at the
+door of the palace. The door-keeper asked who was there.
+
+"We are skilful poets from Erin," said Brian, "and we have come to
+Greece with a poem for the king."
+
+The door-keeper went and gave the message.
+
+"Let them be brought in," said the king, "for it is to seek a good and
+bountiful master whom they may serve faithfully that they have come so
+far from Erin."
+
+The sons of Turenn were accordingly led in to the banquet hall, where
+sat the king surrounded by his nobles; and, bowing low, they saluted
+him; and he saluted them in return, and welcomed them. They sat at the
+table among the company, and joined the feast at once, drinking and
+making merry like the others; and they thought they had never seen a
+banquet hall so grand, or a household so numerous and mirthful.
+
+At the proper time the king's poets arose, according to custom, to
+recite their poems and their lays for the company. And when they had
+come to an end, Brian, speaking low, said to his brothers--
+
+"As we have come here as poets, it is meet that we should practise the
+poetic art like the others; therefore now arise, and recite a poem for
+the king."
+
+"We have no poems," they replied, "and we do not wish to practise any
+art except the art we have learned and practised from our youth, namely,
+to fight like brave champions, and to take by valour and force of arms
+that which we want, if we be stronger than our enemies, or to fall in
+battle if they be the stronger."
+
+"That is not a pleasant way of making poetry," said Brian; and with that
+he arose and requested attention for his poem. And when they sat
+listening, he said--
+
+ To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:
+ Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:
+ Thy bounty, great monarch, shall gladden the bard;
+ And the _Imnocta-fessa_ I claim as reward.
+
+ Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;
+ A bard unrequited--how dreadful a foe!
+ Thy bounty shall add to thy wealth and thy fame;
+ And the _Imnocta-fessa_ is all that I claim.
+
+"Your poem would doubtless be thought a very good one," said the king,
+"if we were able to judge of it; but it is unlike all other poems I have
+ever heard, for I do not in the least understand its sense."
+
+"I will unfold its sense," said Brian.
+
+ To praise thee, O Tuis, we've come to this land:
+ Like an oak among shrubs, over kings thou dost stand:
+
+"This means that as the oak excels all the other trees of the forest, so
+dost thou excel all the other kings of the world for greatness,
+nobility, and generosity.
+
+"'_Imnocta-fessa._' _Imnocta_ means 'skin,' and _fessa_ 'a pig.' That is
+to say; thou hast, O king, the skin of a pig, which I desire to get from
+thee as a guerdon for my poetry.
+
+ Two neighbours shall war, with an O to an O;
+ A bard unrequited--how dreadful a foe!
+
+"_O_ means 'an ear;' that is to say, thou and I shall be ear to ear
+fighting with each other for the skin, if thou give it not of thy own
+free will.
+
+"And that, O king, is the sense of my poem."
+
+"Thy poem would have been a very good one," said the king, "and I would
+have given it due meed of praise if my pig's skin had not been mentioned
+in it. But it is a foolish request of thine, O ferdana,[XLVI.] to ask
+for that skin; for, even though all the poets and men of science of
+Erin, and all the nobles of the whole world were to demand it from me, I
+would refuse it. Nevertheless, thou shalt not pass unrewarded, for I
+will give thee thrice the full of the skin of red gold--one for thyself,
+and one for each of thy brothers."
+
+"Thy ransom is a good one, O king," said Brian; "but I am a near-hearted
+and suspicious man, and I pray thee let me see with my eyes thy servants
+measure the gold, lest they deal unfairly with me."
+
+The king agreed to this; so his servants went with the three sons of
+Turenn to the treasure-room, and one of them drew forth the skin from
+its place, to measure the gold. As soon as Brian caught sight of it, he
+sprang suddenly towards the servant, and, dashing him to the ground with
+his right hand, he snatched the skin with his left, and bound it hastily
+over his shoulders.
+
+Then the three drew their keen swords, and rushed into the banquet hall.
+The king's nobles, seeing how matters stood, surrounded and attacked
+them; but the sons of Turenn, nothing daunted by the number of their
+foes, hewed down the foremost and scattered the rest, so that scarce one
+of the whole party escaped death or deadly wounds.
+
+Then at last Brian and the king met face to face, nor was either slow to
+answer the challenge of the other. They fought as great champions fight,
+and it was long doubtful which should prevail; but the end of the combat
+was, that the king of Greece fell by the overpowering valour of Brian,
+the son of Turenn.
+
+After this victory, the three brothers rested in the palace till they
+had regained their strength, and healed up their wounds by means of the
+apples and the pig's skin; and at the end of three days and three nights
+they found themselves able to undertake the next adventure.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVI.] Ferdana, a poet; literally, "a man of verse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE BLAZING SPEAR OF THE KING OF PERSIA.
+
+
+So, after holding council, they resolved to go to seek the spear of the
+king of Persia; and Brian reminded his brothers that now, as they had
+the apples and the skin to aid them, it would be all the easier to get
+the spear, as well as the rest of the fine.
+
+Leaving now the shores of Greece with all its blue streams, they went on
+board the canoe, which, at Brian's command, flew across the wide seas;
+and soon they made land near the palace of Pezar, king of Persia. And
+seeing how they had fared so well in their last undertaking, they
+resolved to put on the guise of poets this time also.
+
+And so they put the poet's tie on their hair, and, passing through the
+outer gate, they knocked at the door of the palace. The door-keeper
+asked who they were, and from what country they had come.
+
+"We are poets from Erin," answered Brian; "and we have brought a poem
+for the king."
+
+So they were admitted and brought to the presence of the king, who
+seated them among the nobles of his household; and they joined in the
+drinking and the feasting and the revelry.
+
+The king's poets now arose, and chanted their songs for the king and his
+guests. And when the applause had ceased, Brian, speaking softly, said
+to his brothers--
+
+"Arise, now, and chant a poem for the king."
+
+But they answered, "Ask us not to do that which we are unable to do; but
+if you wish us to exercise the art we have learned from our youth, we
+shall do so, namely, the art of fighting and overcoming our foes."
+
+"That would be an unusual way of reciting poetry," said Brian; "but I
+have a poem for the king, and I shall now chant it for him."
+
+So saying, he stood up; and when there was silence, he recited this
+poem--
+
+ In royal state may Pezar ever reign,
+ Like some vast yew tree, monarch of the plain;
+ May Pezar's mystic javelin, long and bright,
+ Bring slaughter to his foes in every fight!
+
+ When Pezar fights and shakes his dreadful spear,
+ Whole armies fly and heroes quake with fear:
+ What shielded foe, what champion can withstand,
+ The blazing spear in mighty Pezar's hand!
+
+"Your poem is a good one," said the king; "but one thing in it I do not
+understand, namely, why you make mention of my spear."
+
+"Because," answered Brian, "I wish to get that spear as a reward for my
+poem."
+
+"That is a very foolish request," said the king, "for no man ever
+escaped punishment who asked me for my spear. And as to your poetry, the
+highest reward I could now bestow on you, and the greatest favour these
+nobles could obtain for you, is that I should spare your life."
+
+Thereupon Brian and his brothers started up in great wrath and drew
+their swords, and the king and his chiefs drew their swords in like
+manner; and they fought a deadly fight. But Brian at last, drawing forth
+one of his apples, and taking sure aim, cast it at the king and struck
+him on the forehead; so that Pezar fell, pierced through the brain.
+
+After this Brian fought on more fiercely than before, dealing
+destruction everywhere around him; but when the chiefs saw that their
+king had fallen, they lost heart and fled through the doors, till at
+length none remained in the banquet hall but the three sons of Turenn.
+
+Then they went to the room where the spear was kept; and they found it
+with its head down deep in a great caldron of water, which hissed and
+bubbled round it. And Brian, seizing it boldly in his hand, drew it
+forth; after which the three brothers left the palace and went to their
+canoe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE CHARIOT AND STEEDS OF THE KING OF SIGAR.
+
+
+Resting now for some days from their toil, they resolved to seek the
+steeds and chariot of the king of Sigar; for this was the next part of
+the Ildana's eric-fine. So they commanded the canoe, and the canoe,
+obedient to their behest, glided swiftly and smoothly over the green
+waves till they landed in Sigar. Brian bore the great, heavy, venomed
+spear in his hand; and the three brothers were of good heart, seeing how
+they had succeeded in their last quest, and that they had now three
+parts of the fine.
+
+"In what shape think you we should go to this court?" said Brian.
+
+"How should we go," answered the others, "but in our own shapes, namely,
+as three hostile champions, who have come to get the chariot and
+steeds, either by force or by good will?"
+
+"That is not what seems best to me," said Brian. "My counsel is, that we
+go as soldiers from Erin, willing to serve for pay; and should the king
+take us into his service, it is likely we shall find out where the
+chariot and steeds are kept."
+
+His brothers having agreed to this, the three set out for the palace.
+
+It happened that the king was holding a fair-meeting on the broad, level
+green before the palace; and when the three warriors came near, the
+people made way for them. They bowed low to the king; and he asked them
+who they were, and from what part of the world they had come.
+
+"We are valiant soldiers from Erin," they answered, "seeking for service
+and pay among the great kings of the world."
+
+"Do you wish to enter my service?" asked the king: and they answered,
+"Yes." So they made a covenant with each other--the king to place them
+in a post of honour and trust, and they to serve him faithfully, and to
+name their own reward. Whereupon the brothers entered the ranks of the
+king's body-guard.
+
+They remained in the palace for a month and a fortnight, looking round
+and carefully noting everything; but they saw nothing of the chariot and
+steeds. At the end of that time Brian said to his brothers--
+
+"It fares ill with us here, my brothers; for we know nothing of the
+chariot and steeds at this hour, more than when we first came hither."
+
+The others said this was quite true, and asked if he meant to do
+anything in the matter.
+
+"This is what I think we should do," answered Brian. "Let us put on our
+travelling array, and take our arms of valour in our hands; and in this
+fashion let us go before the king, and tell him that unless he shows us
+the chariot and steeds, we shall leave his service."
+
+This they did without delay; and when they had come before the king, he
+asked them why they came to his presence so armed and in travelling
+gear.
+
+"We will tell thee of that, O king," answered Brian. "We are valiant
+soldiers from Erin, and into whatsoever lands we have travelled, we have
+been trusted with the secret counsels of the kings who have taken us
+into their service; and we have been made the guardians of their rarest
+jewels and of all their gifted arms of victory. But as to thee, O king,
+thou hast not so treated us since we came hither; for thou hast a
+chariot and two steeds, which exceed all the chariots and steeds in the
+world, and yet we have never seen them."
+
+"A small thing it is that has caused you to prepare for departure," said
+the king; "and there is, moreover, no need that you should leave my
+service; for I would have shown you those steeds the day you came, had I
+only known that you wished it. But ye shall see them now; for I have
+never had in my service soldiers from a distant land, in whom I and my
+people have placed greater trust than we have placed in you."
+
+He then sent for the steeds, and had them yoked to the chariot--those
+steeds that were as fleet as the clear, cold wind of March, and which
+travelled with equal speed on land and on sea.
+
+Brian, viewing them narrowly, said aloud, "Hear me, O king of Sicily. We
+have served thee faithfully up to this time; and now we wish to name our
+own pay, according to the covenant thou hast made with us. The guerdon
+we demand is yonder chariot and steeds; these we mean to have, and we
+shall ask for nothing more."
+
+But the king, in great wrath, said, "Foolish and luckless men! Ye shall
+certainly die because you have dared to ask for my steeds!"
+
+And the king and his warriors drew their swords, and rushed towards the
+sons of Turenn to seize them.
+
+They, on the other hand, were not taken unaware; and a sore fight began.
+And Brian, watching his opportunity, sprang with a sudden bound into the
+chariot, and, dashing the charioteer to the ground, he seized the reins
+in his left hand; then, raising the venomed spear of Pezar in his right,
+he smote the king with its fiery point in the breast, so that he fell
+dead. And the three brothers dealt red slaughter among the king's
+guards, till those who were not slain scattered and fled in all
+directions. So they fared in this undertaking.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE SEVEN PIGS OF THE KING OF THE GOLDEN PILLARS.
+
+
+After resting till their wounds were healed, Ur and Urcar asked where
+they should go next.
+
+"We shall go," said Brian, "to Asal, the king of the Golden Pillars, to
+ask him for his seven pigs; for this is the next part of the Ildana's
+eric-fine."
+
+So they set out; and the canoe brought them straightway to the land of
+the Golden Pillars, without delay and without mishap. As they drew nigh
+to the harbour, they saw the shore lined with men all armed. For the
+fame of the deeds of these great champions had begun to be noised
+through many lands; how they had been forced to leave Erin by the hard
+sentence of the Ildana; and how they were seeking and bearing away the
+most precious and gifted jewels of the world to pay the fine. Wherefore
+the king of the Golden Pillars had armed his people, and had sent them
+to guard the harbours.
+
+The king himself came down to the beach to meet them. As soon as they
+had come within speaking distance, he bade them stay their course; and
+then he asked them, in an angry and chiding tone, if they were the three
+champions from Erin, who had overcome and slain so many kings.
+
+Brian answered, "Be not displeased with us, O king for in all this
+matter we are not to blame. The Ildana has demanded a fine which we
+perforce must pay; for we have promised, and the Dedannans are our
+guarantee. If the kings to whom he sent us had given us peaceably the
+precious things we demanded, we would gladly have departed in peace; but
+as they did not, we fought against them, unwillingly indeed and
+overthrew them; for no one has as yet been able to withstand us."
+
+"Tell me now," said the king, "what has brought you to my country?"
+
+"We have come for thy seven pigs," answered Brian; "for they are a part
+of the fine."
+
+"And in what manner do you think ye shall get them?" asked the king.
+
+Brian answered, "Thou hast heard, O king, how the Ildana has brought us
+to these straits, and we must pay him the fine, every jot, or else we
+shall die at the hands of our people. Thou, perchance, wilt have pity on
+our hardships, and give us these pigs in token of kindness and
+friendship, and if so we shall be thankful; but if not, then we will
+fight for them, and either bring them away by force, after slaying thee
+and thy people or fall ourselves in the attempt."
+
+Hearing this, the king and his people went into council; and after
+debating the matter at full length, they thought it best to give the
+pigs peaceably, seeing that no king, however powerful, had as yet been
+able to withstand the sons of Turenn.
+
+The three champions wondered greatly when this was told to them; for in
+no other country had they been able to get any part of the fine without
+battle and hardship, and without leaving much of their blood behind
+them. So they were now very glad; and thanked Asal and his people.
+
+The king then brought them to his palace, and gave them a kind welcome;
+and they were supplied with food and drink to their hearts' desire, and
+slept on soft, downy beds. So they rested after all their weary journeys
+and toils.
+
+When they arose next morning, they were brought to the king's presence,
+and the pigs were given to them; and Brian addressed the king in these
+words--
+
+ The prizes we've brought to this land,
+ We have won them in conflict and blood;
+ But the gift we have sought at thy hand,
+ That gift thou hast freely bestowed.
+
+ The red spear rewarded our deeds,
+ When Pezar the mighty we slew;
+ And the fight for the chariot and steeds,
+ Ah, long shall the Sigarites rue!
+
+ Great Asal! in happier days,
+ When our deeds bring us glory and fame,
+ Green Erin shall echo thy praise,
+ And her poets shall honour thy name!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE HOUND-WHELP OF THE KING OF IRODA.
+
+
+"Whither do you go next, ye sons of Turenn?" asked Asal.
+
+"We go," answered Brian, "to Iroda, for Failinis, the king's
+hound-whelp."
+
+"Then grant me this boon," said the king, "namely, that ye let me go
+with you to Iroda. For my daughter is the king's wife; and I will try to
+prevail on him that he give you the hound-whelp freely and without
+battle."
+
+This they agreed to. But the king wished that they should go in his own
+ship; so it was got ready, and they went on board with all their wealth;
+and it is not told how they fared till they reached the borders of
+Iroda. The shores were covered with fierce, armed men, who were there by
+orders of the king to guard the harbour; and these men shouted at the
+crew, warning them to come no farther; for they knew the sons of Turenn,
+and well they knew what they came for.
+
+Asal then requested the three champions to remain where they were for a
+time, while he went on shore to talk with his son-in-law. Accordingly he
+landed, and went to the king, who, after he had welcomed him, asked what
+had brought the sons of Turenn to his country.
+
+"They have come for your hound-whelp," answered Asal.
+
+And the king of Iroda said, "It was an evil counsel you followed, when
+you came with these men to my shores; for to no three champions in the
+world have the gods given such strength or such good luck as that they
+can get my hound-whelp, either by force or by my own free will."
+
+"It will be unwise to refuse them," replied Asal. "They have overpowered
+and slain many great kings; for they have gifted arms that no warrior,
+however powerful, can withstand; and behold, I have come hither to tell
+you what manner of men these are, that you might be advised by me, and
+give them your hound-whelp in peace."
+
+So he pressed him earnestly; but his words were only thrown away on the
+king of Iroda, who spoke scornfully of the sons of Turenn, and refused
+Asal's request with wrathful words.
+
+Asal, much troubled at this, went and told the sons of Turenn how
+matters stood. And they, having without delay put on their battle-dress,
+and taken their arms in their hands, challenged the king of Iroda and
+his people. Then began a very fierce and bloody battle; for though
+nothing could stand before the sons of Turenn, yet the warriors of Iroda
+were many and very brave. So they fought till the two younger brothers
+became separated from Brian, and he was quite surrounded. But as he
+wielded the dreadful spear of Pezar, with its blazing, fiery point, his
+enemies fell back dismayed, and the ranks were broken before him, so
+that those who crossed his path stood in a gap of danger.
+
+At length he espied the king of Iroda, where he fought hedged round by
+spears; and he rushed through the thick of the battle straight towards
+him, striking down spears and swords and men as he went. And now these
+two valiant warriors fought hand to hand a stout and watchful and fierce
+battle--for the others fell back by the king's command; and it was long
+before any advantage was gained on either side. But though to those who
+looked on, Brian seemed the more wrathful of the two, yet he held back
+his hand, so as not to slay his foe; and this it was, indeed, that
+prolonged the combat, for he sought to tire out the king. At length,
+watching his opportunity, Brian closed suddenly, and, seizing the king
+in his strong arms, he lifted him clean off the ground, and bore him to
+where Asal stood. Then, setting him down, he said--
+
+"Behold thy son-in-law; it would have been easier to kill him three
+times over than to bring him to thee once!"
+
+When the people saw their king a prisoner, they ceased fighting; and the
+end of all was that peace was made, and the hound-whelp was given over
+to the sons of Turenn. Then they took their leave, and left the shores
+of Iroda in friendship with the king and with Asal his father-in-law.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+RETURN OF THE SONS OF TURENN, WITH PART OF THE ERIC-FINE.
+
+
+Now we shall speak of Luga of the Long Arms. It was revealed to him that
+the sons of Turenn had obtained all those parts of the fine which he
+wanted for the battle of Moytura;[11] but that they had not yet got the
+cooking-spit, or given the three shouts on Midkena's Hill. So he sent
+after them a druidical spell, which, falling on them soon after they had
+left Iroda, caused them to forget the remaining part of the fine, and
+filled them with a longing desire to return to their native home.
+Accordingly they went on board their canoe, bringing with them every
+part of the fine they had gotten already; and the canoe glided swiftly
+over the waves to Erin.
+
+At this time Luga was with the king at a fair-meeting on the plain
+before Tara; and it was made known to him secretly that the sons of
+Turenn had landed at Bruga of the Boyne. He left the assembly anon,
+telling no one; and he went direct to Caher-Crofinn[XLVII.] at Tara,
+and, closing the gates and doors after him, he put on his battle array,
+namely, the smooth Greek armour of Mannanan Mac Lir, and the enchanted
+mantle of the daughter of Flidas.
+
+Soon after, the sons of Turenn were seen approaching; and as they came
+forward, the multitude flocked out to meet them, gazing with wonder at
+the many marvellous things they had brought. When the three champions
+had come to the royal tent, they were joyfully welcomed by the king and
+by the Dedannans in general; and then the king spoke kindly to them, and
+asked if they had brought the eric-fine.
+
+"We have obtained it after much hardship and danger," they replied; "and
+now we wish to know where Luga is, that we may hand it over to him."
+
+The king told them that Luga was at the assembly; but when they sent to
+search for him, he was nowhere to be found.
+
+"I can tell where he is," said Brian. "It has been made known to him
+that we have arrived in Erin, bringing with us gifted arms that none can
+withstand; and he has gone to one of the strongholds of Tara, to avoid
+us, fearing we might use these venomed weapons against himself."
+
+Messengers were then sent to Luga to tell him that the sons of Turenn
+had arrived, and to ask him to come forth to the meeting, that they
+might give him the fine.
+
+But he answered, "I will not come to the meeting yet; but go ye back,
+and tell the sons of Turenn to give the fine to the king for me."
+
+The messengers returned with this answer; and the sons of Turenn gave to
+the king for Luga all the wonderful things they had brought, keeping,
+however their own arms; after which the whole company went into the
+palace.
+
+When Luga was told how matters stood, he came to where the king and all
+the others were; and the king gave him the fine. Then Luga, looking
+narrowly at everything that had been given up to him, said--
+
+"Here, indeed, is an eric enough to pay for any one that ever yet was
+slain, or that shall be slain to the end of time. But yet there is one
+kind of fine that must be paid to the last farthing, namely, an
+eric-fine; for of this it is not lawful to hold back even the smallest
+part. And moreover, O king, thou and the Dedannans whom I see here
+present, are guarantees for the full payment of my eric-fine. Now I see
+here the three apples, and the skin of the pig, and the fiery-headed
+spear, and the chariot and steeds, and the seven pigs, and the
+hound-whelp; but where, ye sons of Turenn, is the cooking-spit of the
+women of Fincara? And I have not heard that ye have given the three
+shouts on Midkena's Hill."
+
+On hearing this, the sons of Turenn fell into a faintness like the
+faintness before death. And when they had recovered they answered not
+one word, but left the assembly and went to their father's house. To him
+and their sister Ethnea they told all that had befallen them; and how
+they should set out on another quest, as they had forgotten part of the
+eric-fine through the spells of Luga.
+
+At this Turenn was overwhelmed with grief; and Ethnea wept in great
+fear and sorrow. And so they passed that night. Next day, they went down
+to the shore, and their father and sister went with them to their ship,
+and bade them farewell.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVII.] Caher-Crofinn, otherwise called Rath-ree, the principal
+fortress at Tara, the remains of which are still to be seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE COOKING-SPIT OF THE WOMEN OF FINCARA.
+
+
+Then they went on board their ship--for they had Mannanan's canoe no
+longer--and they sailed forth on the green billowy sea to search for the
+Island of Fincara. For a whole quarter of a year they wandered hither
+and thither over the wide ocean, landing on many shores and inquiring of
+all they met; yet they were not able to get the least tidings of the
+island.
+
+At last, they came across one very old man, who told them that he had
+heard of the Island of Fincara in the days of his youth; and that it lay
+not on the surface, but down deep in the waters, for it was sunk beneath
+the waves by a spell in times long past.[13]
+
+Then Brian put on his water-dress, with his helmet of transparent
+crystal on his head, and, telling his brothers to await his return, he
+leaped over the side of the ship, and sank at once out of sight. He
+walked about for a fortnight down in the green salt sea, seeking for
+the Island of Fincara; and at last he found it.
+
+There were many houses on the island; but one he saw larger and grander
+than the rest. To this he straightway bent his steps, and found it open.
+On entering, he saw in one large room a great number of beautiful
+ladies, busily employed at all sorts of embroidery and needlework; and
+in their midst was a long, bright cooking-spit lying on a table.
+
+Without speaking a word, he walked straight to the table, and, seizing
+the spit in one hand, he turned round and walked towards the door. The
+women neither spoke nor moved, but each had her eyes fixed on him from
+the moment he entered, admiring his manly form, his beauty, and his
+fearlessness; but when they saw him about to walk off with the spit,
+they all burst out laughing; and one, who seemed chief among them,
+said--
+
+"Thou hast attempted a bold deed, O son of Turenn! Know that there are
+thrice fifty warlike women here, and that the weakest among us would be
+able of herself to prevent thee taking this cooking-spit, even if thy
+two brothers were here to help thee. But thou art a brave and courageous
+champion, else thou wouldst not have attempted, unaided, to take it by
+force, knowing the danger. And for thy boldness and valour, and for the
+comeliness of thy person, we will let thee take this one, for we have
+many others besides."
+
+So Brian, after thanking them, brought away the spit joyfully, and
+sought his ship.
+
+Ur and Urcar waited for Brian in the same spot the whole time, and when
+he came not, they began to fear that he would return no more. With these
+thoughts they were at last about to leave the place, when they saw the
+glitter of his crystal helmet down deep in the water, and immediately
+after he came to the surface with the cooking-spit in his hand. They
+brought him on board, and now all felt very joyful and courageous of
+heart.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE THREE SHOUTS ON MIDKENA'S HILL.
+
+
+The three brothers next sailed away towards the north of Lochlann, and
+never abated speed till they moored their vessel near the Hill of
+Midkena, which rose smooth and green over the sea-shore. When Midkena
+saw them approaching, he knew them at once, and, coming towards them
+armed for battle, he addressed them aloud--
+
+"You it was that slew Kian, my friend and pupil; and now come forth and
+fight, for you shall not leave these shores till you answer for his
+death."
+
+Brian, in no degree daunted by the fierce look and threatening speech of
+Midkena, sprang ashore, and the two heroes attacked each other with
+great fury. When the three sons of Midkena heard the clash of arms,
+they came forth, and, seeing how matters stood, they rushed down to aid
+their father; but just as they arrived at the shore, Midkena fell dead,
+cloven through helmet and head by the heavy sword of Brian.
+
+And now a fight began, three on each side; and if men were afar off,
+even in the land of Hisberna, in the east of the world, they would
+willingly come the whole way to see this battle, so fierce and haughty
+were the minds of those mighty champions, so skilful and active were
+they in the use of their weapons, so numerous and heavy were their
+blows, and so long did they continue to fight without either party
+giving way. The three sons of Turenn were at last dreadfully
+wounded--wounded almost to death. But neither fear nor weakness did this
+cause them, for their valour and their fury arose all the more for their
+wounds, and with one mighty onset they drove their spears through the
+bodies of their foes; and the sons of Midkena fell before them into the
+long sleep of death.
+
+But now that the fight was ended, and the battle-fury of the victors had
+passed off--now it was that they began to feel the effects of their
+wounds. They threw themselves full length on the blood-stained sward,
+and long they remained without moving or speaking a word, as if they
+were dead; and a heavy curtain of darkness fell over their eyes.
+
+At last Brian, raising his head, spoke to his brothers to know if they
+lived, and when they answered him feebly, he said--
+
+"My dear brothers, let us now arise and give the three shouts on the
+hill while there is time, for I feel the signs of death."
+
+But they were not able to rise.
+
+Then Brian, gathering all his remaining strength, stood up and lifted
+one with each hand, while his own blood flowed plentifully; and then
+they raised three feeble shouts on Midkena's Hill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+RETURN AND DEATH OF THE SONS OF TURENN.
+
+
+Making no further delay, he led them to their ship, and they set sail
+for Erin. While they were yet far off, Brian, gazing over the sea
+towards the west, suddenly cried out--
+
+"Lo, I see Ben Edar[XLVIII.] yonder, rising over the waters; and I see
+also Dun Turenn farther towards the north."
+
+And Ur answered from where he reclined with Urcar on the deck, "If we
+could but get one sight of Ben Edar methinks we should regain our health
+and strength; and as thou lovest us, and as thou lovest thy own renown,
+my brother, come and raise our heads and rest them on thy breast, that
+we may see Erin once more. After that, we shall welcome either life or
+death."
+
+ UR.
+
+ O brother, torch of valour, strong of hand,
+ Come, place our weary heads upon thy breast;
+ And let us look upon our native land,
+ Before we sink to everlasting rest!
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ Beloved sons of Turenn, woe is me!
+ My wounds are deep, my day of strength is past;
+ Yet not for this I grieve, but that I see
+ Your lives, my noble brothers, ebbing fast!
+
+ UR.
+
+ Would we could give our lives to purchase thine;
+ Ah, gladly would we die to ease thy pain!
+ For art thou not the pride of Turenn's line,
+ The noblest champion of green Erin's plain?
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ That mighty Dannan healer, Dianket;[XLIX.]
+ Or Midac, who excelled his sire in skill;
+ The maiden-leech, Armedda, mightier yet,
+ Who knew the herbs to cure, the herbs to kill:
+
+ Oh, were they here; or had we now at hand
+ Those gifted apples from the distant East;
+ Then might we hope to reach our native land,
+ And live again in joy and peace and rest!
+
+ UR.
+
+ Brother, methinks could we but see once more
+ Ben Edar's slopes, or Bregia's[L.] dewy plain,
+ Tailltenn,[LI.] or Bruga's[LII.] mystic mansion hoar,
+ Our blood would course in health and strength again.
+
+ Or let us once behold our father's home,
+ Or winding Liffey down by Ahaclee,[LIII.]
+ Old Frevan's hill,[LIV.] or Tara's[LV.] regal dome;
+ Then welcome death or life, whiche'er may be!
+
+So Brian raised their heads and rested them on his breast, and they
+gazed on the rocky cliffs and green slopes of Ben Edar while the ship
+wafted slowly towards land.
+
+Soon after this they landed on the north side of Ben Edar, from which
+they made their way slowly to Dun Turenn. And when they had reached the
+green in front of the house, Brian cried out--
+
+"Father, dear father, come forth to thy children!"
+
+Turenn came forth and saw his sons all wounded and pale and feeble.
+
+And Brian said, "Go, beloved father--go quick to Tara, and quickly
+return. Bring this cooking-spit to Luga, and tell him that we have given
+the three shouts on Midkena's Hill. Say that we have now paid the full
+eric-fine, and bring back from him the apples of the Garden of Hisberna,
+to heal our wounds, else we die."
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ Father, our wounds are deadly; nought can save
+ Thy children's lives but Luga's friendly hand:
+ Go, seek him, father--fare thee fast--and crave
+ The healing apples from Hisberna's land!
+
+ TURENN.
+
+ In vain, my sons, ye seek to fly your doom;
+ The stern Ildana's mind too well I know:
+ Alas! far liefer would he see your tomb,
+ Than all the treasures all this world could show!
+
+ BRIAN.
+
+ But he is just; and though his sire we slew,
+ Have we not paid full eric for the deed?
+ The great Ildana is our kinsman too,
+ And will relent in this our time of need.
+
+ Then go, my father, thou art swift and strong;
+ Speed like the wind--why linger here to mourn?
+ Go straight to Luga's home, nor tarry long;
+ Or, father, we shall die ere thou return!
+
+Turenn set out and travelled like the wind till he reached Tara, where
+he found Luga.
+
+He gave him the cooking-spit, and said, "Behold, my three sons have now
+paid thee the full eric-fine, for they have given the three shouts on
+Midkena's Hill. But they are wounded even unto death; and now give me,
+I pray thee, the apples from the Garden of Hisberna, to cure them, else
+they die."
+
+But Luga refused, and turned away from Turenn.
+
+Turenn hastened back to his sons with a sorrowful heart, and told them
+that he had failed to get the apples.
+
+Then Brian said, "Take me with thee to Tara. I will see him, and
+perchance he may have pity on us, and give us the apples."
+
+And it was done so. But when Brian begged for the apples, Luga said--
+
+"I will not give them to thee. If thou shouldst offer me the full of the
+whole earth of gold, I would not give them to thee. Thou and thy
+brothers committed a wicked and pitiless deed when you slew my father.
+For that deed you must suffer, and with nothing short of your death
+shall I be content."
+
+ For the blood that you spilled,
+ For the hero you killed--
+ The deed is avenged, and your doom is fulfilled!
+
+Brian turned away and went back to his brothers, and, lying down between
+them, his life departed; and his brothers died at the same moment.
+
+Then their father and their sister stood hand in hand over their bodies,
+lamenting. And Turenn spoke this lay--
+
+ Oh, pulseless is my heart this woful hour,
+ My strength is gone, my joy for ever fled;
+ Three noble champions, Erin's pride and power,
+ My three fair youths, my children, cold and dead!
+
+ Mild Ur, the fair-haired; Urcar, straight and tall;
+ The kings of Banba[LVI.] worthy both to be;
+ And Brian, bravest, noblest, best of all,
+ Who conquered many lands beyond the sea:
+
+ Lo, I am Turenn, your unhappy sire,
+ Mourning with feeble voice above your grave;
+ No life, no wealth, no honours I desire;
+ A place beside my sons is all I crave!
+
+After this Turenn and Ethnea fell on the bodies of the three young
+heroes and died.
+
+And they were all buried in one grave.
+
+
+This is the story of the Fate of the Children of Turenn.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XLVIII.] Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin. Dun Turenn, the
+fortress of their father Turenn.
+
+[XLIX.] Dianket, the great Dedannan physician. His son Midac and his
+daughter Armedda were still more skilful than their father. (See note 1
+at the end.)
+
+[L.] Bregia, the plain lying between the Liffey and the Boyne.
+
+[LI.] Tailltenn, now Teltown, on the Blackwater, about midway between
+Navan and Kells, in Meath. Here annual meetings were held from the most
+ancient times, on the first of August, and for some days before and
+after, at which games were celebrated, like the Olympic games of Greece.
+
+[LII.] Bruga on the Boyne, where Angus or Mac Indoc, the great Dedannan
+enchanter, had his "mystic mansion hoar." (See note 1 at the end.)
+
+[LIII.] Ahaclee, the old name of Dublin.
+
+[LIV.] Frevan, now the hill of Frewen, rising over Lough Owei, near
+Mullingar, where the ancient Irish kings had one of their palaces.
+
+[LV.] Tara, in Meath, the chief seat of the Irish kings.
+
+[LVI.] Banba, one of the ancient names of Ireland.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+OVERFLOWING OF LOUGH NEAGH,
+
+AND THE
+
+STORY OF LIBAN THE MERMAID.
+
+
+In the days of old a good king ruled over Muman,[LVII.] whose name was
+Marid Mac Carido. He had two sons, Ecca and Rib. Ecca was restless and
+unruly, and in many ways displeased the king; and he told his brother
+Rib that he had made up his mind to leave his home, and win lands for
+himself in some far off part of the country. Rib tried hard to dissuade
+him; but though this delayed his departure for a while, he was none the
+less bent on going.
+
+At last Ecca, being wrought upon by his stepmother Ebliu (from whom
+Slieve Eblinne[LVIII.] was afterwards named), did a grievous wrong to
+his father, and fled from Muman with all his people; and his brother Rib
+and his stepmother Ebliu went with him. Ten hundred men they were in
+all, besides women and children; and they turned their faces towards
+the north.
+
+After they had travelled for some time, their druids[3] told them that
+it was not fated for them to settle in the same place; and accordingly,
+when they had come to the Pass of the two Pillar Stones, they parted.
+
+Rib and his people turned to the west, and they journeyed till they came
+to the plain of Arbthenn. And there the water of a fountain burst forth
+over the land, and drowned them all; and a great lake was formed, which
+to this day is called the Lake of Rib.[LIX.]
+
+Ecca continued his journey northwards; and he and his people fared
+slowly on till they came near to Bruga[LX.] of the Boyne, the palace of
+Mac Indoc, where they were fain to rest. No sooner had they halted, than
+a tall man came forth from the palace, namely, Angus Mac Indoc of the
+Bruga, son of the Dagda, and commanded them to leave the place without
+delay. But they, being spent with the toil of travel, heeded not his
+words, and, pitching their tents, they rested on the plain before the
+palace. Whereupon Angus, being wroth that his commands were unheeded,
+killed all their horses that night.
+
+Next day, he came forth again, and he said to them, "Your horses I slew
+last night; and now, unless ye depart from this place, I will slay your
+people to-night."
+
+And Ecca said to him, "Much evil hast thou done to us already, for thou
+hast killed all our horses. And now we cannot go, even though we desire
+it, for without horses we cannot travel."
+
+Then Angus brought to them a very large horse in full harness, and they
+put all their goods on him. And when they were about to go, he said to
+them--
+
+"Beware that ye keep this great steed walking continually; not even a
+moment's rest shall ye give him, otherwise he will certainly be the
+cause of your death."[14]
+
+After this they set out again, on a Sunday in the mid-month of autumn,
+and travelled on till they reached the Plain of the Grey Copse,[LXI.]
+where they intended to abide. They gathered then round the great steed
+to take their luggage off him, and each was busy seeing after his own
+property, so that they forgot to keep the horse moving. And the moment
+he stood still, a magic well sprang up beneath his feet.[14]
+
+Now Ecca, when he saw the well spring up, was troubled, remembering
+Angus's warning. And he caused a house to be built round it, and near it
+he built his palace, for the better security. And he chose a woman to
+take care of the well, charging her strictly to keep the door locked,
+except when the people of the palace came for water.
+
+After that the King of Ulad,[LXII.] that is to say, Muridach, the son
+of Fiaca Findamnas (who was grandson of Conal Carna of the Red
+Branch[15]) came against Ecca to drive him forth from Ulad. But Ecca
+made a stout fight, so that he won the lordship of half of Ulad from
+Muridach. And after that his people settled down on the Plain of the
+Grey Copse.
+
+Now Ecca had two daughters, Ariu and Liban, of whom Ariu was the wife of
+Curnan the Simpleton. And Curnan went about among the people,
+foretelling that a lake would flow over them from the well, and urging
+them earnestly to make ready their boats.
+
+ Come forth, come forth, ye valiant men; build boats, and build ye fast!
+ I see the water surging out, a torrent deep and vast;
+ I see our chief and all his host o'erwhelmed beneath the wave;
+ And Ariu, too, my best beloved, alas! I cannot save.
+ But Liban east and west shall swim
+ Long ages on the ocean's rim,
+ By mystic shores and islets dim,
+ And down in the deep sea cave!
+
+And he ceased not to warn all he met, repeating this verse continually;
+but the people gave no heed to the words of the Simpleton.
+
+Now the woman who had charge of the well, on a certain occasion forgot
+to close the door, so that the spell was free to work evil. And
+immediately the water burst forth over the plain, and formed a great
+lake, namely the Lake of the Copse. And Ecca and all his family and all
+his folk were drowned, save only his daughter Liban, and Conang, and
+Curnan the Simpleton. And they buried Ariu, and raised a mound over her,
+which is called from her Carn-Arenn.
+
+Of Conang nothing more is told. But as to Curnan, he died of grief after
+his wife Ariu; and he was buried in a mound, which is called Carn-Curnan
+to this day in memory of him.
+
+And thus the great Lake of the Copse was formed, which is now called
+Lough Necca,[LXIII.] in memory of Ecca, the son of Marid. And it was the
+overflow of this lake which, more than all other causes, scattered the
+Ultonians over Erin.
+
+Now as to Liban. She also was swept away like the others; but she was
+not drowned. She lived for a whole year with her lap-dog, in her chamber
+beneath the lake, and God protected her from the water. At the end of
+the year she was weary; and when she saw the speckled salmon swimming
+and playing all round her, she prayed and said--
+
+"O my Lord, I wish I were a salmon, that I might swim with the others
+through the clear green sea!"
+
+And at the words she took the shape of a salmon, except her face and
+breast, which did not change. And her lap-dog was changed to an otter,
+and attended her afterwards whithersoever she went, as long as she lived
+in the sea.
+
+And so she remained swimming about from sea to sea for three hundred
+years; that is to say, from the time of Ecca, the son of Marid, to the
+time of Comgall of Bangor.[16]
+
+Now on one occasion, Comgall sent Beoc, the son of Indli, from Bangor
+to Rome, to talk with Gregory[LXIV.] concerning some matters of order
+and rule. And when Beoc's curragh[17] was sailing over the sea, he and
+his crew heard sweet singing in the waters beneath them, as it were the
+chanting of angels.
+
+And Beoc, having listened for a while, looked down into the water, and
+asked what the chant was for, and who it was that sang.
+
+And Liban answered, "I am Liban, the daughter of Ecca, son of Marid; and
+it is I who sang the chant thou hast heard."
+
+"Why art thou here?" asked Beoc.
+
+And she replied, "Lo, I have lived for three hundred years beneath the
+sea; and I have come hither to fix a day and a place of meeting with
+thee. I shall now go westward; and I beseech thee, for the sake of the
+holy men of Dalaradia,[LXV.] to come to Inver Ollarba[LXVI.] to meet me,
+on this same day at the end of a year. Say also to Comgall and to the
+other holy men of Bangor, all that I say to thee. Come with thy boats
+and thy fishing-nets, and thou shalt take me from the waters in which I
+have lived."
+
+"I shall not grant thee the boon thou askest," said Beoc, "unless thou
+give me a reward."
+
+"What reward dost thou seek?" asked Liban.
+
+"That thou be buried in one grave with me in my own monastery,"
+answered Beoc.
+
+"That shall be granted to thee," said Liban.
+
+Beoc then went on his way to Rome. And when he had returned, he related
+to Comgall and to the other saints of the monastery at Bangor, the story
+of the mermaid. And now the end of the year was nigh.
+
+Then they made ready their nets, and on the day appointed they went in
+their boats to Inver Ollarba, a goodly company of the saints of Erin.
+And Liban was caught in the net of Fergus of Miluc:[LXVII.] and her head
+and shoulders were those of a maiden, but she had the body of a fish.
+
+Now the boat in which she was brought to land was kept half full of sea
+water, in which she remained swimming about. And many came to see her;
+and all were filled with wonder when they saw her strange shape and
+heard her story.
+
+Among the rest came the chief of the tribe of Hua-Conang, wearing a
+purple cloak; and she kept gazing at him earnestly. The young chief,
+seeing this, said to her--
+
+"Dost thou wish to have this cloak? If so, I will give it to thee
+willingly."
+
+But she answered, "Not so: I desire not thy cloak. But it brings to my
+mind my father Ecca; for on the day he was drowned, he wore a cloak of
+purple like thine. But may good luck be on thee for thy gentleness, and
+on him who shall come after thee in thy place; and in every assembly
+where thy successor sits, may he be known to all without inquiry."
+
+After that there came up a large-bodied, dark-visaged, fierce hero, and
+killed her lap-dog. Whereupon she was grieved; and she told him that the
+heroism of himself and his tribe should be stained by the baseness of
+their minds, and that they should not be able to defend themselves
+against injuries till they should do penance, by fasting, for her sake.
+
+Then the warrior repented what he had done, and humbled himself before
+her.
+
+And now there arose a contention about her, as to whom she should
+belong. Comgall said she was his, forasmuch as she was caught in his
+territory. But Fergus urged that she belonged to him by right, as it was
+in his net she was taken. And Beoc said he had the best right of all to
+her, on account of the promise she had made to him.
+
+And as no one could settle the dispute, these three saints fasted and
+prayed that God would give a judgment between them, to show who should
+own Liban.
+
+And an angel said to one of the company, "Two wild oxen will come hither
+to-morrow from Carn-Arenn, that is to say, from the grave-mound of
+Liban's sister, Ariu. Yoke a chariot to them, and place the mermaid in
+it; and into whatsoever territory they shall bring her, she shall remain
+with the owner thereof."
+
+The oxen came on the morrow, as the angel had foretold. And when they
+were yoked, and when Liban was placed in the chariot, they brought her
+straightway to Beoc's church, namely to Tec-Da-Beoc.
+
+Then the saints gave her a choice--either to die immediately after
+baptism, and go to heaven; or to live on earth as long as she had lived
+in the sea, and then to go to heaven after these long ages. And the
+choice she took was to die immediately. Whereupon Comgall baptised her;
+and he gave her the name of Murgen, that is, "Sea-born," or Murgelt,
+that is "Mermaid."
+
+And she is counted among the holy virgins, and held in honour and
+reverence, as God ordained for her in heaven; and wonders and miracles
+are performed through her means at Tec-Da-Beoc.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LVII.] Muman, _i.e._ Munster.
+
+[LVIII.] Slieve Eblinne, now Slieve Eelim or Slieve Phelim, in
+Tipperary, sometimes called the Twelve Hills of Evlinn. "Eblinne" is the
+genitive of "Ebliu."
+
+[LIX.] Now Lough Ree, on the Shannon.
+
+[LX.] See note, page 62; see also note 1 at the end of the book.
+
+[LXI.] The Plain of the Grey Copse, according to the legend, was the
+name of the plain now covered by Lough Neagh.
+
+[LXII.] Ulad, _i.e._ Ulster.
+
+[LXIII.] Lough Necca, now Lough Neagh.
+
+[LXIV.] Gregory, _i.e._ Pope Gregory.
+
+[LXV.] Dalaradia, the old name of a territory which included the
+southern half of the county Antrim and a part of Down.
+
+[LXVI.] Inver Ollarba, _i.e._ the _inver_, or mouth of the river
+Ollarba, which was the ancient name of the Larne Water, in Antrim.
+
+[LXVII.] Miluc, or Meelick, the name of an ancient ecclesiastical
+establishment in the county Antrim. See "Ecclesiastical Antiquities of
+Down, Connor, and Dromore" (page 3), by the Rev. William Reeves, M.B.,
+M.R.I.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR, AND THE FAIRY MAIDEN.
+
+
+Connla of the Golden Hair was the son of Conn the Hundred-fighter.[18]
+One day as he stood with his father on the royal Hill of Usna,[LXVIII.]
+he saw a lady a little way off, very beautiful, and dressed in strange
+attire. She approached the spot where he stood; and when she was near,
+he spoke to her, and asked who she was, and from what place she had
+come.
+
+The lady replied, "I have come from the Land of the Living[19]--a land
+where there is neither death nor old age, nor any breach of law. The
+inhabitants of earth call us Aes-shee,[19] for we have our dwellings
+within large, pleasant, green hills. We pass our time very pleasantly in
+feasting and harmless amusements, never growing old; and we have no
+quarrels or contentions."
+
+The king and his company marvelled very much; for though they heard this
+conversation, no one saw the lady except Connla alone.
+
+"Who is this thou art talking to, my son?" said the king.
+
+And anon she answered for the youth, "Connla is speaking with a lovely,
+noble-born young lady, who will never die, and who will never grow old.
+I love Connla of the Golden Hair, and I have come to bring him with me
+to Moy-mell,[19] the plain of never-ending pleasure. On the day that he
+comes with me he shall be made king; and he shall reign for ever in
+Fairyland, without weeping and without sorrow. Come with me, O gentle
+Connla of the ruddy cheek, the fair, freckled neck, and the golden hair!
+Come with me, beloved Connla, and thou shalt retain the comeliness and
+dignity of thy form, free from the wrinkles of old age, till the awful
+day of judgment!"
+
+ Thy flowing golden hair, thy comely face,
+ Thy tall majestic form of peerless grace,
+ That show thee sprung from Conn's exalted race.
+
+King Conn the Hundred-fighter, being much troubled, called then on his
+druid,[3] Coran, to put forth his power against the witchery of the
+banshee[19]--
+
+"O Coran of the mystic arts and of the mighty incantations, here is a
+contest such as I have never been engaged in since I was made king at
+Tara--a contest with an invisible lady, who is beguiling my son to
+Fairyland by her baleful charms. Her cunning is beyond my skill, and I
+am not able to withstand her power; and if thou, Coran, help not, my son
+will be taken away from me by the wiles and witchery of a woman from the
+fairy hills."
+
+Coran, the druid, then came forward, and began to chant against the
+voice of the lady. And his power was greater than hers for that time, so
+that she was forced to retire.
+
+As she was going away she threw an apple to Connla, who straightway lost
+sight of her; and the king and his people no longer heard her voice.
+
+The king and the prince returned with their company to the palace; and
+Connla remained for a whole month without tasting food or drink, except
+the apple. And though he ate of it each day, it was never lessened, but
+was as whole and perfect in the end as at the beginning. Moreover, when
+they offered him aught else to eat or drink, he refused it; for while he
+had his apple he did not deem any other food worthy to be tasted. And he
+began to be very moody and sorrowful, thinking of the lovely fairy
+maiden.
+
+At the end of the month, as Connla stood by his father's side among the
+nobles, on the Plain of Arcomin, he saw the same lady approaching him
+from the west. And when she had come near, she addressed him in this
+manner--
+
+"A glorious seat, indeed, has Connla among wretched, short-lived
+mortals, awaiting the dreadful stroke of death! But now, the
+ever-youthful people of Moy-mell, who never feel old age, and who fear
+not death, seeing thee day by day among thy friends, in the assemblies
+of thy Fatherland, love thee with a strange love; and they will make
+thee king over them if thou wilt come with me."
+
+When the king heard the words of the lady, he commanded his people to
+call the druid again to him, saying--
+
+"Bring my druid, Coran, to me; for I see that the fairy lady has this
+day regained the power of her voice."
+
+At this the lady said, "Valiant Conn, fighter of a hundred, the faith of
+the druids has come to little honour among the upright, mighty,
+numberless people of this land. When the righteous law shall be
+restored, it will seal up the lips of the false, black demon; and his
+druids shall no longer have power to work their guileful spells."
+
+Now the king observed, and marvelled greatly, that whenever the lady was
+present, his son never spoke one word to any one, nay, even though they
+addressed him many times. And when the lady had ceased to speak, the
+king said--
+
+"Connla, my son, has thy mind been moved by the words of the lady?"
+
+Connla spoke then, and replied, "Father, I am very unhappy; for though I
+love my people beyond all, yet I am filled with sadness on account of
+this lady!"
+
+When Connla had said this, the maiden again addressed him, and chanted
+these words in a very sweet voice--
+
+
+THE CHANT OF THE FAIRY MAIDEN TO CONNLA OF THE GOLDEN HAIR.
+
+ I.
+
+ A land of youth, a land of rest,
+ A land from sorrow free;
+ It lies far off in the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea.
+ A swift canoe of crystal bright,
+ That never met mortal view--
+ We shall reach the land ere fall of night,
+ In that strong and swift canoe:
+ We shall reach the strand
+ Of that sunny land,
+ From druids and demons free;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ II.
+
+ A pleasant land of winding vales, bright streams, and verdurous plains,
+ Where summer all the live-long year, in changeless splendour reigns;
+ A peaceful land of calm delight, of everlasting bloom;
+ Old age and death we never know, no sickness, care, or gloom;
+ The land of youth,
+ Of love and truth,
+ From pain and sorrow free;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ III.
+
+ There are strange delights for mortal men in that island of the west;
+ The sun comes down each evening in its lovely vales to rest;
+ And though far and dim
+ On the ocean's rim
+ It seems to mortal view,
+ We shall reach its halls
+ Ere the evening falls,
+ In my strong and swift canoe;
+ And ever more
+ That verdant shore
+ Our happy home shall be;
+ The land of rest,
+ In the golden west,
+ On the verge of the azure sea!
+
+ IV.
+
+ It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair,
+ It will guard thee from the druids, from the demons of the air;
+ My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that western shore,
+ Where thou and I in joy and love shall live for evermore:
+ From the druid's incantation,
+ From his black and deadly snare,
+ From the withering imprecation
+ Of the demon of the air,
+ It will guard thee, gentle Connla of the flowing golden hair:
+ My crystal boat will guard thee, till we reach that silver strand
+ Where thou shalt reign in endless joy, the king of the Fairy-land!
+ [LXIX.]
+
+When the maiden had ended her chant, Connla suddenly walked away from
+his father's side, and sprang into the curragh, the gleaming,
+straight-gliding, strong, crystal canoe. The king and his people saw
+them afar off and dimly, moving away over the bright sea towards the
+sunset. They gazed sadly after them, till they lost sight of the canoe
+over the utmost verge; and no one can tell whither they went, for Connla
+was never again seen in his native land.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXVIII.] Hill of Usna. (See note, page 37.)
+
+[LXIX.] This is an expansion, rather than a translation, of the
+original, which is very short, and in some places very obscure.
+
+
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF MAILDUN.
+
+AN ACCOUNT OF THE ADVENTURES OF MAILDUN AND HIS CREW, AND OF THE
+WONDERFUL THINGS THEY SAW DURING THEIR VOYAGE OF THREE YEARS AND SEVEN
+MONTHS, IN THEIR CURRAGH,[17] ON THE WESTERN SEA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+MAILDUN'S CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH. HE BEGINS HIS VOYAGE IN QUEST OF THE
+PLUNDERERS WHO SLEW HIS FATHER.
+
+
+There was once an illustrious man of the tribe of Owenaght[LXX.] of
+Ninus, Allil Ocar Aga by name, a goodly hero, and lord of his own tribe
+and territory. One time, when he was in his house unguarded, a fleet of
+plunderers landed on the coast, and spoiled his territory. The chief
+fled for refuge to the church of Dooclone; but the spoilers followed him
+thither, slew him, and burned the church over his head.
+
+Not long after Allil's death, a son was born to him. The child's mother
+gave him the name of Maildun; and, wishing to conceal his birth, she
+brought him to the queen of that country, who was her dear friend. The
+queen took him to her, and gave out that he was her own child, and he
+was brought up with the king's sons, slept in the same cradle with them,
+and was fed from the same breast and from the same cup. He was a very
+lovely child; and the people who saw him thought it doubtful if there
+was any other child living at the time equally beautiful.
+
+As he grew up to be a young man, the noble qualities of his mind
+gradually unfolded themselves. He was high-spirited and generous, and he
+loved all sorts of manly exercises. In ball-playing, in running and
+leaping, in throwing the stone, in chess-playing, in rowing, and in
+horse-racing, he surpassed all the youths that came to the king's
+palace, and won the palm in every contest.
+
+One day, when the young men were at their games, a certain youth among
+them grew envious of Maildun; and he said, in an angry and haughty tone
+of voice--
+
+"It is a cause of much shame to us that we have to yield in every game,
+whether of skill or of strength, whether on land or on water, to an
+obscure youth, of whom no one can tell who is his father or his mother,
+or what race or tribe he belongs to."
+
+On hearing this, Maildun ceased at once from play; for until that moment
+he believed that he was the son of the king of the Owenaght, and of the
+queen who had nursed him. And going anon to the queen, he told her what
+had happened; and he said to her--
+
+"If I am not thy son, I will neither eat nor drink till thou tell me who
+my father and mother are."
+
+She tried to soothe him, and said, "Why do you worry yourself searching
+after this matter? Give no heed to the words of this envious youth. Am I
+not a mother to you? And in all this country, is there any mother who
+loves her son better than I love you?"
+
+He answered, "All this is quite true; yet I pray thee let me know who my
+parents are."
+
+The queen then, seeing that he would not be put off, brought him to his
+mother, and put him into her hands. And when he had spoken with her, he
+asked her to tell him who his father was.
+
+"You are bent on a foolish quest, my child," she said; "for even if you
+knew all about your father, the knowledge would bring neither advantage
+nor happiness to you; for he died before you were born."
+
+"Even so," he replied, "I wish to know who he was."
+
+So his mother told him the truth, saying, "Your father was Allil Ocar
+Aga, of the tribe of Owenaght of Ninus."
+
+Maildun then set out for his father's territory; and his three foster
+brothers, namely, the king's three sons, who were noble and handsome
+youths like himself, went with him. When the people of his tribe found
+out that the strange youth was the son of their chief, whom the
+plunderers had slain years before, and when they were told that the
+three others were the king's sons, they gave them all a joyful welcome,
+feasting them, and showing them much honour; so that Maildun was made
+quite happy, and soon forgot all the abasement and trouble he had
+undergone.
+
+Some time after this, it happened that a number of young people were in
+the churchyard of Dooclone--the same church in which Maildun's father
+had been slain--exercising themselves in casting a hand-stone. The game
+was to throw the stone clear over the charred roof of the church that
+had been burned; and Maildun was there contending among the others. A
+foul-tongued fellow named Brickna, a servant of the people who owned the
+church, was standing by; and he said to Maildun--
+
+"It would better become you to avenge the man who was burned to death
+here, than to be amusing yourself casting a stone over his bare, burnt
+bones."
+
+"Who was he?" inquired Maildun.
+
+"Allil Ocar Aga, your father," replied the other.
+
+"Who slew him?" asked Maildun.
+
+"Plunderers from a fleet slew him and burned him in this church,"
+replied Brickna; "and the same plunderers are still sailing in the same
+fleet."
+
+Maildun was disturbed and sad after hearing this. He dropped the stone
+that he held in his hand, folded his cloak round him, and buckled on his
+shield. And he left the company, and began to inquire of all he met, the
+road to the plunderers' ships. For a long time he could get no tidings
+of them; but at last some persons, who knew where the fleet lay, told
+him that it was a long way off, and that there was no reaching it except
+by sea.
+
+Now Maildun was resolved to find out these plunderers, and to avenge on
+them the death of his father. So he went without delay into
+Corcomroe,[LXXI.] to the druid[3] Nuca, to seek his advice about
+building a curragh, and to ask also for a charm to protect him, both
+while building it, and while sailing on the sea afterwards.
+
+The druid gave him full instructions. He told him the day he should
+begin to build his curragh, and the exact day on which he was to set out
+on his voyage; and he was very particular about the number of the crew,
+which, he said, was to be sixty chosen men, neither more nor less.
+
+So Maildun built a large triple-hide curragh,[17] following the druid's
+directions in every particular, chose his crew of sixty, among whom were
+his two friends, Germane and Diuran Lekerd; and on the day appointed put
+out to sea.
+
+When he had got only a very little way from the land, he saw his three
+foster brothers running down to the shore, signalling and calling out to
+him to return and take them on board; for they said they wished to go
+with him.
+
+"We shall not turn back," said Maildun; "and you cannot come with us;
+for we have already got our exact number."
+
+"We will swim after you in the sea till we are drowned, if you do not
+return for us," replied they; and so saying, the three plunged in and
+swam after the curragh.
+
+When Maildun saw this, he turned his vessel towards them, and took them
+on board rather than let them be drowned.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXX.] There were several tribes named Owenaght in the south of Ireland.
+This particular tribe were called, as in the text, the Owenaght of
+Ninus, and also, according to an interlined gloss in the "Book of the
+Dun Cow," the Owenaght of the Aras, _i.e._ of the Aran Islands. Their
+territory was situated in the north-west of the county Clare, opposite
+the Islands of Aran.
+
+[LXXI.] Corcomroe, an ancient territory, now a barony in the north-west
+of the county Clare. (For the meaning and history of this name, see the
+author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places," Series I. Part
+i. Chapter ii.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE FIRST ISLAND. TIDINGS OF THE PLUNDERERS.
+
+
+They sailed that day and night, as well as the whole of next day, till
+darkness came on again; and at midnight they saw two small bare islands,
+with two great houses on them near the shore. When they drew near, they
+heard the sounds of merriment and laughter, and the shouts of revellers
+intermingled with the loud voices of warriors boasting of their deeds.
+And listening to catch the conversation, they heard one warrior say to
+another--
+
+"Stand off from me, for I am a better warrior than thou; it was I who
+slew Allil Ocar Aga, and burned Dooclone over his head; and no one has
+ever dared to avenge it on me. Thou hast never done a great deed like
+that!"
+
+"Now surely," said Germane and Diuran to Maildun, "Heaven has guided our
+ship to this place! Here is an easy victory. Let us now sack this house,
+since God has revealed our enemies to us, and delivered them into our
+hands!"
+
+While they were yet speaking, the wind arose, and a great tempest
+suddenly broke on them. And they were driven violently before the storm,
+all that night and a part of next day, into the great and boundless
+ocean; so that they saw neither the islands they had left nor any other
+land; and they knew not whither they were going.
+
+Then Maildun said, "Take down your sail and put by your oars, and let
+the curragh drift before the wind in whatsoever direction it pleases God
+to lead us;" which was done.
+
+He then turned to his foster brothers, and said to them, "This evil has
+befallen us because we took you into the curragh, thereby violating the
+druid's directions; for he forbade me to go to sea with more than sixty
+men for my crew, and we had that number before you joined us. Of a
+surety more evil will come of it."
+
+His foster brothers answered nothing to this, but remained silent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE MONSTROUS ANTS.
+
+
+For three days and three nights they saw no land. On the morning of the
+fourth day, while it was yet dark, they heard a sound to the north-east;
+and Germane said--
+
+"This is the voice of the waves breaking on the shore."
+
+As soon as it was light they saw land and made towards it. While they
+were casting lots to know who should go and explore the country, they
+saw great flocks of ants coming down to the beach, each of them as large
+as a foal. The people judged by their numbers, and by their eager and
+hungry look, that they were bent on eating both ship and crew; so they
+turned their vessel round and sailed quickly away.
+
+ Their multitudes countless, prodigious their size;
+ Were never such ants seen or heard of before.
+ They struggled and tumbled and plunged for the prize,
+ And fiercely the famine-fire blazed from their eyes,
+ As they ground with their teeth the red sand of the shore!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE TERRACED ISLE OF BIRDS.
+
+
+Again for three days and three nights they saw no land. But on the
+morning of the fourth day they heard the murmur of the waves on the
+beach; and as the day dawned, they saw a large high island, with
+terraces all round it, rising one behind another. On the terraces grew
+rows of tall trees, on which were perched great numbers of large,
+bright-coloured birds.
+
+When the crew were about to hold council as to who should visit the
+island and see whether the birds were tame, Maildun himself offered to
+go. So he went with a few companions; and they viewed the island warily,
+but found nothing to hurt or alarm them; after which they caught great
+numbers of the birds and brought them to their ship.
+
+ A shield-shaped island, with terraces crowned,
+ And great trees circling round and round:
+ From the summit down to the wave-washed rocks,
+ There are bright-coloured birds in myriad flocks--
+ Their plumes are radiant; but hunger is keen;
+ So the birds are killed,
+ Till the curragh is filled,
+ And the sailors embark on the ocean green!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+A MONSTER.
+
+
+They sailed from this, and on the fourth day discovered a large, sandy
+island, on which, when they came near, they saw a huge, fearful animal
+standing on the beach, and looking at them very attentively. He was
+somewhat like a horse in shape; but his legs were like the legs of a
+dog; and he had great, sharp claws of a blue colour.
+
+Maildun, having viewed this monster for some time, liked not his look;
+and, telling his companions to watch him closely, for that he seemed
+bent on mischief, he bade the oarsmen row very slowly towards land.
+
+The monster seemed much delighted when the ship drew nigh the shore, and
+gambolled and pranced about with joy on the beach, before the eyes of
+the voyagers; for he intended to eat the whole of them the moment they
+landed.
+
+"He seems not at all sorry to see us coming," said Maildun; "but we must
+avoid him and put back from the shore."
+
+This was done. And when the animal observed them drawing off, he ran
+down in a great rage to the very water's edge, and digging up large,
+round pebbles with his sharp claws, he began to fling them at the
+vessel; but the crew soon got beyond his reach, and sailed into the open
+sea.
+
+ A horrible monster, with blazing eyes,
+ In shape like a horse and tremendous in size,
+ Awaiting the curragh, they saw;
+ With big bony jaws
+ And murderous claws,
+ That filled them with terror and awe:
+ How gleeful he dances,
+ And bellows and prances,
+ As near to the island they draw;
+ Expecting a feast--
+ The bloodthirsty beast--
+ With his teeth like edge of a saw:
+ Then he ran to the shore,
+ With a deafening roar,
+ Intending to swallow them raw:
+ But the crew, with a shout,
+ Put their vessel about,
+ And escaped from his ravenous maw![LXXII.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE DEMON HORSE-RACE.
+
+
+After sailing a long distance, they came in view of a broad, flat
+island. It fell to the lot of Germane to go and examine it, and he did
+not think the task a pleasant one. Then his friend Diuran said to him--
+
+"I will go with you this time; and when next it falls to my lot to visit
+an island, you shall come with me." So both went together.
+
+They found the island very large; and some distance from the shore they
+came to a broad green race-course, in which they saw immense
+hoof-marks, the size of a ship's sail, or of a large dining-table. They
+found nut-shells, as large as helmets, scattered about; and although
+they could see no one, they observed all the marks and tokens that
+people of huge size were lately employed there at sundry kinds of work.
+
+Seeing these strange signs, they became alarmed, and went and called
+their companions from the boat to view them. But the others, when they
+had seen them, were also struck with fear, and all quickly retired from
+the place and went on board their curragh.
+
+When they had got a little way from the land, they saw dimly, as it were
+through a mist, a vast multitude of people on the sea, of gigantic size
+and demoniac look, rushing along the crests of the waves with great
+outcry. As soon as this shadowy host had landed, they went to the green,
+where they arranged a horse-race.
+
+The horses were swifter than the wind; and as they pressed forward in
+the race, the multitudes raised a mighty shout like thunder, which
+reached the crew as if it were beside them. Maildun and his men, as they
+sat in their curragh, heard the strokes of the whips and the cries of
+the riders; and though the race was far off, they could distinguish the
+eager words of the spectators:--"Observe the grey horse!" "See that
+chestnut horse!" "Watch the horse with the white spots!" "My horse leaps
+better than yours!"
+
+After seeing and hearing these things, the crew sailed away from the
+island as quickly as they were able, into the open ocean, for they felt
+quite sure that the multitude they saw was a gathering of demons.
+
+ A spacious isle of meadowy plains, with a broad and sandy shore:
+ Two bold and trusty spies are sent, its wonders to explore.
+ Mysterious signs, strange, awful sights, now meet the wanderers'
+ eyes:
+ Vast hoof-marks, and the traces dire of men of monstrous size:
+ And lo! on the sea, in countless hosts, their shadowy forms expand;
+ They pass the affrighted sailors by, and like demons they rush to
+ land;
+ They mount their steeds, and the race is run, in the midst of
+ hell's uproar:
+ Then the wanderers quickly raise their sails, and leave the
+ accursed shore.
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXII.] See note, page 128.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE PALACE OF SOLITUDE.
+
+
+They suffered much from hunger and thirst this time, for they sailed a
+whole week without making land; but at the end of that time they came in
+sight of a high island, with a large and very splendid house on the
+beach near the water's edge. There were two doors--one turned inland,
+and the other facing the sea; and the door that looked towards the sea
+was closed with a great flat stone. In this stone was an opening,
+through which the waves, as they beat against the door every day, threw
+numbers of salmon into the house.
+
+The voyagers landed, and went through the whole house without meeting
+any one. But they saw in one large room an ornamented couch, intended
+for the head of the house, and in each of the other rooms was a larger
+one for three members of the family: and there was a cup of crystal on a
+little table before each couch. They found abundance of food and ale,
+and they ate and drank till they were satisfied, thanking God for having
+relieved them from hunger and thirst.
+
+ Aloft, high towering o'er the ocean's foam,
+ The spacious mansion rears its glittering dome.
+ Each day the billows, through the marble door,
+ Shoot living salmon floundering on the floor.
+ Couches that lure the sailors to recline,
+ Abundant food, brown ale, and sparkling wine;
+ Tables and chairs in order duly placed,
+ With crystal cups and golden goblets graced.
+ But not a living soul the wanderers found;
+ 'Twas silence all and solitude profound.
+ They eat and drink, give thanks, then hoist their sail,
+ And skim the deep once more, obedient to the gale.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE WONDERFUL APPLE TREE.
+
+
+After leaving this, they suffered again from hunger, till they came to
+an island with a high hill round it on every side. A single apple tree
+grew in the middle, very tall and slender, and all its branches were in
+like manner exceedingly slender, and of wonderful length, so that they
+grew over the hill and down to the sea.
+
+When the ship came near the island, Maildun caught one of the branches
+in his hand. For three days and three nights the ship coasted the
+island, and during all this time he held the branch, letting it slide
+through his hand, till on the third day he found a cluster of seven
+apples on the very end. Each of these apples supplied the travellers
+with food and drink for forty days and forty nights.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE ISLAND OF BLOODTHIRSTY QUADRUPEDS.
+
+
+A beautiful island next came in view, in which they saw, at a distance,
+multitudes of large animals shaped like horses. The voyagers, as they
+drew near, viewed them attentively, and soon observed that one of them
+opened his mouth and bit a great piece out of the side of the animal
+that stood next him, bringing away skin and flesh. Immediately after,
+another did the same to the nearest of his fellows. And, in short, the
+voyagers saw that all the animals in the island kept worrying and
+tearing each other from time to time in this manner; so that the ground
+was covered far and wide with the blood that streamed from their sides.
+
+ In needless strife they oft contend,
+ A cruel, mutual-mangling brood;
+ Their flesh with gory tusks they rend,
+ And crimson all the isle with blood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+AN EXTRAORDINARY MONSTER.
+
+
+The next island had a wall all round it. When they came near the shore,
+an animal of vast size, with a thick, rough skin, started up inside the
+wall, and ran round the island with the swiftness of the wind. When he
+had ended his race, he went to a high point, and standing on a large,
+flat stone, began to exercise himself according to his daily custom, in
+the following manner. He kept turning himself completely round and round
+in his skin, the bones and flesh moving, while the skin remained at
+rest.
+
+When he was tired of this exercise, he rested a little; and he then
+began turning his skin continually round his body, down at one side and
+up at the other like a mill-wheel; but the bones and flesh did not move.
+
+After spending some time at this sort of work, he started and ran round
+the island as at first, as if to refresh himself. He then went back to
+the same spot, and this time, while the skin that covered the lower part
+of his body remained without motion, he whirled the skin of the upper
+part round and round like the movement of a flat-lying millstone. And it
+was in this manner that he spent most of his time on the island.
+
+Maildun and his people, after they had seen these strange doings,
+thought it better not to venture nearer. So they put out to sea in great
+haste. The monster, observing them about to fly, ran down to the beach
+to seize the ship; but finding that they had got out of his reach, he
+began to fling round stones at them with great force and an excellent
+aim. One of them struck Maildun's shield and went quite through it,
+lodging in the keel of the curragh; after which the voyagers got beyond
+his range and sailed away.
+
+ In a wall-circled isle a big monster they found,
+ With a hide like an elephant, leathery and bare;
+ He threw up his heels with a wonderful bound,
+ And ran round the isle with the speed of a hare.
+
+ But a feat more astounding has yet to be told:
+ He turned round and round in his leathery skin;
+ His bones and his flesh and his sinews he rolled--
+ He was resting outside while he twisted within!
+
+ Then, changing his practice with marvellous skill,
+ His carcase stood rigid and round went his hide;
+ It whirled round his bones like the wheel of a mill--
+ He was resting within while he twisted outside!
+
+ Next, standing quite near on a green little hill,
+ After galloping round in the very same track,
+ While the skin of his belly stood perfectly still,
+ Like a millstone he twisted the skin of his back!
+
+ But Maildun and his men put to sea in their boat,
+ For they saw his two eyes looking over the wall;
+ And they knew by the way that he opened his throat,
+ He intended to swallow them, curragh and all![LXXIII.]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXIII.] The verse in the original is quite serious; but I could not
+resist the temptation to give it a humorous turn. The same observation
+applies to the verse at page 122.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE ISLE OF RED-HOT ANIMALS.
+
+
+Not daring to land on this island, they turned away hurriedly, much
+disheartened, not knowing whither to turn or where to find a
+resting-place. They sailed for a long time, suffering much from hunger
+and thirst, and praying fervently to be relieved from their distress. At
+last, when they were beginning to sink into a state of despondency,
+being quite worn out with toil and hardship of every kind, they sighted
+land.
+
+It was a large and beautiful island, with innumerable fruit trees
+scattered over its surface, bearing abundance of gold-coloured apples.
+Under the trees they saw herds of short, stout animals, of a bright red
+colour, shaped somewhat like pigs; but coming nearer, and looking more
+closely, they perceived with astonishment that the animals were all
+fiery, and that their bright colour was caused by the red flames which
+penetrated and lighted up their bodies.
+
+The voyagers now observed several of them approach one of the trees in a
+body, and striking the trunk all together with their hind legs, they
+shook down some of the apples and ate them. In this manner the animals
+employed themselves every day, from early morning till the setting of
+the sun when they retired into deep caves, and were seen no more till
+next morning.
+
+Numerous flocks of birds were swimming on the sea, all round the island.
+From morning till noon, they continued to swim away from the land,
+farther and farther out to sea; but at noon they turned round, and from
+that to sunset they swam back towards the shore. A little after sunset,
+when the animals had retired to their caves, the birds flocked in on the
+island, and spread themselves over it, plucking the apples from the
+trees and eating them.
+
+Maildun proposed that they should land on the island, and gather some of
+the fruit, saying that it was not harder or more dangerous for them than
+for the birds; so two of the men were sent beforehand to examine the
+place. They found the ground hot under their feet, for the fiery
+animals, as they lay at rest, heated the earth all around and above
+their caves; but the two scouts persevered notwithstanding, and brought
+away some of the apples.
+
+When morning dawned, the birds left the island and swam out to sea; and
+the fiery animals, coming forth from their caves, went among the trees
+as usual, and ate the apples till evening. The crew remained in their
+curragh all day; and as soon as the animals had gone into their caves
+for the night, and the birds had taken their place, Maildun landed with
+all his men. And they plucked the apples till morning, and brought them
+on board, till they had gathered as much as they could stow into their
+vessel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE PALACE OF THE LITTLE CAT.
+
+
+After rowing for a long time, their store of apples failed them, and
+they had nothing to eat or drink; so that they suffered sorely under a
+hot sun, and their mouths and nostrils were filled with the briny smell
+of the sea. At last they came in sight of land--a little island with a
+large palace on it. Around the palace was a wall, white all over,
+without stain or flaw, as if it had been built of burnt lime, or carved
+out of one unbroken rock of chalk; and where it looked towards the sea
+it was so lofty that it seemed almost to reach the clouds.
+
+The gate of this outer wall was open, and a number of fine houses, all
+snowy white, were ranged round on the inside, enclosing a level court in
+the middle, on which all the houses opened. Maildun and his people
+entered the largest of them, and walked through several rooms without
+meeting with any one. But on reaching the principal apartment, they saw
+in it a small cat, playing among a number of low, square, marble
+pillars, which stood ranged in a row; and his play was, leaping
+continually from the top of one pillar to the top of another. When the
+men entered the room, the cat looked at them for a moment, but returned
+to his play anon, and took no further notice of them.
+
+Looking now to the room itself, they saw three rows of precious jewels
+ranged round the wall from one door-jamb to the other. The first was a
+row of brooches of gold and silver, with their pins fixed in the wall,
+and their heads outwards; the second, a row of torques of gold and
+silver; and the third, a row of great swords, with hilts of gold and
+silver.
+
+Round the room were arranged a number of couches, all pure white and
+richly ornamented. Abundant food of various kinds was spread on tables,
+among which they observed a boiled ox and a roast hog; and there were
+many large drinking-horns, full of good, intoxicating ale.
+
+"Is it for us that this food has been prepared?" said Maildun to the
+cat.
+
+The cat, on hearing the question, ceased from playing, and looked at
+him; but he recommenced his play immediately. Whereupon Maildun told his
+people that the dinner was meant for them; and they all sat down, and
+ate and drank till they were satisfied, after which they rested and
+slept on the couches.
+
+When they awoke, they poured what was left of the ale into one vessel;
+and they gathered the remnants of the food to bring them away. As they
+were about to go, Maildun's eldest foster brother asked him--
+
+"Shall I bring one of those large torques away with me?"
+
+"By no means," said Maildun; "it is well that we have got food and
+rest. Bring nothing away, for it is certain that this house is not left
+without some one to guard it."
+
+The young man, however, disregarding Maildun's advice, took down one of
+the torques and brought it away. But the cat followed him, and overtook
+him in the middle of the court, and, springing on him like a blazing,
+fiery arrow, he went through his body, and reduced it in a moment to a
+heap of ashes. He then returned to the room, and, leaping up on one of
+the pillars, sat upon it.
+
+Maildun turned back, bringing the torque with him, and, approaching the
+cat, spoke some soothing words; after which he put the torque back to
+the place from which it had been taken. Having done this, he collected
+the ashes of his foster brother, and, bringing them to the shore, cast
+them into the sea. They all then went on board the curragh, and
+continued their voyage, grieving for their lost companion, but thanking
+God for His many mercies to them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+AN ISLAND THAT DYED BLACK AND WHITE.
+
+
+On the morning of the third day, they came to another island, which was
+divided into two parts by a wall of brass running across the middle.
+They saw two great flocks of sheep, one on each side of the wall; and
+all those at one side were black, while those at the other side were
+white.
+
+A very large man was employed in dividing and arranging the sheep; and
+he often took up a sheep and threw it with much ease over the wall from
+one side to the other. When he threw over a white sheep among the black
+ones, it became black immediately; and in like manner, when he threw a
+black sheep over, it was instantly changed to white.
+
+The travellers were very much alarmed on witnessing these doings and
+Maildun said--
+
+"It is very well that we know so far. Let us now throw something on
+shore, to see whether it also will change colour; if it does, we shall
+avoid the island."
+
+So they took a branch with black-coloured bark and threw it towards the
+white sheep, and no sooner did it touch the ground than it became white.
+They then threw a white-coloured branch on the side of the black sheep,
+and in a moment it turned black.
+
+"It is very lucky for us," said Maildun, "that we did not land on the
+island, for doubtless our colour would have changed like the colour of
+the branches."
+
+So they put about with much fear, and sailed away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE BURNING RIVER.
+
+
+On the third day, they came in view of a large, broad island, on which
+they saw a herd of gracefully shaped swine; and they killed one small
+porkling for food. Towards the centre rose a high mountain, which they
+resolved to ascend, in order to view the island; and Germane and Diuran
+Lekerd were chosen for this task.
+
+When they had advanced some distance towards the mountain, they came to
+a broad, shallow river; and sitting down on the bank to rest, Germane
+dipped the point of his lance into the water, which instantly burned off
+the top, as if the lance had been thrust into a furnace. So they went no
+farther.
+
+On the opposite side of the river, they saw a herd of animals like great
+hornless oxen, all lying down; and a man of gigantic size near them: and
+Germane began to strike his spear against his shield, in order to rouse
+the cattle.
+
+"Why are you frightening the poor young calves in that manner?" demanded
+the big shepherd, in a tremendous voice.
+
+Germane, astonished to find that such large animals were nothing more
+than calves, instead of answering the question, asked the big man where
+the mothers of those calves were.
+
+"They are on the side of yonder mountain," he replied.
+
+Germane and Diuran waited to hear no more; but, returning to their
+companions, told them all they had seen and heard; after which the crew
+embarked and left the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE MILLER OF HELL.
+
+
+The next island they came to, which was not far off from the last, had a
+large mill on it; and near the door stood the miller, a huge-bodied,
+strong, burly man. They saw numberless crowds of men and horses laden
+with corn, coming towards the mill; and when their corn was ground they
+went away towards the west. Great herds of all kinds of cattle covered
+the plain as far as the eye could reach, and among them many wagons
+laden with every kind of wealth that is produced on the ridge of the
+world. All these the miller put into the mouth of his mill to be ground;
+and all, as they came forth, went westwards.
+
+Maildun and his people now spoke to the miller, and asked him the name
+of the mill, and the meaning of all they had seen on the island. And he,
+turning quickly towards them, replied in few words--
+
+"This mill is called the Mill of Inver-tre-Kenand, and I am the miller
+of hell. All the corn and all the riches of the world that men are
+dissatisfied with, or which they complain of in any way, are sent here
+to be ground; and also every precious article, and every kind of wealth,
+which men try to conceal from God. All these I grind in the Mill of
+Inver-tre-Kenand, and send them afterwards away to the west."
+
+He spoke no more, but turned round and busied himself again with his
+mill. And the voyagers, with much wonder and awe in their hearts, went
+to their curragh and sailed away.[LXXIV.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE ISLE OF WEEPING.
+
+
+After leaving this, they had not been long sailing when they discovered
+another large island, with a great multitude of people on it. They were
+all black, both skin and clothes, with black head-dresses also; and they
+kept walking about, sighing and weeping and wringing their hands,
+without the least pause or rest.
+
+It fell to the lot of Maildun's second foster brother to go and examine
+the island. And when he went among the people, he also grew sorrowful,
+and fell to weeping and wringing his hands, with the others. Two of the
+crew were sent to bring him back; but they were unable to find him among
+the mourners; and, what was worse, in a little time they joined the
+crowd, and began to weep and lament like all the rest.
+
+Maildun then chose four men to go and bring back the others by force,
+and he put arms in their hands, and gave them these directions--
+
+"When you land on the island, fold your mantles round your faces, so as
+to cover your mouths and noses, that you may not breathe the air of the
+country; and look neither to the right nor to the left, neither at the
+earth nor at the sky, but fix your eyes on your own men till you have
+laid hands on them."
+
+They did exactly as they were told, and having come up with their two
+companions, namely, those who had been sent after Maildun's foster
+brother, they seized them and brought them back by force. But the other
+they could not find. When these two were asked what they had seen on the
+island, and why they began to weep, their only reply was--
+
+"We cannot tell; we only know that we did what we saw the others doing."
+
+And after this the voyagers sailed away from the island, leaving
+Maildun's second foster brother behind.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXIV.] The incident of the big miller occurs in the Voyage of the Sons
+of O'Corra, as well as in the Voyage of Maildun. The two accounts are
+somewhat different; and I have combined both here.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE FOUR PRECIOUS WALLS.
+
+
+The next was a high island, divided into four parts by four walls
+meeting in the centre. The first was a wall of gold; the second, a wall
+of silver; the third, a wall of copper; and the fourth, a wall of
+crystal. In the first of the four divisions were kings; in the second,
+queens; in the third, youths; and in the fourth, young maidens.
+
+When the voyagers landed, one of the maidens came to meet them, and
+leading them forward to a house, gave them food. This food, which she
+dealt out to them from a small vessel, looked like cheese, and whatever
+taste pleased each person best, that was the taste he found on it. And
+after they had eaten till they were satisfied, they slept in a sweet
+sleep, as if gently intoxicated, for three days and three nights. When
+they awoke on the third day, they found themselves in their curragh on
+the open sea; and there was no appearance in any direction either of the
+maiden or of the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE PALACE OF THE CRYSTAL BRIDGE.
+
+
+They came now to a small island, with a palace on it, having a copper
+chain in front, hung all over with a number of little silver bells.
+Straight before the door there was a fountain, spanned by a bridge of
+crystal, which led to the palace. They walked towards the bridge,
+meaning to cross it, but every time they stepped on it they fell
+backwards flat on the ground.
+
+After some time, they saw a very beautiful young woman coming out of the
+palace, with a pail in her hand; and she lifted a crystal slab from the
+bridge, and, having filled her vessel from the fountain, she went back
+into the palace.
+
+"This woman has been sent to keep house for Maildun," said Germane.
+
+"Maildun indeed!" said she, as she shut the door after her.
+
+After this they began to shake the copper chain, and the tinkling of the
+silver bells was so soft and melodious that the voyagers gradually fell
+into a gentle, tranquil sleep, and slept so till next morning. When they
+awoke, they saw the same young woman coming forth from the palace, with
+the pail in her hand; and she lifted the crystal slab as before, filled
+her vessel, and returned into the palace.
+
+"This woman has certainly been sent to keep house for Maildun," said
+Germane.
+
+"Wonderful are the powers of Maildun!" said she, as she shut the door of
+the court behind her.
+
+They stayed in this place for three days and three nights, and each
+morning the maiden came forth in the same manner, and filled her pail.
+On the fourth day, she came towards them, splendidly and beautifully
+dressed, with her bright yellow hair bound by a circlet of gold, and
+wearing silver-work shoes on her small, white feet. She had a white
+mantle over her shoulders, which was fastened in front by a silver
+brooch studded with gold; and under all, next her soft, snow-white skin,
+was a garment of fine white silk.
+
+"My love to you, Maildun, and to your companions," she said; and she
+mentioned them all, one after another, calling each by his own proper
+name. "My love to you," said she. "We knew well that you were coming to
+our island, for your arrival has long been foretold to us."
+
+Then she led them to a large house standing by the sea, and she caused
+the curragh to be drawn high up on the beach. They found in the house a
+number of couches, one of which was intended for Maildun alone, and each
+of the others for three of his people. The woman then gave them, from
+one vessel, food which was like cheese; first of all ministering to
+Maildun, and then giving a triple share to every three of his
+companions; and whatever taste each man wished for, that was the taste
+he found on it. She then lifted the crystal slab at the bridge, filled
+her pail, and dealt out drink to them; and she knew exactly how much to
+give, both of food and of drink, so that each had enough and no more.
+
+"This woman would make a fit wife for Maildun," said his people. But
+while they spoke, she went from them with her pail in her hand.
+
+When she was gone, Maildun's companions said to him, "Shall we ask this
+maiden to become thy wife?"
+
+He answered, "What advantage will it be to you to ask her?"
+
+She came next morning, and they said to her, "Why dost thou not stay
+here with us? Wilt thou make friendship with Maildun; and wilt thou take
+him for thy husband?"
+
+She replied that she and all those that lived on the island were
+forbidden to marry with the sons of men; and she told them that she
+could not disobey, as she knew not what sin or transgression was.
+
+She then went from them to her house; and on the next morning, when she
+returned, and after she had ministered to them as usual, till they were
+satisfied with food and drink, and were become cheerful, they spoke the
+same words to her.
+
+"To-morrow," she replied, "you will get an answer to your question;" and
+so saying, she walked towards her house, and they went to sleep on their
+couches.
+
+When they awoke next morning, they found themselves lying in their
+curragh on the sea, beside a great high rock; and when they looked
+about, they saw neither the woman, nor the palace of the crystal bridge,
+nor any trace of the island where they had been sojourning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE ISLE OF SPEAKING BIRDS.
+
+
+One night, soon after leaving this, they heard in the distance, towards
+the north-east, a confused murmur of voices, as if from a great number
+of persons singing psalms. They followed the direction of the sound, in
+order to learn from what it proceeded; and at noon the next day, they
+came in view of an island, very hilly and lofty. It was full of birds,
+some black, some brown, and some speckled, who were all shouting and
+speaking with human voices; and it was from them that the great clamour
+came.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE AGED HERMIT, AND THE HUMAN SOULS.
+
+
+At a little distance from this they found another small island, with
+many trees on it, some standing singly, and some in clusters, on which
+were perched great numbers of birds. They also saw an aged man on the
+island, who was covered thickly all over with long, white hair, and wore
+no other dress. And when they landed, they spoke to him, and asked him
+who he was and what race he belonged to.
+
+"I am one of the men of Erin," he replied. "On a certain day, a long,
+long time ago, I embarked in a small curragh, and put out to sea on a
+pilgrimage; but I had got only a little way from shore, when my curragh
+became very unsteady, as if it were about to overturn. So I returned to
+land, and, in order to steady my boat, I placed under my feet at the
+bottom, a number of green surface sods, cut from one of the grassy
+fields of my own country, and began my voyage anew. Under the guidance
+of God, I arrived at this spot; and He fixed the sods in the sea for me,
+so that they formed a little island. At first I had barely room to
+stand; but every year, from that time to the present, the Lord has added
+one foot to the length and breadth of my island, till in the long lapse
+of ages it has grown to its present size. And on one day in each year,
+He has caused a single tree to spring up, till the island has become
+covered with trees. Moreover, I am so old that my body, as you see, has
+become covered with long, white hair, so that I need no other dress.
+
+"And the birds that ye see on the trees," he continued, "these are the
+souls of my children, and of all my descendants, both men and women, who
+are sent to this little island to abide with me according as they die in
+Erin. God has caused a well of ale to spring up for us on the island:
+and every morning the angels bring me half a cake, a slice of fish, and
+a cup of ale from the well; and in the evening the same allowance of
+food and ale is dealt out to each man and woman of my people. And it is
+in this manner that we live, and shall continue to live till the end of
+the world; for we are all awaiting here the day of judgment."
+
+Maildun and his companions were treated hospitably on the island by the
+old pilgrim for three days and three nights; and when they were taking
+leave of him, he told them that they should all reach their own country
+except one man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE ISLAND OF THE BIG BLACKSMITHS.
+
+
+When they had been for a long time tossed about on the waters, they saw
+land in the distance. On approaching the shore, they heard the roaring
+of a great bellows, and the thundering sound of smiths' hammers striking
+a large glowing mass of iron on an anvil; and every blow seemed to
+Maildun as loud as if a dozen men had brought down their sledges all
+together.
+
+When they had come a little nearer, they heard the big voices of the
+smiths in eager talk.
+
+"Are they near?" asked one.
+
+"Hush! silence!" says another.
+
+"Who are they that you say are coming?" inquired a third.
+
+"Little fellows, that are rowing towards our shore in a pigmy boat,"
+says the first.
+
+When Maildun heard this, he hastily addressed the crew--
+
+"Put back at once, but do not turn the curragh: reverse the sweep of
+your oars, and let her move stern forward, so that those giants may not
+perceive that we are flying!"
+
+The crew at once obey, and the boat begins to move away from the shore,
+stern forward, as he had commanded.
+
+The first smith again spoke. "Are they near enough to the shore?" said
+he to the man who was watching.
+
+"They seem to be at rest," answered the other; "for I cannot perceive
+that they are coming closer, and they have not turned their little boat
+to go back."
+
+In a short time the first smith asks again, "What are they doing now?"
+
+"I think," said the watcher, "they are flying; for it seems to me that
+they are now farther off than they were a while ago."
+
+At this the first smith rushed out of the forge--a huge, burly
+giant--holding, in the tongs which he grasped in his right hand, a vast
+mass of iron sparkling and glowing from the furnace; and, running down
+to the shore with long, heavy strides, he flung the red-hot mass with
+all his might after the curragh. It fell a little short, and plunged
+down just near the prow, causing the whole sea to hiss and boil and
+heave up around the boat. But they plied their oars, so that they
+quickly got beyond his reach, and sailed out into the open ocean.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE CRYSTAL SEA.
+
+
+After a time, they came to a sea like green crystal. It was so calm and
+transparent that they could see the sand at the bottom quite clearly,
+sparkling in the sunlight. And in this sea they saw neither monsters,
+nor ugly animals, nor rough rocks; nothing but the clear water and the
+sunshine and the bright sand. For a whole day they sailed over it,
+admiring its splendour and beauty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+A LOVELY COUNTRY BENEATH THE WAVES.
+
+
+After leaving this they entered on another sea, which seemed like a
+clear, thin cloud; and it was so transparent, and appeared so light,
+that they thought at first it would not bear up the weight of the
+curragh.
+
+Looking down, they could see, beneath the clear water, a beautiful
+country, with many mansions surrounded by groves and woods. In one place
+was a single tree; and, standing on its branches, they saw an animal
+fierce and terrible to look upon.
+
+Round about the tree was a great herd of oxen grazing, and a man stood
+near to guard them, armed with shield and spear and sword; but when he
+looked up and saw the animal on the tree, he turned anon and fled with
+the utmost speed. Then the monster stretched forth his neck, and,
+darting his head downward, plunged his fangs into the back of the
+largest ox of the whole herd, lifted him off the ground into the tree,
+and swallowed him down in the twinkling of an eye; whereupon the whole
+herd took to flight.
+
+When Maildun and his people saw this, they were seized with great
+terror; for they feared they should not be able to cross the sea over
+the monster, on account of the extreme mist-like thinness of the water;
+but after much difficulty and danger they got across it safely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+AN ISLAND GUARDED BY A WALL OF WATER.
+
+
+When they came to the next island, they observed with astonishment that
+the sea rose up over it on every side, steep and high, standing, as it
+were, like a wall all round it. When the people of the island saw the
+voyagers, they rushed hither and thither, shouting, "There they are,
+surely! There they come again for another spoil!"
+
+Then Maildun's people saw great numbers of men and women, all shouting
+and driving vast herds of horses, cows, and sheep. A woman began to pelt
+the crew from below with large nuts; she flung them so that they
+alighted on the waves round the boat, where they remained floating; and
+the crew gathered great quantities of them and kept them for eating.
+
+When they turned to go away, the shouting ceased: and they heard one man
+calling aloud, "Where are they now?" and another answering him, "They
+are gone away!"
+
+From what Maildun saw and heard at this island, it is likely that it had
+been foretold to the people that their country should some day be
+spoiled by certain marauders; and that they thought Maildun and his men
+were the enemies they expected.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+A WATER-ARCH IN THE AIR.
+
+
+On the next island they saw a very wonderful thing, namely, a great
+stream of water which, gushing up out of the strand, rose into the air
+in the form of a rainbow, till it crossed the whole island and came down
+on the strand at the other side. They walked under it without getting
+wet; and they hooked down from it many large salmon. Great quantities of
+salmon of a very great size fell also out of the water over their heads
+down on the ground; so that the whole island smelled of fish, and it
+became troublesome to gather them on account of their abundance.
+
+From the evening of Sunday till the evening of Monday, the stream never
+ceased to flow, and never changed its place, but remained spanning the
+island like a solid arch of water. Then the voyagers gathered the
+largest of the salmon, till they had as much as the curragh would hold;
+after which they sailed out into the great sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE SILVER PILLAR OF THE SEA.
+
+
+The next thing they found after this was an immense silver pillar
+standing in the sea. It had eight sides, each of which was the width of
+an oar-stroke of the curragh, so that its whole circumference was eight
+oar-strokes. It rose out of the sea without any land or earth about it,
+nothing but the boundless ocean; and they could not see its base deep
+down in the water, neither were they able to see the top on account of
+its vast height.
+
+A silver net hung from the top down to the very water, extending far out
+at one side of the pillar; and the meshes were so large that the curragh
+in full sail went through one of them. When they were passing through
+it, Diuran struck the mesh with the edge of his spear, and with the blow
+cut a large piece off it.
+
+"Do not destroy the net," said Maildun; "for what we see is the work of
+great men."
+
+"What I have done," answered Diuran, "is for the honour of my God, and
+in order that the story of our adventures may be more readily believed;
+and I shall lay this silver as an offering on the altar of Armagh, if I
+ever reach Erin."
+
+That piece of silver weighed two ounces and a half, as it was reckoned
+afterwards by the people of the church of Armagh.
+
+After this they heard some one speaking on the top of the pillar, in a
+loud, clear, glad voice; but they knew neither what he said, nor in what
+language he spoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+AN ISLAND STANDING ON ONE PILLAR.
+
+
+The island they saw after this was named Encos;[LXXV.] and it was so
+called because it was supported by a single pillar in the middle. They
+rowed all round it, seeking how they might get into it; but could find
+no landing-place. At the foot of the pillar, however, down deep in the
+water, they saw a door securely closed and locked, and they judged that
+this was the way into the island. They called aloud, to find out if any
+persons were living there; but they got no reply. So they left it, and
+put out to sea once more.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXV.] Encos means "one foot."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+THE ISLAND QUEEN DETAINS THEM WITH HER MAGIC THREAD-CLEW.
+
+The next island they reached was very large. On one side rose a lofty,
+smooth, heath-clad mountain, and all the rest of the island was a grassy
+plain. Near the sea-shore stood a great high palace, adorned with
+carvings and precious stones, and strongly fortified with a high rampart
+all round. After landing, they went towards the palace, and sat to rest
+on the bench before the gateway leading through the outer rampart; and,
+looking in through the open door, they saw a number of beautiful young
+maidens in the court.
+
+After they had sat for some time, a rider appeared at a distance, coming
+swiftly towards the palace; and on a near approach, the travellers
+perceived that it was a lady, young and beautiful and richly dressed.
+She wore a blue, rustling silk head-dress; a silver-fringed purple cloak
+hung from her shoulders; her gloves were embroidered with gold thread;
+and her feet were laced becomingly in close-fitting scarlet sandals. One
+of the maidens came out and held her horse, while she dismounted and
+entered the palace; and soon after she had gone in, another of the
+maidens came towards Maildun and his companions and said--
+
+"You are welcome to this island. Come into the palace; the queen has
+sent me to invite you, and is waiting to receive you."
+
+They followed the maiden into the palace; and the queen bade them
+welcome, and received them kindly. Then, leading them into a large hall
+in which a plentiful dinner was laid out, she bade them sit down and
+eat. A dish of choice food and a crystal goblet of wine were placed
+before Maildun; while a single dish and a single drinking-bowl, with a
+triple quantity of meat and drink, were laid before each three of his
+companions. And having eaten and drunk till they were satisfied, they
+went to sleep on soft couches till morning.
+
+Next day, the queen addressed Maildun and his companions--
+
+"Stay now in this country, and do not go a-wandering any longer over the
+wide ocean from island to island. Old age or sickness shall never come
+upon you; but you shall be always as young as you are at present, and
+you shall live for ever a life of ease and pleasure."
+
+"Tell us," said Maildun, "how you pass your life here."
+
+"That is no hard matter," answered the queen. "The good king who
+formerly ruled over this island was my husband, and these fair young
+maidens that you see are our children. He died after a long reign, and
+as he left no son, I now reign, the sole ruler of the island. And every
+day I go to the Great Plain, to administer justice and to decide causes
+among my people."
+
+"Wilt thou go from us to-day?" asked Maildun.
+
+"I must needs go even now," she replied, "to give judgments among the
+people; but as to you, you will all stay in this house till I return in
+the evening, and you need not trouble yourselves with any labour or
+care."
+
+They remained in that island during the three months of winter. And
+these three months appeared to Maildun's companions as long as three
+years, for they began to have an earnest desire to return to their
+native land. At the end of that time, one of them said to Maildun--
+
+"We have been a long time here; why do we not return to our own
+country?"
+
+"What you say is neither good nor sensible," answered Maildun, "for we
+shall not find in our own country anything better than we have here."
+
+But this did not satisfy his companions, and they began to murmur
+loudly. "It is quite clear," said they, "that Maildun loves the queen of
+this island; and as this is so, let him stay here; but as for us, we
+will return to our own country."
+
+Maildun, however, would not consent to remain after them, and he told
+them that he would go away with them.
+
+Now, on a certain day, not long after this conversation, as soon as the
+queen had gone to the Great Plain to administer justice, according to
+her daily custom, they got their curragh ready and put out to sea. They
+had not gone very far from land when the queen came riding towards the
+shore; and, seeing how matters stood, she went into the palace and soon
+returned with a ball of thread in her hand.
+
+Walking down to the water's edge, she flung the ball after the curragh,
+but held the end of the thread in her hand. Maildun caught the ball as
+it was passing, and it clung to his hand; and the queen, gently pulling
+the thread towards her, drew back the curragh to the very spot from
+which they had started in the little harbour. And when they had landed,
+she made them promise that if ever this happened again, some one should
+always stand up in the boat and catch the ball.
+
+The voyagers abode on the island, much against their will, for nine
+months longer. For every time they attempted to escape, the queen
+brought them back by means of the clew, as she had done at first,
+Maildun always catching the ball.
+
+At the end of the nine months, the men held council, and this is what
+they said--
+
+"We know now that Maildun does not wish to leave the island; for he
+loves this queen very much, and he catches the ball whenever we try to
+escape, in order that we may be brought back to the palace."
+
+Maildun replied, "Let some one else attend to the ball next time, and
+let us try whether it will cling to his hand."
+
+They agreed to this, and, watching their opportunity, they again put off
+towards the open sea. The queen arrived, as usual, before they had gone
+very far and flung the ball after them as before. Another man of the
+crew caught it, and it clung as firmly to his hand as to Maildun's; and
+the queen began to draw the curragh towards the shore. But Diuran,
+drawing his sword, cut off the man's hand, which fell with the ball into
+the sea; and the men gladly plying their oars, the curragh resumed her
+outward voyage.
+
+When the queen saw this, she began to weep and lament, wringing her
+hands and tearing her hair with grief; and her maidens also began to
+weep and cry aloud and clap their hands, so that the whole palace was
+full of grief and lamentation. But none the less did the men bend to
+their oars, and the curragh sailed away; and it was in this manner that
+the voyagers made their escape from the island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+THE ISLE OF INTOXICATING WINE-FRUITS.
+
+
+They were now a long time tossed about on the great billows, when at
+length they came in view of an island with many trees on it. These trees
+were somewhat like hazels, and they were laden with a kind of fruit
+which the voyagers had not seen before, extremely large, and not very
+different in appearance from apples, except that they had a rough,
+berry-like rind.
+
+After the crew had plucked all the fruit off one small tree, they cast
+lots who should try them, and the lot fell on Maildun. So he took some
+of them, and, squeezing the juice into a vessel, drank it. It threw him
+into a sleep of intoxication so deep that he seemed to be in a trance
+rather than in a natural slumber, without breath or motion, and with the
+red foam on his lips. And from that hour till the same hour next day, no
+one could tell whether he was living or dead.
+
+When he awoke next day, he bade his people to gather as much of the
+fruit as they could bring away with them; for the world, as he told
+them, never produced anything of such surpassing goodness. They pressed
+out the juice of the fruit till they had filled all their vessels; and
+so powerful was it to produce intoxication and sleep, that, before
+drinking it, they had to mix a large quantity of water with it to
+moderate its strength.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE MYSTIC LAKE.
+
+
+The island they came to next was larger than most of those they had
+seen. On one side grew a wood of yew trees and great oaks; and on the
+other side was a grassy plain, with one small lake in the midst. A
+noble-looking house stood on the near part of the plain, with a small
+church not far off; and numerous flocks of sheep browsed over the whole
+island.
+
+The travellers went to the church, and found in it a hermit, with
+snow-white beard and hair, and all the other marks of great old age.
+Maildun asked who he was, and whence he had come.
+
+He replied, "I am one of the fifteen people, who, following the example
+of our master, Brendan of Birra,[20] sailed on a pilgrimage out into the
+great ocean. After many wanderings, we settled on this island, where we
+lived for a long time; but my companions died one after another, and of
+all who came hither, I alone am left."
+
+The old pilgrim then showed them Brendan's satchel,[21] which he and his
+companions had brought with them on their pilgrimage; and Maildun kissed
+it, and all bowed down in veneration before it. And he told them that as
+long as they remained there, they might eat of the sheep and of the
+other food of the island; but to waste nothing.
+
+One day, as they were seated on a hill, gazing out over the sea, they
+saw what they took to be a black cloud coming towards them from the
+south-west. They continued to view it very closely as it came nearer and
+nearer; and at last they perceived with amazement that it was an immense
+bird, for they saw quite plainly the slow, heavy flapping of his wings.
+When he reached the island, he alighted on a little hillock over the
+lake; and they felt no small alarm, for they thought, on account of his
+vast size, that if he saw them, he might seize them in his talons, and
+carry them off over the sea. So they hid themselves under trees and in
+the crannies of rocks; but they never lost sight of the bird, for they
+were bent on watching his movements.
+
+He appeared very old, and he held in one claw a branch of a tree, which
+he had brought with him over the sea, larger and heavier than the
+largest full-grown oak. It was covered with fresh, green leaves, and was
+heavily laden with clusters of fruit, red and rich-looking like grapes,
+but much larger.
+
+He remained resting for a time on the hill, being much wearied after his
+flight, and at last he began to eat the fruit off the branch. After
+watching him for some time longer, Maildun ventured warily towards the
+hillock, to see whether he was inclined to mischief; but the bird showed
+no disposition to harm him. This emboldened the others, and they all
+followed their chief.
+
+The whole crew now marched in a body round the bird, headed by Maildun,
+with their shields raised; and as he still made no stir, one of the men,
+by Maildun's directions, went straight in front of him, and brought away
+some of the fruit from the branch which he still held in his talons. But
+the bird went on plucking and eating his fruit, and never took the least
+notice.
+
+On the evening of that same day, as the men sat looking over the sea to
+the south-west, where the great bird first appeared to them, they saw
+in the distance two others, quite as large, coming slowly towards them
+from the very same point. On they came, flying at a vast height, nearer
+and nearer, till at last they swooped down and alighted on the hillock
+in front of the first bird, one on each side.
+
+Although they were plainly much younger than the other, they seemed very
+tired, and took a long rest. Then, shaking their wings, they began
+picking the old bird all over, body, wings, and head, plucking out the
+old feathers and the decayed quill points, and smoothing down his
+plumage with their great beaks. After this had gone on for some time,
+the three began plucking the fruit off the branch, and they ate till
+they were satisfied.
+
+Next morning, the two birds began at the very same work, picking and
+arranging the feathers of the old bird as before; and at midday they
+ceased, and began again to eat the fruit, throwing the stones and what
+they did not eat of the pulp, into the lake, till the water became red
+like wine. After this the old bird plunged into the lake and remained in
+it, washing himself, till evening, when he again flew up on the hillock,
+but perched on a different part of it, to avoid touching and defiling
+himself with the old feathers and the other traces of age and decay,
+which the younger birds had removed from him.
+
+On the morning of the third day, the two younger birds set about
+arranging his feathers for the third time; and on this occasion they
+applied themselves to their task in a manner much more careful and
+particular than before, smoothing the plumes with the nicest touches,
+and arranging them in beautiful lines and glossy tufts and ridges. And
+so they continued without the least pause till midday, when they ceased.
+Then, after resting for a little while, they opened their great wings,
+rose into the air, and flew away swiftly towards the south-west, till
+the men lost sight of them in the distance.
+
+Meantime the old bird, after the others had left, continued to smooth
+and plume his feathers till evening; then, shaking his wings, he rose
+up, and flew three times round the island, as if to try his strength.
+And now the men observed that he had lost all the appearances of old
+age: his feathers were thick and glossy, his head was erect and his eye
+bright, and he flew with quite as much power and swiftness as the
+others. Alighting for the last time on the hillock, after resting a
+little, he rose again, and turning his flight after the other two, to
+the point from which he had come, he was soon lost to view, and the
+voyagers saw no more of him.
+
+It now appeared very clear to Maildun and his companions that this bird
+had undergone a renewal of youth from old age, according to the word of
+the prophet, which says, "Thy youth shall be renewed as the eagle."
+Diuran, seeing this great wonder, said to his companions--
+
+"Let us also bathe in the lake, and we shall obtain a renewal of youth
+like the bird."
+
+But they said, "Not so, for the bird has left the poison of his old age
+and decay in the water."
+
+Diuran, however, would have his own way; and he told them he was
+resolved to try the virtue of the water, and that they might follow his
+example or not, whichever they pleased. So he plunged in and swam about
+for some time, after which he took a little of the water and mixed it in
+his mouth; and in the end he swallowed a small quantity. He then came
+out perfectly sound and whole; and he remained so ever after, for as
+long as he lived he never lost a tooth or had a grey hair, and he
+suffered not from disease or bodily weakness of any kind. But none of
+the others ventured in.
+
+The voyagers, having remained long enough on this island, stored in
+their curragh a large quantity of the flesh of the sheep; and after
+bidding farewell to the ancient cleric, they sought the ocean once more.
+
+ Now once again, when winds and tide combine,
+ The flying curragh cleaves the crested brine.
+ Far to the west an island rose to view,
+ With verdant plains, clear streams, and mountains blue.
+ An aged hermit, bred in Erin's land,
+ Welcomed and blessed the chieftain and his band;
+ Brought food and drink, and bade them rest awhile,
+ And view the wonders of that lovely isle.
+ Lo, from the sea, three birds of monstrous size,
+ With vast wings slowly moving, cleave the skies;
+ And as they nearer drew, the sailors saw
+ One held a fruit branch firmly in his claw.
+ Down by the dear, mysterious lake they light,
+ Eat from the branch, and rest them from their flight.
+
+ The aged bird, with plumes decayed and thin,
+ Paused on the brink awhile, then, plunging in,
+ He bath'd and smooth'd his feathers o'er and o'er,
+ Shook his great wings and rested on the shore.
+ Now while the other two his plumes arrange,
+ Through all his frame appears a wondrous change:
+ His eyes grow bright, his head erect and bold,
+ His glossy plumage shines like burnished gold;
+ Free from old age, his glorious form expands;
+ In radiant youth and beauty proud he stands!
+ Such was the gift that lake of wonder gave;
+ Such was the virtue of its mystic wave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+THE ISLE OF LAUGHING.
+
+
+They next came to an island with a great plain extending over its whole
+surface. They saw a vast multitude of people on it, engaged in sundry
+youthful games, and all continually laughing. The voyagers cast lots who
+should go to examine the island; and the lot fell upon Maildun's third
+foster brother.
+
+The moment he landed he went among the others and joined in their
+pastimes and in their laughter, as if he had been among them all his
+life. His companions waited for him a very long time, but were afraid to
+venture to land after him; and at last, as there seemed no chance of his
+returning, they left him and sailed away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+THE ISLE OF THE BLEST.
+
+
+They came now to a small island with a high rampart of fire all round
+it; and that rampart revolved continually round the island. There was
+one large open door in the rampart; and whenever the door, in its
+involution, came in front of them, they could see almost the whole
+island through it, and all that was therein.
+
+And this is what they saw: A great number of people, beautiful and
+glorious-looking, wearing rich garments adorned and radiant all over,
+feasting joyously, and drinking from embossed vessels of red gold which
+they held in their hands. The voyagers heard also their cheerful,
+festive songs; and they marvelled greatly, and their hearts were full of
+gladness at all the happiness they saw and heard. But they did not
+venture to land.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+THE HERMIT OF THE SEA-ROCK.
+
+
+A little time after leaving this, they saw something a long way off
+towards the south, which at first they took to be a large white bird
+floating on the sea, and rising and falling with the waves; but on
+turning their curragh towards it for a nearer view, they found that it
+was a man. He was very old, so old that he was covered all over with
+long, white hair, which grew from his body; and he was standing on a
+broad, bare rock, and kept continually throwing himself on his knees,
+and never ceased praying.
+
+When they saw that he was a holy man, they asked and received his
+blessing; after which they began to converse with him; and they inquired
+who he was, and how he had come to that rock. Then the old man gave them
+the following account:--
+
+"I was born and bred in the island of Tory.[LXXVI.] When I grew up to be
+a man, I was cook to the brotherhood of the monastery; and a wicked cook
+I was; for every day I sold part of the food intrusted to me, and
+secretly bought many choice and rare things with the money. Worse even
+than this I did; I made secret passages underground into the church and
+into the houses belonging to it, and I stole from time to time great
+quantities of golden vestments, book-covers adorned with brass and gold,
+and other holy and precious things.
+
+"I soon became very rich, and had my rooms filled with costly couches,
+with clothes of every colour, both linen and woollen, with brazen
+pitchers and caldrons, and with brooches and armlets of gold. Nothing
+was wanting in my house, of furniture and ornament, that a person in a
+high rank of life might be expected to have; and I became very proud and
+overbearing.
+
+"One day, I was sent to dig a grave for the body of a rustic that had
+been brought from the mainland to be buried on the island. I went and
+fixed on a spot in the little graveyard; but as soon as I had set to
+work, I heard a voice speaking down deep in the earth beneath my feet--
+
+"'Do not dig this grave!'
+
+"I paused for a moment, startled; but, recovering myself, I gave no
+further heed to the mysterious words, and again I began to dig. The
+moment I did so, I heard the same voice, even more plainly than before--
+
+"'Do not dig this grave! I am a devout and holy person, and my body is
+lean and light; do not put the heavy, pampered body of that sinner down
+upon me!'
+
+"But I answered, in the excess of my pride and obstinacy, 'I will
+certainly dig this grave; and I will bury this body down on you!'
+
+"'If you put that body down on me, the flesh will fall off your bones,
+and you will die, and be sent to the infernal pit at the end of three
+days; and, moreover, the body will not remain where you put it.'
+
+"'What will you give me,' I asked, 'if I do not bury the corpse on you?'
+
+"'Everlasting life in heaven,' replied the voice.
+
+"'How do you know this; and how am I to be sure of it?' I inquired.
+
+"And the voice answered me, 'The grave you are digging is clay. Observe
+now whether it will remain so, and then you will know the truth of what
+I tell you. And you will see that what I say will come to pass, and that
+you cannot bury that man on me, even if you should try to do so.'
+
+"These words were scarce ended, when the grave was turned into a mass of
+white sand before my face. And when I saw this, I brought the body away,
+and buried it elsewhere.
+
+"It happened, some time after, that I got a new curragh made, with the
+hides painted red all over; and I went to sea in it. As I sailed by the
+shores and islands, I was so pleased with the view of the land and sea
+from my curragh that I resolved to live altogether in it for some time;
+and I brought on board all my treasures--silver cups, gold bracelets,
+and ornamented drinking-horns, and everything else, from the largest to
+the smallest article.
+
+"I enjoyed myself for a time, while the air was clear and the sea calm
+and smooth. But one day, the winds suddenly arose and a storm burst upon
+me, which carried me out to sea, so that I quite lost sight of land, and
+I knew not in what direction the curragh was drifting. After a time, the
+wind abated to a gentle gale, the sea became smooth, and the curragh
+sailed on as before, with a quiet, pleasant movement.
+
+"But suddenly, though the breeze continued to blow, I thought I could
+perceive that the curragh ceased moving, and, standing up to find out
+the cause, I saw with great surprise an old man not far off, sitting on
+the crest of a wave.
+
+"He spoke to me; and, as soon as I heard his voice, I knew it at once,
+but I could not at the moment call to mind where I had heard it before.
+And I became greatly troubled, and began to tremble, I knew not why.
+
+"'Whither art thou going?' he asked.
+
+"'I know not,' I replied; 'but this I know, I am pleased with the
+smooth, gentle motion of my curragh over the waves.'
+
+"'You would not be pleased,' replied the old man, 'if you could see the
+troops that are at this moment around you.'
+
+"'What troops do you speak of?' I asked. And he answered--
+
+"'All the space round about you, as far as your view reaches over the
+sea, and upwards to the clouds, is one great towering mass of demons, on
+account of your avarice, your thefts, your pride, and your other crimes
+and vices.'
+
+"He then asked, 'Do you know why your curragh has stopped?'
+
+"I answered, 'No;' and he said, 'It has been stopped by me; and it will
+never move from that spot till you promise me to do what I shall ask of
+you.'
+
+"I replied that perhaps it was not in my power to grant his demand.
+
+"'It is in your power,' he answered; 'and if you refuse me, the torments
+of hell shall be your doom.'
+
+"He then came close to the curragh, and, laying his hands on me, he
+made me swear to do what he demanded.
+
+"'What I ask is this,' said he; 'that you throw into the sea this moment
+all the ill-gotten treasures you have in the curragh.'
+
+"This grieved me very much, and I replied, 'It is a pity that all these
+costly things should be lost.'
+
+"To which he answered, 'They will not go to loss; a person will be sent
+to take charge of them. Now do as I say.'
+
+"So, greatly against my wishes, I threw all the beautiful precious
+articles overboard, keeping only a small wooden cup to drink from.
+
+"'You will now continue your voyage,' he said; 'and the first solid
+ground your curragh reaches, there you are to stay.'
+
+"He then gave me seven cakes and a cup of watery whey as food for my
+voyage; after which the curragh moved on, and I soon lost sight of him.
+And now I all at once recollected that the old man's voice was the same
+as the voice that I had heard come from the ground, when I was about to
+dig the grave for the body of the rustic. I was so astonished and
+troubled at this discovery, and so disturbed at the loss of all my
+wealth, that I threw aside my oars, and gave myself up altogether to the
+winds and currents, not caring whither I went; and for a long time I was
+tossed about on the waves, I knew not in what direction.
+
+"At last it seemed to me that my curragh ceased to move; but I was not
+sure about it, for I could see no sign of land. Mindful, however, of
+what the old man had told me, that I was to stay wherever my curragh
+stopped, I looked round more carefully; and at last I saw, very near me,
+a small rock level with the surface, over which the waves were gently
+laughing and tumbling. I stepped on to the rock; and the moment I did
+so, the waves seemed to spring back, and the rock rose high over the
+level of the water; while the curragh drifted by and quickly
+disappeared, so that I never saw it after. This rock has been my abode
+from that time to the present day.
+
+"For the first seven years, I lived on the seven cakes and the cup of
+whey given me by the man who had sent me to the rock. At the end of that
+time the cakes were all gone; and for three days I fasted, with nothing
+but the whey to wet my mouth. Late in the evening of the third day, an
+otter brought me a salmon out of the sea; but though I suffered much
+from hunger, I could not bring myself to eat the fish raw, and it was
+washed back again into the waves.
+
+"I remained without food for three days longer; and in the afternoon of
+the third day, the otter returned with the salmon. And I saw another
+otter bring firewood; and when he had piled it up on the rock, he blew
+it with his breath till it took fire and lighted up. And then I broiled
+the salmon and ate till I had satisfied my hunger.
+
+"The otter continued to bring me a salmon every day, and in this manner
+I lived for seven years longer. The rock also grew larger and larger
+daily, till it became the size you now see it. At the end of seven
+years, the otter ceased to bring me my salmon, and I fasted for three
+days. But at the end of the third day, I was sent half a cake of fine
+wheaten flour and a slice of fish; and on the same day my cup of watery
+whey fell into the sea, and a cup of the same size, filled with good
+ale, was placed on the rock for me.
+
+"And so I have lived, praying and doing penance for my sins to this
+hour. Each day my drinking-vessel is filled with ale, and I am sent half
+a wheat-flour cake and a slice of fish; and neither rain nor wind, nor
+heat, nor cold, is allowed to molest me on this rock."
+
+This was the end of the old man's history. In the evening of that day,
+each man of the crew received the same quantity of food that was sent to
+the old hermit himself, namely, half a cake and a slice of fish; and
+they found in the vessel as much good ale as served them all.
+
+The next morning he said to them, "You shall all reach your own country
+in safety. And you, Maildun, you shall find in an island on your way,
+the very man that slew your father; but you are neither to kill him nor
+take revenge on him in any way. As God has delivered you from the many
+dangers you have passed through, though you were very guilty, and well
+deserved death at His hands; so you forgive your enemy the crime he
+committed against you."
+
+After this they took leave of the old man and sailed away.
+
+
+THE OLD HERMIT'S STORY.
+
+ The storms may roar and the seas may rage,
+ But here, on this bare, brown rock,
+ I pray and repent and I tell my beads,
+ Secure from the hurricane's shock.
+
+ For the good, kind God, in pity to me,
+ Holds out His protecting hand;
+ And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,
+ Can molest me where I stand.
+
+ I robbed the churches and wronged the poor,
+ And grew richer day by day;
+ But now on this bare, brown ocean rock,
+ A heavy penance I pay.
+
+ A bloated sinner died unshrived,
+ And they brought his corse to me--
+ "Go, dig the grave and bury the dead,
+ And pray for the soul set free."
+
+ I dug the grave, but my hands were stayed
+ By a solemn and fearful sound,
+ For the feeble tones of a dead man's voice
+ Came up from the hollow ground!
+
+_The dead monk speaks up from the grave_--
+
+ Place not that pampered corse on mine,
+ For my bones are weak and thin;
+ I cannot bear the heavy weight
+ Of a body defiled by sin.
+
+ I was a meek and holy man;
+ I fasted and watched and prayed;
+ A sinner's corse would defile the clay
+ Where my wasted body is laid.
+
+_The old hermit continues his story_--
+
+ The voice then ceased, and I heard no more
+ Its hollow, beseeching tone;
+ Then I closed the grave, and left the old monk
+ To rest in his coffin alone.
+
+ My curragh sailed on the western main,
+ And I saw, as I viewed the sea,
+ A withered old man upon a wave;
+ And he fixed his eyes on me.
+
+ He spoke, and his voice my heart's blood froze,
+ And I shook with horror and fear:
+ 'Twas the very voice of the dead old monk
+ That sounded in mine ear!
+
+_The dead monk speaks again_--
+
+ Far from my grave the sinner's corse
+ In unhallowed clay lies deep;
+ And now in my coffin, undefiled,
+ For ever in peace I sleep.
+
+ Go, live and pray on the bare, brown rock,
+ Far out in the stormy sea;
+ A heavy penance for heavy crimes,
+ And heaven at last for thee!
+
+_The old hermit ends his story_--
+
+ And here I live from age to age;
+ I pray and repent and fast;
+ An otter brings me food each day,
+ And I hope for heaven at last.
+
+ The tempests roar and the billows rage,
+ But God holds forth His hand,
+ And cold nor heat nor storm nor sleet,
+ Can harm me where I stand.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXVI.] Tory Island, off the coast of Donegal, where there was a
+monastery dedicated to St. Columkille.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+SIGNS OF HOME.
+
+
+Soon after they saw a beautiful verdant island, with herds of oxen,
+cows, and sheep browsing all over its hills and valleys; but no houses
+nor inhabitants were to be seen. And they rested for some time on this
+island, and ate the flesh of the cows and sheep.
+
+One day, while they were standing on a hill, a large falcon flew by; and
+two of the crew, who happened to look closely at him, cried out, in the
+hearing of Maildun--
+
+"See that falcon! he is surely like the falcons of Erin!"
+
+"Watch him closely," cried Maildun; "and observe exactly in what
+direction he is flying!"
+
+And they saw that he flew to the south-east, without turning or
+wavering.
+
+They went on board at once; and, having unmoored, they sailed to the
+south-east after the falcon. After rowing the whole day, they sighted
+land in the dusk of the evening, which seemed to them like the land of
+Erin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+MAILDUN MEETS HIS ENEMY, AND ARRIVES HOME.
+
+
+On a near approach, they found it was a small island; and now they
+recognised it as the very same island they had seen in the beginning of
+their voyage, in which they had heard the man in the great house boast
+that he had slain Maildun's father, and from which the storm had driven
+them out into the great ocean.
+
+They turned the prow of their vessel to the shore, landed, and went
+towards the house. It happened that at this very time the people of the
+house were seated at their evening meal; and Maildun and his companions,
+as they stood outside, heard a part of their conversation.
+
+Said one to another, "It would not be well for us if we were now to see
+Maildun."
+
+"As to Maildun," answered another, "it is very well known that he was
+drowned long ago in the great ocean."
+
+"Do not be sure," observed a third; "perchance he is the very man that
+may waken you up some morning from your sleep."
+
+"Supposing he came now," asks another, "what should we do?"
+
+The head of the house now spoke in reply to the last question; and
+Maildun at once knew his voice--
+
+"I can easily answer that," said he. "Maildun has been for a long time
+suffering great afflictions and hardships; and if he were to come now,
+though we were enemies once, I should certainly give him a welcome and a
+kind reception."
+
+When Maildun heard this he knocked at the door, and the door-keeper
+asked who was there; to which Maildun made answer--
+
+"It is I, Maildun, returned safely from all my wanderings."
+
+The chief of the house then ordered the door to be opened; and he went
+to meet Maildun, and brought himself and his companions into the house.
+They were joyfully welcomed by the whole household; new garments were
+given to them; and they feasted and rested, till they forgot their
+weariness and their hardships.
+
+They related all the wonders God had revealed to them in the course of
+their voyage, according to the word of the sage who says, "It will be a
+source of pleasure to remember these things at a future time."
+
+After they had remained here for some days, Maildun returned to his own
+country. And Diuran Lekerd took the five half-ounces of silver he had
+cut down from the great net at the Silver Pillar, and laid it, according
+to his promise, on the high altar of Armagh.
+
+
+
+
+THE FAIRY PALACE OF THE QUICKEN TREES.[LXXVII.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+COLGA, KING OF LOCHLANN, INVADES ERIN, AND IS SLAIN.
+
+
+Once upon a time, a noble, warlike king ruled over Lochlann,[6] whose
+name was Colga of the Hard Weapons. On a certain occasion, this king
+held a meeting of his chief people, on the broad, green plain before his
+palace of Berva.[6] And when they were all gathered together, he spoke
+to them in a loud, clear voice, from where he sat high on his throne;
+and he asked them whether they found any fault with the manner in which
+he ruled them, and whether they knew of anything deserving of blame in
+him as their sovereign lord and king. They replied, as if with the voice
+of one man, that they found no fault of any kind.
+
+Then the king spoke again and said, "You see not as I see. Do you not
+know that I am called King of the Four Tribes of Lochlann, and of the
+Islands of the Sea? And yet there is one island which acknowledges not
+my rule."
+
+And when they had asked which of the islands he meant, he said--
+
+"That island is Erin of the green hills. My forefathers, indeed, held
+sway over it, and many of our brave warriors died there in fight. There
+fell the great king, Balor of the Mighty Blows;[9] his son Bres[9] also;
+and his queen, Kethlenda of the Crooked Teeth;[9] there, too, fell Irann
+and Slana, sisters of the king; and many others that I do not name. But
+though our hosts at last subdued the land and laid it under tribute, yet
+they held it not long; for the men of Erin arose and expelled our army,
+regaining their ancient freedom.
+
+"And now it is my desire that we once more sail to Erin with a fleet and
+an army, to bring it under my power, and take, either by consent or by
+force, the tributes that are due to me by right. And we shall thereafter
+hold the island in subjection till the end of the world."
+
+The chiefs approved the counsel of the king, and the meeting broke up.
+
+Then the king made proclamation, and sent his swift scouts and couriers
+all over the land, to muster his fighting men, till he had assembled a
+mighty army in one place.
+
+And when they had made ready their curve-sided, white-sailed ships, and
+their strong, swift-gliding boats, the army embarked. And they raised
+their sails and plied their oars; and they cleft the billowy, briny sea;
+and the clear, cold winds whistled through their sails; and they made
+neither stop nor stay, till they landed on the shore of the province of
+Ulad.[LXXVIII.]
+
+The King of Ireland at that time was Cormac Mac Art,[22] the grandson of
+Conn the Hundred-fighter.[18] And when Cormac heard that a great fleet
+had come to Erin, and landed an army of foreigners, he straightway sent
+tidings of the invasion to Allen[LXXIX.] of the green hill-slopes, where
+lived Finn,[23] and the noble Fena[23] of the Gaels.
+
+When the king's messengers had told their tale, Finn despatched his
+trusty, swift-footed couriers to every part of Erin where he knew the
+Fena dwelt; and he bade them to say that all should meet him at a
+certain place, near that part of the coast where the Lochlann army lay
+encamped. And he himself led the Fena of Leinster northwards to join the
+muster.
+
+They attacked the foreigners, and the foreigners were not slow to meet
+their onset; and the Fena were sore pressed in that battle, so that at
+one time the Lochlanns were like to prevail.
+
+Oscar, the son of Oisin,[23] when he saw his friends falling all round
+him, was grieved to the heart; and he rested for a space to gather his
+wrath and his strength. Then, renewing the fight, he rushed with fury
+towards the standard of Colga, the Lochlann king, dealing havoc and
+slaughter among those foreigners that stood in his track. The king saw
+Oscar approach, and met him; and they fought a deadly battle
+hand-to-hand. Soon their shields were rent, their hard helmets were
+dinted with sword-blows, their armour was pierced in many places, and
+their flesh was torn with deep wounds. And the end of the fight was,
+that the king of the foreigners was slain by Oscar, the son of Oisin.
+
+When the Lochlanns saw their king fall, they lost heart, and the battle
+went against them. But they fought on nevertheless, till evening, when
+their army entirely gave way, and fled from the field. And of all the
+nobles and princes and mighty chiefs who sailed to Erin on that
+expedition, not one was left alive, except the youngest son of the king,
+whose name was Midac. Him Finn spared on account of his youth; with
+intent to bring him up in his own household.
+
+After the Fena had rested for a time, and buried their dead, they turned
+their faces southward, and marched slowly towards Allen, bringing their
+sick and wounded companions. And Finn placed Midac among the household
+of Allen, treating him honourably, and giving him servants and tutors.
+Moreover, he enlisted him in the Fena, and gave him a high post as
+befitted a prince.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXVII.] The quicken tree, or quickbeam, or mountain ash, or roan-tree;
+Gaelic, _caerthainn_. Many mystic virtues were anciently attributed to
+this tree.
+
+[LXXVIII.] Ulad, _i.e._ Ulster.
+
+[LXXIX.] The Hill of Allen, in the county Kildare, where Finn had his
+palace. (See note 23 at the end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+MIDAC, THE SON OF COLGA, MEDITATES REVENGE.
+
+
+After this things went on as before, while Midac grew up towards
+manhood, and hunted and feasted with the Fena, and fought with them when
+they fought. But he never lost an opportunity of making himself
+acquainted with all their haunts and hunting-grounds, their palaces and
+fortresses, and in particular with their manner of carrying on war.
+
+It happened one day that Finn and some of his leading chiefs were in
+council, considering sundry matters, especially the state and condition
+of the Fena; and each chief was commanded by Finn to speak, and give his
+opinion or advice on anything that he deemed weighty enough to be
+debated by the meeting.
+
+And after many had spoken, Conan Mail, the son of Morna, stood up and
+said--
+
+"It seems to me, O king, that you and I and the Fena in general are now
+in great danger. For you have in your house, and mixing with your
+people, a young man who has good cause of enmity towards you; that is to
+say, Midac, the son of the king of Lochlann. For was it not by you that
+his father and brothers and many of his friends were slain? Now I notice
+that this young prince is silent and distant, and talks little to those
+around him. Moreover, I see that day after day he takes much pains to
+know all matters relating to the Fena; and as he has friends in
+Lochlann, mighty men with armies and ships, I fear me the day may come
+when this prince will use his knowledge to our destruction."
+
+The king said that all this was quite true, and he asked Conan to give
+his opinion as to what should be done.
+
+"What I advise in the matter is this," said Conan, "that Midac be not
+allowed to abide any longer in the palace of Allen. But as it is meet
+that he should be treated in a manner becoming a prince, let him be
+given a tract of land for himself in some other part of Erin, with a
+home and a household of his own. Then shall we be freed from his
+presence, and he can no longer listen to our counsels, and learn all our
+secrets and all our plans."
+
+This speech seemed to Finn and the other chiefs reasonable and prudent,
+and they agreed to follow the advice of Conan Mail.
+
+Accordingly Finn sent for the prince, and said to him--
+
+"Thou knowest, Midac, that thou hast been brought up from boyhood in my
+household, and that thou hast been dealt with in every way as becomes a
+prince. Now thou art a man, and standest in no further need of
+instruction, for thou hast learned everything needful for a prince and
+for a champion of the Fena; and it is not meet that thou shouldst abide
+longer in the house of another. Choose, therefore, the two cantreds
+that please thee best in all Erin, and they shall be given to thee and
+to thy descendants for ever as a patrimony. There thou shalt build
+houses and a homestead for thyself, and I will help thee with men and
+with cattle and with all things else necessary."
+
+Midac listened in silence; and when the king had done speaking, he
+replied in a cold and distant manner and in few words, that the proposal
+was reasonable and proper, and pleased him well. And thereupon he chose
+the rich cantred of Kenri on the Shannon, and the cantred of the Islands
+lying next to it on the north, at the other side of the river.[LXXX.]
+
+Now Midac had good reasons for choosing these two territories beyond all
+others in Erin. For the river opens out between them like a great sea,
+in which are many islands and sheltered harbours, where ships might
+anchor in safety; and he hoped to bring a fleet and an army into Erin
+some day, to avenge on Finn and the Fena the defeats they had inflicted
+on his countrymen, and above all, the death of his father and brothers.
+And being bent on treachery, he could not have chosen in all Erin a
+territory better suited for carrying out his secret designs.
+
+So these two cantreds were bestowed on Midac. Finn gave him also much
+cattle and wealth of all kinds; so that when his houses were built, and
+when he was settled in his new territory, with his servants and his
+cattle and his wealth all round him, there was no brugaid[LXXXI.] in
+Erin richer or more prosperous than he.
+
+For fourteen years Midac lived in his new home, growing richer every
+year. But the Fena knew nothing of his way of life, for he kept himself
+apart, and none of his old acquaintances visited him. And though he was
+enrolled in the ranks of the Fena, he never, during all that time,
+invited one of them to his house, or offered them food or drink or
+entertainment of any kind.
+
+One day, Finn and the Fena went to hunt in the district of Fermorc,[C]
+and over the plains of Hy Conall Gavra.[LXXXII.] And when all was
+arranged and the chase about to begin, Finn himself, and a few of his
+companions, went to the top of the hill of Knockfierna[LXXXIII.] to see
+the sport; while the main body of the Fena scattered themselves over the
+plain with their dogs and attendants, to start the deer and the wild
+boars and all the other game of the forest.
+
+Then Finn's people pitched their tents, and made soft couches of rushes
+and heather, and dug cooking-places[24]; for they intended the hill to
+be the resting-place of all who chose to rest, till the chase was
+ended.
+
+After Finn and his companions had sat for some time on the hill, they
+saw a tall warrior coming towards them, armed in full battle array. He
+wore a splendid coat of mail of Lochlann workmanship, and over it a
+mantle of fine satin dyed in divers colours. A broad shield hung on his
+left shoulder, and his helmet glittered in the morning sun like polished
+silver. At his left side hung a long sword, with golden hilt and
+enamelled sheath; and he held in his right hand his two long, polished,
+death-dealing spears. His figure and gait were wonderfully majestic, and
+as he came near, he saluted the king in stately and courteous words.
+
+Finn returned the salutation, and spoke with him for a while; and at
+length he asked him whence he had come, and if he had brought any
+tidings.
+
+"As to the place I came from," he answered, "that need not be spoken of;
+and for news, I have nothing to tell except that I am a
+ferdana,[LXXXIV.] and that I have come to thee, O king of the Fena, with
+a poem."
+
+"Methinks, indeed," replied Finn, "that conflict and battle are the
+poetry you profess; for never have I seen a hero more noble in mien and
+feature."
+
+"I am a ferdana nevertheless," answered the stranger; "and if thou dost
+not forbid me, I will prove it by reciting a poem I have brought for
+thee."
+
+"A mountain-top is not the place for poetry," said Finn; "and moreover,
+there is now no opportunity either for reciting or listening. For I and
+these few companions of mine have come to sit here that we may view the
+chase, and listen to the eager shouts of the men, and the sweet cry of
+the hounds.
+
+"But if you are, as you say," continued Finn, "a ferdana, remain here
+with us till the chase is ended; and then you shall come with me to one
+of our palaces, where I shall listen to your poem, and bestow on you
+such gifts as are meet for a poet of your rank."
+
+But the strange champion answered, "It is not my wish to go to your
+palace; and I now put you under gesa,[12] which true heroes do not
+suffer, that you listen to my poem, and that you find out and explain
+its meaning."
+
+"Well then," said Finn, "let there be no further delay; repeat your
+poem."
+
+So the hero recited the following verse:--
+
+ I saw a house by a river's shore,
+ Famed through Erin in days of yore,
+ Radiant with sparkling gems all o'er,
+ Its lord deep skilled in magical lore;
+ No conqueror ever defiled its floor;
+ No spoiler can rive its golden store;
+ Fire cannot burn its battlements hoar;
+ Safe it stands when the torrents pour;
+ Feasting and joy for evermore,
+ To all who enter its open door!
+ Now if thou hast learned a champion's lore,
+ Tell me the name of that mansion hoar,
+ With roof of crystal and marble floor--
+ The mansion I saw by the river's shore.
+
+"I can explain that poem," said Finn. "The mansion you saw is Bruga of
+the Boyne,[LXXXV.] the fairy palace of Angus, the Dedannan prince, son
+of the Dagda, which is open to all who wish to partake of its feasts and
+its enjoyments. It cannot be burned by fire, or drowned by water, or
+spoiled by robbers, on account of the great power of its lord and
+master; for there is not now, and there never was, and there never shall
+be, in Erin, a man more skilled in magic arts than Angus of the Bruga."
+
+"That is the sense of my poem," said the stranger; "and now listen to
+this other, and explain it to me if thou canst"--
+
+ I saw to the south a bright-faced queen,
+ With couch of crystal and robe of green;
+ A numerous offspring, sprightly and small,
+ Plain through her skin you can see them all;
+ Slowly she moves, and yet her speed
+ Exceeds the pace of the swiftest steed!
+ Now tell me the name of that wondrous queen,
+ With her couch of crystal and robe of green.[LXXXVI.]
+
+"I understand the sense of that poem also," said Finn. "The queen you
+saw is the river Boyne, which flows by the south side of the palace of
+Bruga. Her couch of crystal is the sandy bed of the river; and her robe
+of green the grassy plain of Bregia,[LXXXVII.] through which it flows.
+Her children, which you can see through her skin, are the speckled
+salmon, the lively, pretty trout, and all the other fish that swim in
+the clear water of the river. The river flows slowly indeed; but its
+waters traverse the whole world in seven years, which is more than the
+swiftest steed can do."
+
+"These are my poems," said the champion; "and thou hast truly explained
+their meaning."
+
+"And now," said Finn, "as I have listened to thy poetry and explained
+it, tell us, I pray thee, who thou art and whence thou hast come; for I
+marvel much that so noble a champion should live in any of the five
+provinces of Erin without being known to me and my companions."
+
+Then Conan Mail spoke. "Thou art, O king, the wisest and most far-seeing
+of the Fena, and thou hast unravelled and explained the hard poetical
+puzzles of this champion. Yet, on the present occasion, thou knowest not
+a friend from a foe; for this man is Midac, whom thou didst bring up
+with much honour in thine own house, and afterwards made rich, but who
+is now thy bitter enemy, and the enemy of all the Fena. Here he has
+lived for fourteen years, without fellowship or communication with his
+former companions. And though he is enrolled in the order of the Fena,
+he has never, during all that time, invited thee to a banquet, or come
+to see any of his old friends, or given food or entertainment to any of
+the Fena, either master or man."
+
+Midac answered, "If Finn and the Fena have not feasted with me, that is
+none of my fault; for my house has never been without a banquet fit for
+either king or chief; but you never came to partake of it. I did not,
+indeed, send you an invitation; but that you should not have waited for,
+seeing that I was one of the Fena, and that I was brought up in your own
+household. Howbeit, let that pass. I have now a feast ready, in all
+respects worthy of a king; and I put you under gesa that you and the
+chiefs that are here with you, come this night to partake of it. I have
+two palaces, and in each there is a banquet. One is the Palace of the
+Island, which stands on the sea; and the other is the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, which is a little way off from this hill; and it is to
+this that I wish you to come."
+
+Finn consented; and Midac, after he had pointed out the way to the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees, left them, saying he would go before, that
+he might have things in readiness when they should arrive.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXX.] The cantreds of Kenri and Islands are now two baronies: the
+former the barony of Kenry, in Limerick, a little below the city; the
+latter the barony of Islands, in Clare, on the opposite side of the
+Shannon, including the mouth of the river Fergus, with its numerous
+_islands_, from which the barony has its name.
+
+[LXXXI.] Brugaid, a sort of local officer, who was allowed a tract of
+land free, on condition that he maintained a large establishment as a
+house of public hospitality. Many of the brugaids were very rich.
+
+[LXXXII.] Fermorc and Hy Conall Gavra are now the baronies of Upper and
+Lower Connello, in the county Limerick.
+
+[LXXXIII.] Knockfierna, a conspicuous hill, celebrated for its fairy
+lore, near Croom, in the county Limerick; very near Kenri, Midac's
+territory.
+
+[LXXXIV.] Ferdana, a poet.
+
+[LXXXV.] Bruga of the Boyne. (See note, page 62.)
+
+[LXXXVI.] The poets were much given to proposing poetical puzzles of
+this kind; and it was considered a mark of superior education, and of
+great acuteness in a champion to be able to explain them. (For another
+example, see the enigmatical verse about the skin of the pig, in the
+story of "The Children of Turenn," page 69.)
+
+[LXXXVII.] Bregia or Magh Breagh, the ancient name of the plain
+extending from the Liffey northwards to the borders of the county Louth.
+(For this name, see the author's "Irish Names of Places," Series II.
+Part IV. chap. II.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FINN IS ENTRAPPED BY MIDAC, AND HELD BY ENCHANTMENT IN THE PALACE OF THE
+QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+Finn now held council with his companions, and they agreed that the
+king's son, Oisin, and five other chiefs, with their followers, should
+tarry on the hill till the hunting party returned, while Finn went to
+the palace with the rest.
+
+And it was arranged that Finn should send back word immediately to the
+party on the hill, how he fared; and that Oisin and the others were to
+follow him to the palace when the hunting party had returned.
+
+Those that remained with Oisin were Dermat O'Dyna; Fatha Conan, the son
+of the son of Conn; Kylta Mac Ronan; Ficna, the son of Finn; and Innsa,
+the son of Swena Selga.
+
+And of those who went with Finn to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, the
+chief were Gaul Mac Morna; Dathkeen the Strong-limbed; Mac Luga of the
+Red Hand; Glas Mac Encarda from Beara; the two sons of Aed the Lesser,
+son of Finn; Racad and Dalgus, the two kings of Leinster; Angus Mac
+Bresal Bola; and the two leaders of the Connaught Fena, namely,
+Mac-na-Corra and Corr the Swift-footed.
+
+As Finn and his party came nigh to the palace, they were amazed at its
+size and splendour; and they wondered greatly that they had never seen
+it before. It stood on a level green, which was surrounded by a light
+plantation of quicken trees, all covered with clusters of scarlet
+berries. At one side of the little plain, very near the palace, was a
+broad river, with a rocky bank at the near side, and a steep pathway
+leading down to a ford.
+
+But what surprised them most was that all was lonely and silent--not a
+living soul could they see in any direction; and Finn, fearing some
+foul play, would have turned back, only that he bethought him of his
+gesa and his promise. The great door was wide open, and Conan went in
+before the others; and after viewing the banqueting hall, he came out
+quite enraptured with what he had seen. He praised the beauty and
+perfect arrangement of everything, and told his companions that no other
+king or chief in all Erin had a banqueting hall to match the hall of
+Midac, the son of Colga. They all now entered, but they found no
+one--neither host nor guests nor attendants.
+
+As they gazed around, they thought they had never seen a banquet hall so
+splendid. A great fire burned brightly in the middle, without any smoke,
+and sent forth a sweet perfume, which filled the whole room with
+fragrance, and cheered and delighted the heroes. Couches were placed all
+round, with rich coverlets and rugs, and soft, glossy furs. The curved
+walls were of wood,[LXXXVIII.] close-jointed and polished like ivory;
+and each board was painted differently from those above and below; so
+that the sides of the room, from floor to roof, were all radiant with a
+wonderful variety of colours.
+
+Still seeing no one, they seated themselves on the couches and rugs.
+Presently a door opened, and Midac walked into the room. He stood for a
+few moments before the heroes, and looked at them one after another,
+but never spoke one word; then, turning round, he went out and shut the
+great door behind him.
+
+Finn and his friends were much surprised at this; however, they said
+nothing, but remained resting as they were for some time, expecting
+Midac's return. Still no one came, and at length Finn spoke--
+
+"We have been invited here, my friends, to a banquet; and it seems to me
+very strange that we should be left so long without attendance, and
+without either food or drink. Perhaps, indeed, Midac's attendants have
+made some mistake, and that the feast intended for this palace has been
+prepared in the Palace of the Island. But I wonder greatly that such a
+thing should have happened."
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Gaul Mac Morna; "for
+lo, the fire, which was clear and smokeless when we first saw it, and
+which smelled more sweetly than the flowers of the plain, now fills the
+hall with a foul stench, and sends up a great cloud of black, sooty
+smoke!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Glas Mac Encarda; "for
+the boards in the walls of this banquet hall, which were smooth and
+close-jointed and glorious all over with bright colours when we came,
+are now nothing but rough planks, clumsily fastened together with tough
+quicken tree withes, and as rude and unshapen as if they had been hacked
+and hewed with a blunt axe!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Foilan, the son of Aed
+the Lesser; "for this palace, which had seven great doors when we came
+in, all wide open, and looking pleasantly towards the sunshine, has now
+only one small, narrow door, close fastened, and facing straight to the
+north!"
+
+"I see something more wonderful than that," said Conan Mail; "for the
+rich rugs and furs and the soft couches, which were under us when we sat
+here first, are all gone, not as much as a fragment or a thread
+remaining; and we are now sitting on the bare, damp earth, which feels
+as cold as the snow of one night!"[LXXXIX.]
+
+Then Finn again spoke. "You know, my friends, that I never tarry in a
+house having only one door. Let one of you then, arise, and break open
+that narrow door, so that we may go forth from this foul, smoky den!"
+
+"That shall be done," cried Conan; and, so saying, he seized his long
+spear, and, planting it on the floor, point downwards, he attempted to
+spring to his feet. But he found that he was not able to move, and
+turning to his companions, he cried out with a groan of anguish--
+
+"Alas, my friends! I see now something more wonderful than all; for I am
+firmly fixed by some druidical spell to the cold clay floor of the
+Palace of the Quicken Trees!"
+
+And immediately all the others found themselves, in like manner, fixed
+where they sat. And they were silent for a time, being quite confounded
+and overwhelmed with fear and anguish.
+
+At length Gaul spoke, and said, "It seems clear, O king, that Midac has
+planned this treachery, and that danger lies before us. I wish, then,
+that you would place your thumb under your tooth of knowledge,[25] and
+let us know the truth; so that we may at once consider as to the best
+means of escaping from this strait."
+
+Whereupon Finn placed his thumb under his tooth of knowledge, and mused
+for a little while. Then suddenly withdrawing his thumb, he sank back in
+his seat and groaned aloud.
+
+"May it be the will of the gods," said Gaul, "that it is the pain of thy
+thumb that has caused thee to utter that groan!"
+
+"Alas! not so," replied Finn. "I grieve that my death is near, and the
+death of these dear companions! For fourteen years has Midac, the son of
+the king of Lochlann, been plotting against us; and now at last he has
+caught us in this treacherous snare, from which I can see no escape.
+
+"For in the Palace of the Island there is, at this moment, an army of
+foreigners, whom Midac has brought hither for our destruction. Chief
+over all is Sinsar of the Battles, from Greece, the Monarch of the
+World, who has under his command sixteen warlike princes, with many
+others of lesser note. Next to Sinsar is his son, Borba the Haughty,
+who commands also a number of fierce and hardy knights.
+
+"There are, besides, the three kings of the Island of the Torrent,
+large-bodied and bloodthirsty, like three furious dragons, who have
+never yet yielded to an enemy on the field of battle. It is these who,
+by their sorcery, have fixed us here; for this cold clay that we sit on
+is part of the soil of the enchanted Island of the Torrent, which they
+brought hither, and placed here with foul spells. Moreover, the
+enchantment that binds us to this floor can never be broken unless the
+blood of these kings be sprinkled on the clay. And very soon some of
+Sinsar's warriors will come over from the Palace of the Island, to slay
+us all, while we are fixed here helpless, and unable to raise a hand in
+our own defence."
+
+Full of alarm and anguish were the heroes when they heard these tidings.
+And some began to shed bitter tears in silence, and some lamented aloud.
+But Finn again spoke and said--
+
+"It becomes us not, my friends, being heroes, to weep and wail like
+women, even though we are in danger of death; for tears and lamentations
+will avail us nothing. Let us rather sound the Dord-Fian,[XC.] sweetly
+and plaintively, according to our wont, that it may be a comfort to us
+before we die."
+
+So they ceased weeping, and, joining all together, they sounded the
+Dord-Fian in a slow, sad strain.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[LXXXVIII.] The houses of the ancient Irish were circular, and generally
+made of wood.
+
+[LXXXIX.] "As cold as the snow of one night;" "As white as the snow of
+one night," are usual comparisons in Gaelic. The first night's snow
+seems particularly cold and white when you see it in the morning on
+account of the contrast with the green fields of the day before.
+
+[XC.] Dord-Fian, or Dord-Fiansa, a sort of musical war-cry, usually
+performed by several persons in chorus.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+INNSA, FINN'S FOSTER SON, DEFENDS THE FORD LEADING TO THE PALACE OF THE
+QUICKEN TREES.
+
+
+Now let us speak of Oisin, and the party who tarried with him on the
+hill of Knockfierna. When he found that his father Finn had not sent
+back a messenger as he had promised, though the night was now drawing
+nigh, he began to fear that something was wrong; and he said to his
+companions--
+
+"I marvel much that we have got no news from the king, how he and his
+companions have fared in the Palace of the Quicken Trees. It is clear to
+me that he would have fulfilled his promise to send us word, if he had
+not been hindered by some unforeseen difficulty. Now, therefore, I wish
+to know who will go to the palace and bring me back tidings."
+
+Ficna, the son of Finn, stood forth and offered to go; and Finn's foster
+son, Innsa, the son of Swena Selga, said he would go with him.
+
+They both set out at once, and as they travelled with speed, they soon
+reached the plain on which stood the Palace of the Quicken Trees; and
+now the night was darkening around them. As they came near to the
+palace, they marvelled to hear the loud, slow strains of the Dord-Fian;
+and Innsa exclaimed joyfully--
+
+"Things go well with our friends, seeing that they are amusing
+themselves with the Dord-Fian!"
+
+But Ficna, who guessed more truly how things really stood, replied--
+
+"It is my opinion, friend, that matters are not so pleasant with them as
+you think; for it is only in time of trouble or danger that Finn is wont
+to have the Dord-Fian sounded in a manner so slow and sad."
+
+While they talked in this wise, it chanced that the Dord-Fian ceased for
+a little space; and Finn hearing the low hum of conversation outside,
+asked was that the voice of Ficna. And when Ficna answered, "Yes," Finn
+said to him--
+
+"Come not nearer, my son; for this place teems with dangerous spells. We
+have been decoyed hither by Midac, and we are all held here by the foul
+sorcery of the three kings of the Island of the Torrent."
+
+And thereupon Finn told him the whole story of the treachery that had
+been wrought on them, from beginning to end; and he told him also that
+nothing could free them but the blood of those three kings sprinkled on
+the clay.
+
+Then he asked who the second man was whom he had heard conversing with
+Ficna; and when he was told that it was Innsa, the son of Swena Selga,
+he addressed Ficna earnestly--
+
+"Fly, my son, from this fatal place! Fly, and save my foster child from
+the treacherous swords of the foreigners; for they are already on their
+way hither!"
+
+But Innsa quickly answered, "That I will never do. It would, indeed, be
+an ungrateful return to a kind foster father, to leave thee now in
+deadly strait, and seek my own safety."
+
+And Ficna spoke in a like strain.
+
+Then Finn said, "Be it so, my sons; but a sore trial awaits you. Those
+who come hither from the Palace of the Island must needs pass the ford
+under the shadow of these walls. Now this ford is rugged and hard to be
+crossed; and one good man, standing in the steep, narrow entrance at the
+hither side, might dispute the passage for a time against many. Go now,
+and defend this ford; and haply some help may come in time."
+
+So both went to the ford. And when they had viewed it carefully, Ficna,
+seeing that one man might defend it for a short time almost as well as
+two, said to Innsa--
+
+"Stay thou here to guard the ford for a little time, while I go to the
+Palace of the Island to see how the foreigners might be attacked. Haply,
+too, I may meet with the party coming hither, and decoy them on some
+other track."
+
+And Innsa consented; and Ficna set out straightway for the Palace of the
+Island.
+
+
+Now as to the Palace of the Island. When Midac returned in the morning,
+and told how Finn and his people were held safe in the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, the foreigners were in great joy. And they feasted and
+drank and were merry till evening; when an Irla[XCI.] of the King of the
+World spoke in secret to his brother, and said--
+
+"I will go now to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, and I will bring
+hither the head of Finn the son of Cumal; and I shall gain thereby much
+renown, and shall be honoured by the King of the World."
+
+So he went, bringing with him a goodly number of his own knights; and
+nothing is told of what befell them till they arrived at the brink of
+the ford under the Palace of the Quicken Trees. Looking across through
+the darkness, the Irla thought he saw a warrior standing at the other
+brink; and he called aloud to ask who was there, and whether he belonged
+to the noble or the ignoble races of the world.
+
+And when Innsa answered that he belonged to the household of Finn, the
+son of Cumal, the Irla said--
+
+"Lo, we are going to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, to bring Finn's
+head to the King of the World; and thou shalt come with us and lead us
+to the door."
+
+"That, indeed," replied Innsa, "would be a strange way for a champion to
+act who has been sent hither by Finn to guard this ford. I will not
+allow any foe to pass--of that be sure; and I warn you that you come not
+to my side of the ford!"
+
+At this the Irla said to his knights, "Force the ford: then shall we see
+if yonder hero can fight as well as he threatens."
+
+And at the word, they rushed through the water, as many as could find
+room. But only one or two at a time could attack; and the young champion
+struck them down right and left as fast as they came up, till the ford
+became encumbered with their bodies.
+
+And when the conflict had lasted for a long time, and when they found
+that they could not dislodge him, the few that remained retired across
+the ford; and Innsa was fain to rest after his long combat.
+
+But the Irla, seeing so many of his knights slain, was mad with wrath;
+and, snatching up his sword and shield, he attacked Innsa; and they
+fought a long and bloody fight.
+
+Now the Irla was fresh and strong, while Innsa was weary and sore
+wounded; and at length the young hero fell in the ford, and the Irla
+beheaded him, and, exulting in his victory, brought the head away.
+
+Finn and his companions, as they sat in miserable plight in the Palace
+of the Quicken Trees, heard the clash of arms at the ford, and the
+shouts and groans of warriors; and after a time all was still again; and
+they knew not how the fight had ended.
+
+And now the Irla, thinking over the matter, deemed it unsafe to go to
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees without a larger body of knights; so he
+returned towards the Palace of the Island, intending to bring Innsa's
+head to the King of the World. When he had come within a little distance
+of the palace, he met Ficna, who was then on his way back to the ford;
+and seeing that he was coming from the Palace of the Island, he deemed
+that he was one of the knights of the King of the World.
+
+Ficna spoke to him, and asked whither he had come.
+
+"I come," replied the Irla, "from the ford of the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees. There, indeed, on our way to the palace, to slay Finn the son of
+Cumal, we were met by a young champion, who defended the ford and slew
+my knights. But he fell at length beneath my sword; and, lo, I have
+brought his head for a triumph to the King of the World!"
+
+Ficna took the head tenderly, and kissed the cheek thrice, and said,
+sorrowing--
+
+"Alas, dear youth! only this morning I saw the light of valour in those
+dim eyes, and the bloom of youth on that faded cheek!"
+
+Then turning wrathfully to the Irla, he asked--
+
+"Knowest thou to whom thou hast given the young warrior's head?"
+
+And the Irla replied, "Hast thou not come from the Palace of the Island,
+and dost thou not belong to the host of the King of the World?"
+
+"I am not one of his knights," answered Ficna; "and neither shalt thou
+be, after this hour!"
+
+Whereupon they drew their swords, and fought where they stood; and the
+foreign Irla fell by the avenging sword of Ficna, the son of Finn. Ficna
+beheaded him and returned to the ford, bringing the head, and also the
+head of Innsa. And when he had come to the ford, he made a grave of
+green sods on the bank, in which he laid the body and the head of
+Innsa, sometimes grieving for the youth, and sometimes rejoicing that
+his death had been avenged.
+
+Then he went on to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, bringing the Irla's
+head; and when he had come nigh the door, he called aloud to Finn, who,
+impatient and full of anxious thoughts, asked--
+
+"Tell us, Ficna, who fought the battle at the ford, and how it has
+ended."
+
+"Thine own foster son, Innsa, defended the ford against many foes, whose
+bodies now encumber the stream."
+
+"And how is it now with my foster son?" asked Finn.
+
+"He died where he fought," replied Ficna; "for at the end, when he was
+weary and sore wounded, the foreign Irla attacked him, and slew him."
+
+"And thou, my son, didst thou stand by and see my nursling slain?"
+
+"Truly I did not," answered Ficna. "Would that I had been there, and I
+would have defended and saved him! And even now he is well avenged; for
+I met the Irla soon after, and lo, I have brought thee his head.
+Moreover, I buried thy nursling tenderly in a grave of green sods by the
+ford."
+
+And Finn wept and said, "Victory and blessings be with thee, my son!
+Never were children better than mine. Before I saw them, few were my
+possessions and small my consideration in Erin; but since they have
+grown up around me, I have been great and prosperous, till I fell by
+treachery into this evil plight. And now, Ficna, return and guard the
+ford, and peradventure our friends may send help in time."
+
+So Ficna went and sat on the brink of the ford.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCI.] Irla, _i.e._ an earl, a chief.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+FICNA, THE SON OF FINN, DEFENDS THE FORD.
+
+
+Now at the Palace of the Island, another Irla, whose name was Kironn,
+brother to him who had been slain by Ficna, spoke to some of his own
+followers--
+
+"It is long since my brother left for the Palace of the Quicken Trees; I
+fear me that he and his people have fared ill in their quest. And now I
+will go to seek for them."
+
+And he went, bringing a company of knights well armed; and when they had
+come to the ford, they saw Ficna at the far side. Kironn called out and
+asked who he was, and asked also who had made such a slaughter in the
+ford.
+
+Ficna answered, "I am one of the household champions of Finn the son of
+Cumal, and he has sent me here to guard this ford. As to the slaughter
+of yonder knights, your question stirs my mind to wrath, and I warn you,
+if you come to this side of the ford, you will get a reply, not in
+words, but in deeds."
+
+Then Kironn and his men rushed through the water, blind with rage, and
+struck wildly at Ficna. But the young hero watchfully parried their
+strokes and thrusts; and one after another they fell beneath his blows,
+till only a single man was left, who ran back with all speed to the
+Palace of the Island to tell the tale. And Ficna sat down on the brink,
+covered all over with wounds, and weary from the toil of battle.
+
+When these tidings were brought to the palace, Midac was very wroth, and
+he said, "These men should not have gone to force the ford without my
+knowledge; for they were far too few in number, and neither were they
+bold and hardy enough to meet Finn's valiant champions. I know these
+Fena well, and it is not to me a matter of surprise that the Irla and
+his people fell by them.
+
+"But I will now go with a choice party of my own brave men; and I will
+cross the ford despite their guards, and slay Finn and all his
+companions in the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+
+"Moreover, there is one man among them, namely, Conan Mail,[23] who of
+all the men of Erin has the largest appetite, and is fondest of choice
+eating and drinking. To him will I bring savoury food and delicious
+drink, not, indeed, to delight him with eating and drinking, but that I
+may torment him with the sight and smell of what he cannot taste."
+
+So, having got the food, he set out with a chosen band; and when he had
+arrived at the ford, he saw a warrior at the far side. He asked who he
+was, and finding that it was Ficna, he spoke guilefully to him.
+
+"Dear art thou to me, Ficna, dearer even than all the rest of Finn's
+household; for during the time I lived among the Fena, you never used me
+ill, or lifted a hand to either man or dog belonging to me."
+
+But Ficna spurned his smooth words, and replied, "While you lived among
+the Fena, there was not a man among them that had less to do with you
+than I. But this I know, that you were treated kindly by all, especially
+by my father Finn, and you have repaid him by ingratitude and
+treachery."
+
+When Midac heard this speech he was filled with wrath, and no longer
+hiding his evil mind, he ordered Ficna with threats to leave the ford.
+But Ficna laughed with scorn, and replied--
+
+"The task is easy, friend Midac, to dislodge a single champion; and
+surely it is a small matter to you whether I stand in this narrow pass
+or abandon my post. Come forward, then, you and your knights; but here I
+will remain to receive you. I only regret you did not come sooner, while
+my blood was hot, and before my wounds grew stiff, when you would have
+got a better welcome!"
+
+Then Midac ordered forward his knights, and they ran eagerly across the
+ford. But Ficna overthrew them with a mighty onset, like a hawk among a
+flight of small birds, or like a wolf among a flock of sheep. When Midac
+saw this, he buckled on his shield and took his sword. Then, treading
+warily over the rough rocks, and over the dead bodies of his knights,
+he confronted Ficna, and they attacked each other with deadly hate and
+fury.
+
+
+We shall now speak of those who remained on Knockfierna. When Oisin
+found that the two heroes did not return as soon as he expected, he thus
+addressed his companions--
+
+"It seems to me a long time, my friends, since Ficna and Innsa went to
+the Palace of the Quicken Trees; methinks if they have sped successfully
+they should have long since come back with tidings of Finn and the
+others."
+
+And one of his companions answered, "It is plain that they have gone to
+partake of the feast, and it fares so well with them that they are in no
+haste to leave the palace."
+
+But Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face spoke and said, "It may be as you
+say, friend, but I should like to know the truth of the matter. And now
+I will go and find out why they tarry, for my mind misgives me that some
+evil thing has happened."
+
+And Fatha Conan said he would go with him.
+
+So the two heroes set out for the Palace of the Quicken Trees; and when
+they were yet a good way off from the ford they heard the clash of arms.
+They paused for a moment, breathless, to listen, and then Dermat
+exclaimed--
+
+"It is the sound of single combat, the combat of mighty heroes; it is
+Ficna fighting with the foreigners, for I know his war-shout. I hear
+the clash of swords and the groans of warriors; I hear the shrieks of
+the ravens over the fairy-mansions, and the howls of the wild men of the
+glens! Hasten, Fatha, hasten, for Ficna is in sore strait, and his shout
+is a shout for help!"
+
+And so they ran like the wind till they reached the hill-brow over the
+river; and, looking across in the dim moonlight, they saw the whole ford
+heaped with the bodies of the slain, and the two heroes fighting to the
+death at the far side. And at the first glance they observed that Ficna,
+being sore wounded, was yielding and sheltering behind his shield, and
+scarce able to ward off the blows of Midac.
+
+Then Fatha cried out, "Fly, Dermat, fly! Save our dear companion! Save
+the king's son from death."
+
+And Dermat, pausing for a moment, said, as if communing with himself--
+
+"This is surely an evil plight: for if I run to the other side, the
+foreigner, being the more enraged for seeing me, will strike with
+greater fury, and I may not overtake the prince alive; and if I cast my
+spear, I may strike the wrong man!"
+
+But Fatha, overhearing him, said, "Fear not, Dermat, for you never yet
+threw an erring cast of a spear!"
+
+Then Dermat, putting his finger in the silken loop of his spear, threw a
+deadly cast with unerring aim, and struck Midac, so that the iron
+spear-head went right through his body, and the length of a warrior's
+hand beyond.
+
+"Woe to the man," exclaimed Midac--"woe to him whom that spear reaches:
+for it is the spear of Dermat O'Dyna!"
+
+And now his wrath increased, and he struck at Ficna more fiercely than
+before.
+
+Dermat shouted to him to hold his hand and not slay the king's son; and
+as he spoke he rushed down the slope and across the ford, to save the
+young hero. But Midac, still pressing on with unabated strength and
+fury, replied--
+
+"Had you wished to save the prince's life, you should have spared mine:
+now that I have been wounded to death by your spear, Finn shall never
+see his son alive!"
+
+Even as he spoke, he raised his sword for a mighty blow; and just as
+Dermat, shouting earnestly, was closing on them, he struck the prince
+lifeless to the earth, but fell down himself immediately after.
+
+Dermat came up on the instant, and looked sadly at his friend lying
+dead. Then, addressing Midac, he said--
+
+"If I had found thee dead, I would have passed thee untouched; but now
+that I have overtaken thee alive, I must needs behead thee, for thy head
+will be to Finn a worthy eric[10] for his son."
+
+And so saying, he struck off Midac's head with one sweep of his heavy
+sword.
+
+Dermat now repaired to the Palace of the Quicken Trees, leaving Fatha to
+watch the ford till his return. And when he had come near, he called
+aloud and struck the door with his heavy spear, for his wrath had not
+yet left him; but the door yielded not.
+
+Finn knew the voice, and called out impatiently, "Do not try to enter
+here, Dermat, for this place is full of foul spells. But tell us first,
+I pray thee, who fought that long and bitter fight; for we heard the
+clash of arms and the shouts of warriors, but we know nothing more."
+
+"Thy noble son, Ficna," returned Dermat, "fought single-handed against
+the foreigners."
+
+"And how fares it with my son after that battle?"
+
+"He is dead," answered Dermat; "first sore wounded by many foes whom he
+slaughtered, and afterwards slain by Midac, the son of Colga. But thy
+son is avenged; for though I came to the ford indeed too late to save
+him, I have slain Midac, and here I have brought thee his head as an
+eric."
+
+And for a long time Dermat heard no more.
+
+At last Finn spoke again and said--
+
+"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat, for often before did you
+relieve the Fena from sore straits. But never have we been in such
+plight as this. For here we sit spell-bound, and only one thing can
+release us, the blood of the three fierce kings of the Island of the
+Torrent sprinkled on this clay. Meantime, unless the ford be well
+defended, the foreigners will come and slay us. In you, Dermat, we
+trust, and unless you aid us well and faithfully now, we shall of a
+certainty perish. Guard the ford till the rising of the sun, for then I
+know the Fena will come to aid you."
+
+"I and Fatha will of a certainty keep the enemy at bay," replied Dermat;
+and he bade them farewell for a time, and was about to return to the
+ford: but Conan Mail, with a groan, said--
+
+"Miserable was the hour when I came to this palace, and cold and
+comfortless is the clay on which I sit--the clay of the Island of the
+Torrent. But worst of all to be without food and drink so long. And
+while I sit here, tormented with hunger and thirst, there is great
+plenty of ale and wine and of rich, savoury food yonder in the Palace of
+the Island. I am not able to bear this any longer; and now, Dermat, I
+beseech you to bring me from the palace as much food as I can eat and a
+drinking-horn of wine."
+
+"Cursed be the tongue that spoke these selfish words!" said Dermat. "A
+host of foreigners are now seeking to compass your death, with only
+Fatha and myself to defend you. Surely this is work enough for two good
+men! And now it seems I must abandon my post, and undertake a task of
+much danger, to get food for the gluttonous Conan Mail!"
+
+"Alas, Dermat-na-man!"[23] replied Conan, "if it were a lovely maiden,
+with bright eyes and golden hair, who made this little request, quickly
+and eagerly you would fly to please her, little recking of danger or
+trouble. But now you refuse me, and the reason is not hard to see. For
+you formerly crossed me four times in my courtships; and now it likes
+you well to see me die of hunger in this dungeon!"
+
+"Well, then," said Dermat, "cease your upbraiding, and I will try to
+bring you food; for it is better to face danger than to suffer the
+revilings of your foul tongue."
+
+So saying, he went back to the ford to Fatha, where he stood watching;
+and after he had told him how matters stood, he said to him--
+
+"I must needs go to the Palace of the Island, to get food for Conan
+Mail; and you shall guard the ford till I return."
+
+But Fatha told him that there was food and drink enough at the other
+side of the ford, which Midac had brought from the palace, and urged him
+to bring a good meal of this to Conan.
+
+"Not so," said Dermat. "He would taunt me with bringing him food taken
+from the hands of dead men; and though one may recover from his blow, it
+is not so easy to recover from the venom of his tongue."[XCII.]
+
+So he left Fatha at the ford, and repaired to the Palace of the Island.
+
+As he drew nigh, he heard the noise of feasting and revelry, and the
+loud talk and laughter of men deep in drink. Walking tiptoe, he peered
+warily through the open door, and saw the chiefs and the knights sitting
+at the tables; with Sinsar of the Battles and his son Borba high seated
+over all. He saw also many attendants serving them with food and drink,
+each holding in his hand a large ornamented drinking-horn, filled with
+wine.
+
+Dermat entered the outer door softly, and stood in a dark part of the
+passage near the door, silent and stern, with sword drawn, watching his
+opportunity. And after a time one of the attendants, unsuspecting,
+passed close to him; when Dermat, with a swift, sure blow, struck off
+his head. And he snatched the drinking-horn from the man's hand before
+he fell, so that not a drop of the wine was spilled.
+
+Then, laying the drinking-horn aside for a moment, he walked straight
+into the hall, and taking up one of the dishes near where the king sat,
+he went out through the open door, bringing with him both dish and
+drinking-horn. And amidst the great crowd, and the drinking, and the
+noise, no one took the least notice of him, so that he got off without
+hindrance or harm of any kind.
+
+When he reached the ford, he found Fatha lying fast asleep on the bank.
+He wondered very much that he could sleep in the midst of such a
+slaughter; but knowing that the young warrior was worn out with watching
+and toil, he left him lying asleep, and went to the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees with the food for Conan.
+
+When he had come to the door, he called aloud to Conan and said--
+
+"I have here a goodly meal of choice food: how am I to give it to thee?"
+
+Conan said, "Throw it towards me through yonder little opening."
+
+Dermat did so; and as fast as he threw the food, Conan caught it in his
+large hands, and ate it up ravenously. And when it was all gone, Dermat
+said--
+
+"I have here a large drinking-horn of good wine: how am I to give it to
+thee?"
+
+Conan answered, "There is a place behind the palace where, from a rock,
+you may reach the lower parapet with a light, airy bound. Come from that
+straight over me, and break a hole in the roof with your spear, through
+which you can pour the wine down to me."
+
+Dermat did so; and as he poured down the wine, Conan, with upturned
+face, opened his great mouth and caught it, and swallowed it every drop.
+
+After this Dermat came down and returned to the ford, where he found
+Fatha still asleep; and he sat beside him, but did not awaken him.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCII.] A satirical allusion to Conan's well-known cowardice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA SLAYS THE THREE KINGS OF THE ISLAND OF THE TORRENT, BREAKS
+THE SPELL WITH THEIR BLOOD, AND FREES FINN.
+
+
+Tidings were brought to the Palace of the Island that Midac and all whom
+he led were slain at the ford; and the three kings of the Island of the
+Torrent said--
+
+"The young king of Lochlann did wrong to make this attempt without
+asking our counsel; and had we known of the thing we would have hindered
+him. For to us belongs the right to behead Finn and his companions,
+since it is the spell-venom of the clay which we brought from the Island
+of the Torrent that holds them bound in the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+And now, indeed, we will go and slay them all."
+
+So they set out with a strong party, and soon reached the ford. Looking
+across in the dim light, they saw Dermat, and called aloud to ask who he
+was.
+
+"I am Dermat O'Dyna," he replied, "one of Finn's champions. He has sent
+me to guard this ford, and whoever you are, I warn you not to cross!"
+
+Then they sought to beguile Dermat, and to win him over by smooth words;
+and they replied--
+
+"It is a pleasure to us to meet you, Dermat; for we are old friends of
+yours. We are the three kings of the Island of the Torrent, your
+fellow-pupils in valour and all heroic feats. For you and we lived with
+the same tutors from the beginning; and you never learned a feat of arms
+that we did not learn in like manner. Leave the ford, then, that we may
+pass on to the Palace of the Quicken Trees."
+
+But Dermat answered in few words, "Finn and his companions are under my
+protection till morning; and I will defend the ford as long as I am
+alive!"
+
+And he stood up straight and tall like a pillar, and scowled across the
+ford.
+
+A number of the foreigners now rushed towards Dermat, and raging in a
+confused crowd, assailed him. But the strong hero met them as a rock
+meets the waves, and slew them with ease as they came within the range
+of his sword. Yet still they pressed on, others succeeding those that
+fell; and in the midst of the rage of battle, Fatha started up from his
+sleep, awakened by the crashing of weapons and the riving of shields.
+
+He gazed for a moment, bewildered, at the combatants, and, seeing how
+matters stood, he was wroth with Dermat for not awakening him; so that
+he ran at him fiercely with drawn sword. But Dermat stepped aside, and,
+being angry, thus addressed him--
+
+"Slake thy vengeance on our foes for the present: for me, the swords of
+the foreigners are enough, methinks, without thine to aid them!"
+
+Then Fatha turned and attacked the foe, and his onset was even more
+deadly than that of Dermat; so that they fell before him to the right
+and left on the ford.
+
+And now at last the three kings, seeing so many of their men falling,
+advanced slowly towards Dermat; and Dermat, unterrified, stood in his
+place to meet them. And their weapons clashed and tore through their
+shields, and the fight was long and furious; till at last the
+champion-pride and the battle-fury of Dermat arose, so that the three
+dragon-like kings fell slain one by one before him, on that ford of red
+slaughter.
+
+And now, though smarting with wounds, and breathless, and weary, Dermat
+and Fatha remembered Finn and the Fena; and Dermat called to mind what
+Finn had told him as to how the spell was to be broken. So he struck off
+the heads of the three kings, and, followed by Fatha, he ran with them,
+all gory as they were, to the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
+
+As they drew nigh to the door, Finn, knowing their voices and their
+footsteps, called aloud anxiously to ask how it fared with the
+combatants at the ford; "For," said he, "the crashing and the din of
+that battle exceeded all we have yet heard, and we know not how it has
+ended."
+
+Dermat answered, "King of the Fena, Fatha and I have slain the three
+kings of the Island of the Torrent; and lo, here we have their heads all
+bloody; but how am I to bring them to thee?"
+
+"Victory and blessings be with you, Dermat; you and Fatha have fought a
+valiant fight, worthy of the Fena of Erin! Now sprinkle the door with
+the blood."
+
+Dermat did so, and in a moment the door flew wide open with a crash. And
+inside they saw the heroes in sore plight, all pale and faint, seated on
+the cold clay round the wall. Dermat and Fatha, holding the gory heads
+by the hair, sprinkled the earth under each with the blood, beginning
+with Finn, and freed them one by one; and the heroes, as they found the
+spell broken, sprang to their feet with exulting cries. And they thanked
+the gods for having relieved them from that perilous strait, and they
+and the two heroes joyfully embraced each other.
+
+But danger still threatened, and they now took counsel what they should
+do; and Finn, addressing Dermat and Fatha, said--
+
+"The venom of these foul spells has withered our strength, so that we
+are not able to fight; but at sunrise they will lose their power, and we
+shall be strong again. It is necessary, therefore, that you still guard
+the ford, and at the rising of the sun we shall relieve you."
+
+So the two heroes went to the ford, and Fatha returned with food and
+drink for Finn and the others.
+
+
+After the last battle at the ford, a few who had escaped brought back
+tidings to the King of the World and his people, that the three kings of
+the Island of the Torrent had fallen by the hands of Dermat and Fatha.
+But they knew not that Finn and the others had been released.
+
+Then arose the king's son, Borba the Haughty, who, next to the king
+himself, was mightiest in battle of all the foreign host. And he said--
+
+"Feeble warriors were they who tried to cross this ford. I will go now
+and avenge the death of our people on these Fena, and I will bring
+hither the head of Finn the son of Cumal, and place it at my father's
+feet."
+
+So he marched forth without delay, with a large body of chosen warriors,
+till he reached the edge of the ford. And although Dermat and Fatha
+never trembled before a foe, yet when they saw the dark mass drawing
+nigh, and heard the heavy tread and clank of arms, they dreaded that
+they might be dislodged and overpowered by repeated attacks, leaving
+Finn and the rest helpless and unprotected. And each in his heart longed
+for the dawn of morning.
+
+No parley was held this time, but the foreigners came straight across
+the ford--as many abreast as could find footing. And as they drew near,
+Dermat spoke to Fatha--
+
+"Fight warily, my friend: ward the blows of the foremost, and be not too
+eager to slay, but rather look to thy own safety. It behoves us to nurse
+our strength and prolong the fight, for the day is dawning, and sunrise
+is not far off!"
+
+The foreigners came on, many abreast; but their numbers availed them
+naught, for the pass was narrow; and the two heroes, one taking the
+advancing party to the right, and the other to the left, sometimes
+parried and sometimes slew, but never yielded an inch from where they
+stood.
+
+And now at last the sun rose up over the broad plain of Kenri; and
+suddenly the withering spell went forth from the bones and sinews of the
+heroes who sat at the Palace of the Quicken Trees, listening with
+anxious hearts to the clash of battle at the ford. Joyfully they started
+to their feet, and, snatching up their arms, hastened down to the ford
+with Finn at their head; but one they sent, the swiftest among them, to
+Knockfierna, to take the news to Oisin.
+
+Dermat and Fatha, fighting eagerly, heeded not that the sun had risen,
+though it was now indeed glittering before their eyes on the helmets and
+arms of their foes. But as they fought, there rose a great shout behind
+them; and Finn and Gaul and the rest ran down the slope to attack the
+foreigners.
+
+The foreigners, not in the least dismayed, answered the attack; and the
+fight went on, till Gaul Mac Morna and Borba the Haughty met face to
+face in the middle of the ford, and they fought a hard and deadly
+combat. The battle-fury of Gaul at length arose, so that nothing could
+stand before him, and, with one mighty blow, he cleft the head from the
+body of Borba.
+
+And now the foreigners began to yield: but they still continued to
+fight, till a swift messenger sped to the Palace of the Island, and told
+the great king, Sinsar of the Battles, that his son was dead, slain by
+Gaul; and that his army was sore pressed by the Fena, with Finn at their
+head.
+
+When the people heard these tidings, they raised a long and sorrowful
+cry of lamentation for the king's son; but the king himself, though
+sorrow filled his heart, showed it not. And he arose and summoned his
+whole host; and, having arranged them in their battalions and in their
+companies under their princes and chiefs, he marched towards the
+battle-field, desiring vengeance on the Fena more than the glory of
+victory.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE FIGHT AT THE FORD, WITH THE FOREIGN ARMY.
+
+
+All the Fena who had gone to the chase from Knockfierna had returned,
+and were now with Oisin, the son of Finn. And the messenger came slowly
+up the hill-side, and told them, though with much difficulty, for he
+was weary and breathless, the whole story from beginning to end, of
+Finn's enchantment, and of the battles at the ford, and how their
+companions at that moment stood much in need of aid against the
+foreigners.
+
+Instantly the whole body marched straight towards the Palace of the
+Quicken Trees, and arrived on the hill-brow over the ford, just as the
+King of the World and his army were approaching from the opposite
+direction.
+
+And now the fight at the ford ceased for a time, while the two armies
+were put in battle array; and on neither side was there any cowardice or
+any desire to avoid the combat.
+
+The Fena were divided into four battalions. The active, bright-eyed
+Clann Baskin marched in front of the first battalion; the fierce,
+champion-like Clann Morna led the second; the strong, sanguinary
+Mic-an-Smoil brought up the third; and the fourth was led forward by the
+fearless, venomous Clann O'Navnan.
+
+And they marched forward, with their silken banners, each banner-staff
+in the hand of a tall, trusty hero; their helmets glittering with
+precious gems; their broad, beautiful shields on their left shoulders;
+with their long, straight, deadly lances in their hands; and their
+heavy, keen-edged swords hanging at the left side of each. Onward they
+marched; and woe to those who crossed the path of that host of active,
+high-minded champions, who never turned their backs on an enemy in
+battle!
+
+And now at last the fight began with showers of light, venomous
+missiles; and many a hero fell even before the combatants met face to
+face. Then they drew their long, broad-bladed swords, and the ranks
+closed and mingled in deadly strife. It would be vain to attempt a
+description of that battle, for it was hard to distinguish friend from
+foe. Many a high-souled hero fell wounded and helpless, and neither sigh
+nor groan of pain escaped them; but they died, encouraging their friends
+to vengeance with voice and gesture. And the first thought of each
+champion was to take the life of his foe rather than to save his own.
+
+The great king Finn himself moved tall and stately from battalion to
+battalion, now fighting in the foremost ranks, and now encouraging his
+friends and companions, his mighty voice rising clear over the clash of
+arms and the shouts of the combatants. And wherever he moved, there the
+courage of the Fena rose high, and their valour and their daring
+increased, so that the ranks of their foes fell back thinned and
+scattered before them.
+
+Oscar, resting for a moment from the toil of battle, looked round, and
+espied the standard of the King of the World, where he stood guarded by
+his best warriors, to protect him from the danger of being surrounded
+and outnumbered by his foes; and the young hero's wrath was kindled when
+he observed that the Fena were falling back dismayed wherever that
+standard was borne.
+
+Rushing through the opposing ranks like a lion maddened by dogs, he
+approached the king; and the king laughed a grim laugh of joy when he
+saw him, and ordered his guards back; for he was glad in his heart,
+expecting to revenge his son's death by slaying with his own hand Finn's
+grandson, who was most loved of all the youthful champions of the Fena.
+Then these two great heroes fought a deadly battle; and many a warrior
+stayed his hand to witness this combat. It seemed as if both should
+fall; for each inflicted on the other many wounds. The king's rage knew
+no bounds at being so long withstood, for at first sight he despised
+Oscar for his youth and beauty; and he made an onset that caused Oscar's
+friends, as they looked on, to tremble; for during this attack the young
+hero defended himself, and no more. But now, having yielded for a time,
+he called to mind the actions and the fame of his forefathers, and
+attacked the king in turn, and, with a blow that no shield or buckler
+could withstand, he swept the head from the king's body.
+
+Then a great shout went up from the Fena, and the foreigners instantly
+gave way; and they were pursued and slaughtered on every side. A few
+threw away their arms and escaped to the shore, where, hastily unmooring
+their ships, they sailed swiftly away to their own country, with tidings
+of the death of their king and the slaughter of their army.
+
+
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARRIVAL OF THE GILLA DACKER AND HIS HORSE.
+
+
+One day in the beginning of summer, Finn, the son of Cumal, the son of
+Trenmore O'Baskin,[23] feasted the chief people of Erin at Allen[23] of
+the broad hill-slopes. And when the feast was over, the Fena reminded
+him that it was time to begin the chase through the plains and the glens
+and the wildernesses of Erin.
+
+For this was the manner in which the Fena were wont to spend their time.
+They divided the year into two parts. During the first half, namely,
+from Beltane to Samin,[XCIII.] they hunted each day with their dogs; and
+during the second half, namely, from Samin to Beltane, they lived in the
+mansions and the betas[XCIV.] of Erin; so that there was not a chief or
+a great lord or a keeper of a house of hospitality in the whole country
+that had not nine of the Fena quartered on him during the winter half of
+the year.
+
+Finn and his chiefs now held council as to which of the provinces of
+Erin they should begin with; and they chose Munster for the first chase.
+
+Next day they set out, both dogs and men; and they travelled through
+Offaly,[XCV.] and by one side of Fera-call, and to Brosna of Slieve
+Bloma, and by the Twelve Mountains of Evlinn, till they came to
+Collkilla, which is now called Knockainy.
+
+The chase was then set in order, and they scattered themselves over the
+broad plains of Munster. They began at Ardpatrick,[XCVI.] and they
+hunted over Kenn-Avrat of Slieve-Keen, and over Coill-na-drua, which is
+now called the district of Fermoy; over the fruitful lands of Lehan, and
+over the confines of Fermorc, which is now called Hy Conall Gavra. Then
+south to the patrimony of Curoi Mac Dara, and by the shores of Loch
+Lein; afterwards along the blue-streamy Suir, by Caher-Dun-Isca, over
+the great plain of Femin, and across the speckled summit of
+Slieve-na-man-finn; all over East Munster and West Munster, as far as
+Balla-Gavran on the one side, and on the other across the Shannon to
+Cratloe, near Limerick of the blue waters.
+
+In short, there was not a plain or a valley, a wood or a brake, a
+mountain or a wilderness, in the two provinces of Munster, that they did
+not hunt over on that occasion.
+
+Now it chanced at one time during the chase, while they were hunting
+over the plain of Cliach,[XCVII.] that Finn went to rest on the hill of
+Collkilla, which is now called Knockainy; and he had his hunting-tents
+pitched on a level spot near the summit. Some of his chief heroes
+tarried with him; namely, his son Oisin; the valiant Oscar, the son of
+Oisin; Gaul Mac Morna of the Mighty Deeds; Finn's shield-bearer,
+Skeabrac; Kylta Mac Ronan; Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face; Ligan
+Lumina the Swift-footed; Conan Mail of the Foul Tongue; and Finn Ban Mac
+Bresal.
+
+When the king and his companions had taken their places on the hill, the
+Fena unleashed their gracefully shaped, sweet-voiced hounds through the
+woods and sloping glens. And it was sweet music to Finn's ear, the cry
+of the long-snouted dogs, as they routed the deer from their covers, and
+the badgers from their dens; the pleasant, emulating shouts of the
+youths; the whistling and signalling of the huntsmen; and the
+encouraging cheers of the mighty heroes, as they spread themselves
+through the glens and woods, and over the broad, green plain of Cliach.
+
+Then did Finn ask who of all his companions would go to the highest
+point of the hill directly over them, to keep watch and ward, and to
+report how the chase went on. For, he said, the Dedannans[1] were ever
+on the watch to work the Fena mischief by their druidical spells, and
+more so during the chase than at other times.
+
+Finn Ban Mac Bresal stood forward and offered to go: and, grasping his
+broad spears, he went to the top, and sat viewing the plain to the four
+points of the sky. And the king and his companions brought forth the
+chess-board and chess-men,[26] and sat them down to a game.
+
+Finn Ban Mac Bresal had been watching only a little time, when he saw on
+the plain to the east, a Fomor[XCVIII.] of vast size coming towards the
+hill, leading a horse. As he came nearer, Finn Ban observed that he was
+the ugliest-looking giant his eyes ever lighted on. He had a large,
+thick body, bloated and swollen out to a great size; clumsy, crooked
+legs; and broad, flat feet, turned inwards. His hands and arms and
+shoulders were bony and thick and very strong-looking; his neck was long
+and thin; and while his head was poked forward, his face was turned up,
+as he stared straight at Finn Mac Bresal. He had thick lips, and long,
+crooked teeth; and his face was covered all over with bushy hair.
+
+He was fully armed; but all his weapons were rusty and soiled and
+slovenly looking. A broad shield of a dirty, sooty colour, rough and
+battered, hung over his back; he had a long, heavy, straight sword at
+his left hip; and he held in his left hand two thick-handled,
+broad-headed spears, old and rusty, and seeming as if they had not been
+handled for years. In his right hand he held an iron club, which he
+dragged after him, with its end on the ground; and, as it trailed along,
+it tore up a track as deep as the furrow a farmer ploughs with a team of
+oxen.
+
+The horse he led was even larger in proportion than the giant himself,
+and quite as ugly. His great carcase was covered all over with tangled,
+scraggy hair, of a sooty black; you could count his ribs, and all the
+points of his big bones through his hide; his legs were crooked and
+knotty; his neck was twisted; and as for his jaws, they were so long and
+heavy that they made his head look twice too large for his body.
+
+The giant held him by a thick halter, and seemed to be dragging him
+forward by main force, the animal was so lazy and so hard to move. Every
+now and then, when the beast tried to stand still, the giant would give
+him a blow on the ribs with his big iron club, which sounded as loud as
+the thundering of a great billow against the rough-headed rocks of the
+coast. When he gave him a pull forward by the halter, the wonder was
+that he did not drag the animal's head away from his body; and, on the
+other hand, the horse often gave the halter such a tremendous tug
+backwards that it was equally wonderful how the arm of the giant was not
+torn away from his shoulder.
+
+Now it was not an easy matter to frighten Finn Ban Mac Bresal; but when
+he saw the giant and his horse coming straight towards him in that wise,
+he was seized with such fear and horror that he sprang from his seat,
+and, snatching up his arms, he ran down the hill-slope with his utmost
+speed towards the king and his companions, whom he found sitting round
+the chess-board, deep in their game.
+
+They started up when they saw Finn Ban looking so scared; and, turning
+their eyes towards where he pointed, they saw the big man and his horse
+coming up the hill. They stood gazing at him in silent wonder, waiting
+till he should arrive; but although he was no great way off when they
+first caught sight of him, it was a long time before he reached the spot
+where they stood, so slow was the movement of himself and his horse.
+
+When at last he had come up, he bowed his head, and bended his knee, and
+saluted the king with great respect.
+
+Finn addressed him; and after having given him leave to speak, he asked
+him who he was, and what was his name; from which of the three chief
+divisions of the world he had come, and whether he belonged to one of
+the noble or ignoble races; also what was his profession or craft, and
+why he had no servant to attend to his horse--if, indeed, such an ugly
+old spectre of an animal could be called a horse at all.
+
+The big man made answer and said, "King of the Fena, I will answer
+everything you ask me, as far as lies in my power. Whether I come of a
+noble or of an ignoble race, that, indeed, I cannot tell, for I know not
+who my father and mother were. As to where I came from, I am a Fomor of
+Lochlann[6] in the north; but I have no particular dwelling-place, for
+I am continually travelling about from one country to another, serving
+the great lords and nobles of the world, and receiving wages for my
+service.
+
+"In the course of my wanderings I have often heard of you, O king, and
+of your greatness and splendour and royal bounty; and I have come now to
+visit you, and to ask you to take me into your service for one year; and
+at the end of that time I shall fix my own wages, according to my
+custom.
+
+"You ask me also why I have no servant for this great horse of mine. The
+reason of that is this: at every meal I eat, my master must give me as
+much food and drink as would be enough for a hundred men; and whosoever
+the lord or chief may be that takes me into his service, it is quite
+enough for him to have to provide for me, without having also to feed my
+servant.
+
+"Moreover, I am so very heavy and lazy that I should never be able to
+keep up with a company on march if I had to walk; and this is my reason
+for keeping a horse at all.
+
+"My name is the Gilla Dacker,[XCIX.] and it is not without good reason
+that I am so called. For there never was a lazier or worse servant than
+I am, or one that grumbles more at doing a day's work for his master.
+And I am the hardest person in the whole world to deal with; for, no
+matter how good or noble I may think my master, or how kindly he may
+treat me, it is hard words and foul reproaches I am likely to give him
+for thanks in the end.
+
+"This, O Finn, is the account I have to give of myself, and these are my
+answers to your questions."
+
+"Well," answered Finn, "according to your own account, you are not a
+very pleasant fellow to have anything to do with; and of a truth there
+is not much to praise in your appearance. But things may not be so bad
+as you say; and, anyhow, as I have never yet refused any man service and
+wages, I will not now refuse you."
+
+Whereupon Finn and the Gilla Dacker made covenants, and the Gilla Dacker
+was taken into service for a year.
+
+Then the big man turned to Conan Mail, and asked him whether the
+foot-service or the horse-service had the better pay among the Fena; and
+Conan answered that the horsemen had twice as much pay as the footmen.
+
+"If that be so," replied the Gilla Dacker, "I will join the
+horse-service, as I have a fine steed of my own; and indeed, if I had
+known this before, I would certainly have come hither on horseback,
+instead of walking.
+
+"And now, as to this same horse of mine, I find I must attend to him
+myself, as I see no one here worthy of putting a hand near him. So I
+will lead him to the nearest stud, as I am wont to do, and let him graze
+among your horses. I value him greatly, however, and it would grieve me
+very much if any harm were to befall him; so," continued he, turning to
+the king, "I put him under your protection, O king, and under the
+protection of all the Fena that are here present."
+
+At this speech the Fena all burst out laughing, to see the Gilla Dacker
+showing such concern for his miserable, worthless old skeleton of a
+horse.
+
+Howbeit, the big man, giving not the least heed to their merriment, took
+the halter off the horse's head, and turned him loose among the horses
+of the Fena.
+
+But now, this same wretched-looking old animal, instead of beginning to
+graze, as every one thought he would, ran in among the horses of the
+Fena, and began straightway to work all sorts of mischief. He cocked his
+long, hard, switchy tail straight out like a rod, and, throwing up his
+hind legs, he kicked about on this side and on that, maiming and
+disabling several of the horses. Sometimes he went tearing through the
+thickest of the herd, butting at them with his hard, bony forehead; and
+he opened out his lips with a vicious grin, and tore all he could lay
+hold on, with his sharp, crooked teeth, so that none were safe that came
+in his way either before or behind. And the end of it was, that not an
+animal of the whole herd escaped, without having a leg broken, or an eye
+knocked out, or his ribs fractured, or his ear bitten off, or the side
+of his face torn open, or without being in some other way cut or maimed
+beyond cure.
+
+At last he left them, and was making straight across to a small field
+where Conan Mail's horses were grazing by themselves, intending to play
+the same tricks among them. But Conan, seeing this, shouted in great
+alarm to the Gilla Dacker, to bring away his horse, and not let him work
+any more mischief; and threatening, if he did not do so at once, to go
+himself and knock the brains out of the vicious old brute on the spot.
+
+But the Gilla Dacker took the matter quite cool; and he told Conan that
+he saw no way of preventing his horse from joining the others, except
+some one put the halter on him and held him, which would, of course, he
+said, prevent the poor animal from grazing, and would leave him with a
+hungry belly at the end of the day.
+
+He said, moreover, that as he had no horse-boy, and must needs do
+everything for himself, he thought it quite time enough to look after
+his horse when he had to make ready for a journey. "But," said he to
+Conan, "there is the halter; and if you are in any fear for your own
+animals, you may go yourself and bring him away from the field."
+
+Conan was in a mighty rage when he heard this; and as he saw the big
+horse just about to cross the fence, he snatched up the halter, and
+running forward, with long strides, he threw it over the animal's head
+and thought to lead him back. But in a moment the horse stood stock
+still, and his body and legs became as stiff as if they were made of
+wood; and though Conan pulled and tugged with might and main, he was not
+able to stir him an inch from his place.
+
+He gave up pulling at last, when he found it was no use; but he still
+kept on holding the halter, while the big horse never made the least
+stir, but stood as if he had been turned into stone; the Gilla Dacker
+all the time looking on quite unconcernedly, and the others laughing at
+Conan's perplexity. But no one offered to relieve him.
+
+At last Fergus Finnvel, the poet, spoke to Conan, and said, "I never
+would have believed, Conan Mail, that you could be brought to do
+horse-service for any knight or noble in the whole world; but now,
+indeed, I see that you have made yourself a horse-boy to an ugly foreign
+giant, so hateful-looking and low-born that not a man of the Fena would
+have anything to say to him. As you have, however, to mind this old
+horse in order to save your own, would it not be better for you to mount
+him, and revenge yourself for all the trouble he is giving you, by
+riding him across the country, over the hill-tops, and down into the
+deep glens and valleys, and through stones and bogs and all sorts of
+rough places, till you have broken the heart in his big, ugly body?"
+
+Conan, stung by the cutting words of the poet, and by the jeers of his
+companions, jumped upon the horse's back, and began to beat him mightily
+with his heels, and with his two big, heavy fists, to make him go; but
+the horse seemed not to take the least notice and never stirred.
+
+"I know the reason he does not go," said Fergus Finnvel; "he has been
+accustomed to carry a horseman far heavier than you, that is to say,
+the Gilla Dacker; and he will not move till he has the same weight on
+his back."
+
+At this Conan Mail called out to his companions, and asked which of them
+would mount with him, and help to avenge the damage done to their
+horses.
+
+"I will go," said Coil Croda the Battle Victor, son of Criffan; and up
+he went. But the horse never moved.
+
+Dara Donn Mac Morna next offered to go, and mounted behind the others;
+and after him Angus Mac Art Mac Morna. And the end of it was, that
+fourteen men of the Clann Baskin and Clann Morna[23] got up along with
+Conan; and all began to thrash the horse together, with might and main.
+But they were none the better of it, for he remained standing stiff and
+immovable as before. They found, moreover, that their seat was not at
+all an easy one--the animal's back was so sharp and bony.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[XCIII.] Beltane, the first of May; Samin, the first of November.
+
+[XCIV.] Beta, a public house of hospitality.
+
+[XCV.] Offaly, now the name of two baronies in the county Kildare.
+
+Fera-call, or Fircal, an ancient territory in the present King's County.
+
+Brosna, a small river rising in the Slieve Bloma, or Slieve Bloom
+mountains, which flows by Birr, and falls into the Shannon near
+Banagher; usually called the Little Brosna, to distinguish it from the
+Great Brosna, which flows through King's County into the Shannon.
+
+The Twelve Mountains of Evlinn. (See note, page 97.)
+
+Knockainy, a small hill much celebrated in fairy lore, in the county
+Limerick, giving name to the village of Knockainy at its base. It
+appears from the text that it was more anciently called Collkilla, or
+hazel-wood.
+
+[XCVI.] Ardpatrick, a beautiful green hill, with a remarkable church
+ruin and graveyard on its summit, two miles from Kilfinane, county
+Limerick.
+
+Kenn-Avrat was the ancient name of Seefin mountain, rising over the
+village of Glenosheen, two miles from Ardpatrick. Slieve-Keen, the old
+name of the hill of Carrigeennamroanty, near Seefin.
+
+Fermoy, a well-known town and barony in the county Cork. It appears from
+the text that the district was anciently known by the name of
+Coill-na-drua, or the wood of the druids.
+
+Lehan, the ancient name of the district round Castlelyons, in the county
+Cork.
+
+Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. (See note, page
+184.)
+
+Curoi Mac Dara, a celebrated chief who flourished in the time of the Red
+Branch Knights of Ulster, viz., in the first century of the Christian
+era. Curoi had his residence on a mountain near Tralee, still called
+Caherconree (the fortress of Curoi), and his "patrimony" was South
+Munster. The remains of Curoi's great stone fortress are still to be
+seen on Caherconree.
+
+Loch Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+Caher-Dun-Isca, now the town of Caher, on the Suir, in Tipperary.
+
+Femin was the name of the great plain lying to the south and west of the
+mountain of Slievenaman, or Slieve-na-man-finn, near Clonmel, in
+Tipperary.
+
+Balla-Gavran, or the pass of Gavran, an ancient road, which ran by
+Gavran (now Gowran), in the county Kilkenny.
+
+Cratloe, a well-known district on the Clare side of the Shannon, near
+Limerick.
+
+[XCVII.] Cliach, the old name of the plain lying round Knockainy.
+
+[XCVIII.] Fomor, a gigantic warrior, a giant; its primitive meaning is
+"a sea-robber," commonly called a Fomorian. (See note 5 at the end.)
+
+[XCIX.] Gilla Dacker means "a slothful fellow"--a fellow hard to move,
+hard to manage, hard to have anything to do with.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONAN AND FIFTEEN OF THE FENA ARE CARRIED OFF BY THE GILLA DACKER'S
+HORSE.
+
+
+When the Gilla Dacker saw the Fena beating his horse at such a rate, he
+seemed very angry, and addressed the king in these words--
+
+"King of the Fena, I now see plainly that all the fine accounts I heard
+about you and the Fena are false, and I will not stay in your
+service--no, not another hour. You can see for yourself the ill usage
+these men are giving my horse without cause; and I leave you to judge
+whether any one could put up with it--any one who had the least regard
+for his horse. The time is, indeed, short since I entered your service,
+but I now think it a great deal too long; so pay me my wages, and let me
+go my ways."
+
+But Finn said, "I do not wish you to go; stay on till the end of your
+year, and then I will pay you all I promised you."
+
+"I swear," answered the Gilla Dacker, "that if this were the very last
+day of my year, I would not wait till morning for my wages, after this
+insult. So, wages or no wages, I will now seek another master; but from
+this time forth I shall know what to think of Finn Mac Cumal and his
+Fena!"
+
+With that the Gilla Dacker stood up as straight as a pillar, and,
+turning his face towards the south-west, he walked slowly away.
+
+When the horse saw his master leaving the hill, he stirred himself at
+once and walked quietly after him, bringing the fifteen men away on his
+back. And when the Fena saw this they raised a loud shout of laughter,
+mocking them.
+
+The Gilla Dacker, after he had walked some little way, looked back, and
+seeing that his horse was following, he stood for a moment to tuck up
+his skirts. Then, all at once changing his pace, he set out with long,
+active strides; and if you know what the speed of a swallow is, flying
+across a mountain-side, or the dry, fairy wind of a March day sweeping
+over the plains, then you can understand the swiftness of the Gilla
+Dacker, as he ran down the hill-side towards the south-west.
+
+Neither was the horse behindhand in the race; for, though he carried a
+heavy load, he galloped like the wind after his master, plunging and
+bounding forward with as much freedom as if he had nothing at all on his
+back.
+
+The men now tried to throw themselves off; but this, indeed, they were
+not able to do, for the good reason that they found themselves fastened
+firmly, hands and feet and all, to the horse's back.
+
+And now Conan, looking round, raised his big voice, and shouted to Finn
+and the Fena, asking them were they content to let their friends be
+carried off in that manner by such a horrible, foul-looking old spectre
+of a horse.
+
+Finn and the others, hearing this, seized their arms and started off in
+pursuit. Now the way the Gilla Dacker and his horse took was first
+through Fermorc,[C.] which is at the present day called Hy Conall Gavra;
+next over the wide, heathy summit of Slieve Lougher; from that to Corca
+Divna; and they ran along by Slieve Mish, till they reached Cloghan
+Kincat, near the deep green sea.
+
+During all this time Finn and his people kept them in view, but were not
+able to overtake them; and Ligan Lumina, one of the swiftest of the
+Fena, kept ahead of the others.
+
+The horse now passed by Cloghan Kincat without in the least abating his
+speed; and when he had arrived on the beach, even at the very water's
+edge, Ligan overtook him, and caught him by the tail with his two hands,
+intending to hold him till the rest of the Fena came up. He gave a
+mighty pull back; but the horse, not in the least checked by this, made
+no more ado but plunged forward through the waves, dragging Ligan after
+him hanging at his tail. And Ligan now found that he could neither help
+his friends nor free himself, for his two hands clung fast to the tail
+of the horse.
+
+And so the great horse continued his course without stop or stay,
+bringing the sixteen Fena with him through the sea. Now this is how they
+fared in the sea, while the horse was rushing swiftly farther and
+farther to the west: they had always a dry, firm strand under them, for
+the waters retired before the horse while behind them was a wild, raging
+sea, which followed close after, and seemed ready every moment to topple
+over their heads. But, though the billows were tumbling and roaring all
+round, neither horse nor riders were wetted by as much as a drop of
+brine or a dash of spray.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[C.] Fermorc, now the baronies of Connello, in Limerick. Slieve Lougher,
+a celebrated mountain near Castle Island, in Kerry. Corca Divna, now the
+barony of Corkaguiny, the long peninsula lying west of Tralee, and
+containing the town of Dingle, and the mountain range of Slieve Mish.
+Cloghan Kincat, now called Cloghan, a small village on the northern
+coast of the peninsula.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+PURSUIT.
+
+
+Now as to Finn and the others. They stood on the bank over the beach,
+watching the horse and men till they lost sight of them in the sea afar
+off; and then they sat them down, weary after their long chase, and full
+of sadness for the loss of their companions.
+
+After a long silence, Finn spoke and asked the chiefs what they thought
+best to be done. But they replied that he was far beyond them all in
+knowledge and wisdom; and they told him they would follow whatsoever
+counsel he and Fergus Finnvel, the poet, gave them. Then Finn told
+Fergus to speak his mind; and Fergus said--
+
+"My counsel is that we go straightway to Ben Edar,[CI.] where we shall
+find a ship ready to sail. For our forefathers, when they wrested the
+land from the gifted, bright-complexioned Dedannans, bound them by
+covenant to maintain this ship for ever, fitted with all things needful
+for a voyage, even to the smallest article, as one of the privileges of
+Ben Edar; so that if at any time one of the noble sons of Gael
+Glas[CII.] wished to sail to distant lands from Erin, he should have a
+ship lying at hand in the harbour ready to begin his voyage."
+
+They agreed to this counsel, and turned their steps without delay
+northwards towards Ben Edar. They had not gone far when they met two
+noble-looking youths, fully armed, and wearing over their armour
+beautiful mantles of scarlet silk, fastened by brooches of gold. The
+strangers saluted the king with much respect; and the king saluted them
+in return. Then, having given them leave to converse, he asked them who
+they were, whither they had come, and who the prince or chief was that
+they served. And the elder answered--
+
+"My name is Feradach, and my brother's name is Foltlebar; and we are the
+two sons of the king of Innia. Each of us professes an art; and it has
+long been a point of dispute between us, which art is the better, my
+brother's or mine. Hearing that there is not in the world a wiser or
+more far-seeing man than thou art, O king, we have come to ask thee to
+take us into thy service among thy household troops for a year, and at
+the end of that time to give judgment between us in this matter."
+
+Finn asked them what were the two arts they professed.
+
+"My art," answered Feradach, "is this: If at any time a company of
+warriors need a ship, give me only my joiner's axe and my
+crann-tavall,[CIII.] and I am able to provide a ship for them without
+delay. The only thing I ask them to do is this--to cover their heads
+close, and keep them covered, while I give the crann-tavall three blows
+of my axe. Then I tell them to uncover their heads; and lo, there lies
+the ship in harbour, ready to sail!"
+
+Then Foltlebar spoke and said, "This, O king, is the art I profess: On
+land I can track the wild duck over nine ridges and nine glens, and
+follow her without being once thrown out, till I drop upon her in her
+nest. And I can follow up a track on sea quite as well as on land, if I
+have a good ship and crew."
+
+Finn replied, "You are the very men I want; and I now take you both into
+my service. At this moment I need a good ship and a skilful pilot more
+than any two things in the whole world. And though our own track-men,
+namely, the Clann Navin, are good, yet we now need some one still more
+skilful, to follow the Gilla Dacker through unknown seas."
+
+Then the two brothers asked Finn what strait he was in at that moment,
+and why he wanted a ship and pilot so much. Whereupon Finn told them the
+whole story of the Gilla Dacker's doings from beginning to end. "And we
+are now," said he, "on our way to Ben Edar, to seek a ship, that we may
+follow this giant and his horse, and rescue our companions."
+
+Then Feradach said, "I will get you a ship--a ship that will sail as
+swiftly as a swallow can fly!"
+
+And Foltlebar said, "I will guide your ship in the track of the Gilla
+Dacker till ye lay hands on him, in whatsoever quarter of the world he
+may have hidden himself!"
+
+And so they turned back to Cloghan Kincat. And when they had come to the
+beach, Feradach told them to cover their heads; and they did so. Then he
+struck three blows of his axe on the crann-tavall; after which he bade
+them look. And lo, they saw a ship, fully fitted out with oars and
+sails, and with all things needed for a long voyage, riding before them
+in the harbour!
+
+Then Kylta Mac Ronan went to the top of a high hill; and, turning his
+face inland, he uttered three mighty shouts, which were taken up by the
+people of the next valley, and after them by those of the next valley
+beyond. And so the signal spread, till a shout of alarm was heard in
+every plain and hill-side, glen and valley, wood and wilderness, in the
+two provinces of Munster. And when the Fena heard these shouts, they
+ceased anon from their sports and pastimes; for they knew their king was
+in danger or strait of some kind. And they formed themselves into ranks
+and troops and battalions, and began their march; and it is not told how
+they fared till they reached Cloghan Kincat.
+
+Finn told them the whole story of the Gilla Dacker and his horse, and
+how he had carried away Conan and fifteen others to some far-off island
+in the Western Ocean. He also showed them the ship, and told them that
+he himself and a chosen band of the Fena were about to sail westward in
+quest of their friends.
+
+And Oisin asked him how many of the chief men of the Fena he wished to
+take with him.
+
+Finn replied, "I foresee that this will be a perilous quest; and I think
+all the chiefs here present few enough to bring with me."
+
+"Say not so, O king," said Oisin; "too many have gone already, and some
+must be left behind to guard the country, and to keep order. If fifteen
+good men go with you, and that you find the others, the whole party will
+be a match for any foe you are like to meet in these western lands."
+
+And Oscar and Gaul Mac Morna spoke in like manner.
+
+To this Finn agreed. Then he picked out fifteen men, the bravest and
+best, the most dexterous at the sword, and the swiftest of foot among
+the Fena.
+
+The question then arose, who should lead the Fena in the king's absence;
+and what they agreed on was that Oisin should remain behind and take
+command, as he was the eldest and bravest and wisest of the king's sons.
+
+Of those who were chosen to go with Finn, the chief men were Dermat
+O'Dyna; Gaul Mac Morna; Oscar, the son of Oisin; Aed Beg, the son of
+Finn; Fergus Finnvel, the poet; the three sons of Encarda; and Feradach
+and Foltlebar, the two sons of the king of Innia.
+
+So the king and his party took leave of Oisin and the rest. And sad,
+indeed, were they on both sides; for no one knew how far the king might
+have to sail among unknown seas and islands, or how long he should be
+away from Erin, or the spells and dangers he and his men might encounter
+in this pursuit.
+
+Then they went on board, and launched their ship on the cold, bright
+sea; and Foltlebar was their pilot and steersman. And they set their
+sail and plied their slender oars, and the ship moved swiftly westward
+till they lost sight of the shores of Erin; and they saw nothing all
+round them but a wide girdle of sea. After some days' sailing, a great
+storm came from the west, and the black waves rose up against them, so
+that they had much ado to keep their vessel from sinking. But through
+all the roaring of the tempest, through the rain and blinding spray,
+Foltlebar never stirred from the helm or changed his course, but still
+kept close on the track of the Gilla Dacker.
+
+At length the storm abated, and the sea grew calm. And when the darkness
+had cleared away, they saw to the west, a little way off, a vast rocky
+cliff towering over their heads to such a height, that its head seemed
+hidden among the clouds. It rose up sheer from the very water, and
+looked at that distance as smooth as glass, so that at first sight there
+seemed no way to reach the top.
+
+Foltlebar, after examining to the four points of the sky, found the
+track of the Gilla Dacker as far as the cliff, but no farther. And he
+accordingly told the heroes that he thought it was on the top of that
+rock the giant lived; and that, anyhow, the horse must have made his way
+up the face of the cliff with their companions.
+
+When the heroes heard this they were greatly cast down and puzzled what
+to do; for they saw no way of reaching the top of the rock; and they
+feared they should have to give up the quest and return without their
+companions. And they sat down and looked up at the cliff, with sorrow
+and vexation in their hearts.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CI.] Ben Edar, now Howth Hill, near Dublin.
+
+[CII.] Gael Glas, the traditional ancestor of the Gaels.
+
+[CIII.] Crann-tav'all, a sort of sling for projecting stones, made of an
+elastic piece of wood, and strung somewhat like a cross-bow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA, IN QUEST OF THE GILLA DACKER, ENCOUNTERS THE
+WIZARD-CHAMPION AT THE WELL.
+
+
+When now they had been silent for a time, Fergus Finnvel, the poet,
+arose and said--
+
+"My friends, we have here amongst us one who has been fostered and
+taught from the child to the man, by Mannanan Mac Lir[8] in Fairyland,
+and by Angus,[1] the wisest of the Dedannans, at Bruga of the Boyne. He
+has been carefully trained by both in everything a warrior should learn,
+and in much druidical lore besides; so that he is skilled beyond us all
+in manly arts and champion-feats. But now it seems that all his arts and
+accomplishments go for nought, seeing that he is unable to make use of
+them just at the time that we stand most in need of them. On the top of
+that rock, doubtless, the Gilla Dacker lives, and there he holds Conan
+and the others in bondage; and surely this hero, who now sits idly with
+us here in our ship, should be able to climb up the face of that cliff,
+and bring us back tidings of our dear friends and companions."
+
+When Dermat O'Dyna heard this speech, his cheek grew red with shame, and
+he made this reply--
+
+"It is of me you have spoken these words, Fergus. Your reproaches are
+just; and though the task is hard, I will attempt to follow the track of
+the Gilla Dacker, and find out some tidings of our friends."
+
+So saying, Dermat arose, and girded on his armour, and put on his
+glittering helmet. He hung his sword at his left hip; and he took his
+two long, deadly spears, one in each hand, namely, the Crann-boi and the
+Ga-derg;[CIV.] and the battle-fury of a warrior descended on him, so
+that he looked a dreadful foe to meet in single combat.
+
+Then, leaning on the handles of his spears, after the manner of skilful
+champions, he leaped with a light, airy bound on the nearest shelf of
+rock. And using his spears and his hands, he climbed from ledge to
+ledge, while his companions watched him anxiously from below; till,
+after much toil, he measured the soles of his two feet on the green sod
+at the top of the rock. And when, recovering breath, he turned round and
+looked at his companions in the ship far below, he started back with
+amazement and dread at the dizzy height.
+
+He now looked inland, and saw a beautiful country spread out before
+him:--a lovely, flowery plain straight in front, bordered with pleasant
+hills, and shaded with groves of many kinds of trees. It was enough to
+banish all care and sadness from one's heart to view this country, and
+to listen to the warbling of the birds, the humming of the bees among
+the flowers, the rustling of the wind through the trees, and the
+pleasant voices of the streams and waterfalls.
+
+Making no delay, Dermat set out to walk across the plain. He had not
+been long walking when he saw, right before him, a great tree laden with
+fruit, overtopping all the other trees of the plain. It was surrounded
+at a little distance by a circle of pillar-stones; and one stone, taller
+than the others, stood in the centre near the tree. Beside this
+pillar-stone was a spring well, with a large, round pool as clear as
+crystal; and the water bubbled up in the centre, and flowed away towards
+the middle of the plain in a slender stream.
+
+Dermat was glad when he saw the well; for he was hot and thirsty after
+climbing up the cliff. He stooped down to take a drink; but before his
+lips touched the water, he heard the heavy tread of a body of warriors,
+and the loud clank of arms, as if a whole host were coming straight down
+on him. He sprang to his feet and looked round; but the noise ceased in
+an instant, and he could see nothing.
+
+After a little while he stooped again to drink; and again, before he had
+wet his lips, he heard the very same sounds, nearer and louder than
+before. A second time he leaped to his feet; and still he saw no one.
+He knew not what to think of this; and as he stood wondering and
+perplexed, he happened to cast his eyes on the tall pillar-stone that
+stood on the brink of the well; and he saw on its top a large, beautiful
+drinking-horn, chased with gold and enamelled with precious stones.
+
+"Now surely," said Dermat, "I have been doing wrong; it is, no doubt,
+one of the virtues of this well that it will not let any one drink of
+its waters except from the drinking-horn."
+
+So he took down the horn, dipped it into the well, and drank without
+hindrance, till he had slaked his thirst.
+
+Scarcely had he taken the horn from his lips, when he saw a tall
+wizard-champion[CV.] coming towards him from the east, clad in a
+complete suit of mail, and fully armed with shield and helmet, sword and
+spear. A beautiful scarlet mantle hung over his armour, fastened at his
+throat by a golden brooch; and a broad circlet of sparkling gold was
+bended in front across his forehead, to confine his yellow hair, and
+keep it from being blown about by the wind.
+
+As he came nearer, he increased his pace, moving with great strides;
+and Dermat now observed that he looked very wrathful. He offered no
+greeting, and showed not the least courtesy; but addressed Dermat in a
+rough, angry voice--
+
+"Surely, Dermat O'Dyna, Erin of the green plains should be wide enough
+for you; and it contains abundance of clear, sweet water in its crystal
+springs and green bordered streams, from which you might have drunk your
+fill. But you have come into my island without my leave, and you have
+taken my drinking-horn, and have drunk from my well; and this spot you
+shall never leave till you have given me satisfaction for the insult."
+
+So spoke the wizard-champion, and instantly advanced on Dermat with fury
+in his eyes. But Dermat was not the man to be terrified by any hero or
+wizard-champion alive. He met the foe half-way; and now, foot to foot,
+and knee to knee, and face to face, they began a fight, watchful and
+wary at first, but soon hot and vengeful, till their shields and helmets
+could scarce withstand their strong thrusts and blows. Like two enraged
+lions fighting to the death, or two strong serpents intertwined in
+deadly strife, or two great opposing billows thundering against each
+other on the ocean border; such was the strength and fury and
+determination of the combat of these two heroes.
+
+And so they fought through the long day, till evening came, and it began
+to be dusk; when suddenly the wizard-champion sprang outside the range
+of Dermat's sword, and leaping up with a great bound, he alighted in the
+very centre of the well. Down he went through it, and disappeared in a
+moment before Dermat's eyes, as if the well had swallowed him up. Dermat
+stood on the brink, leaning on his spear, amazed and perplexed, looking
+after him in the water; but whether the hero had meant to drown himself,
+or that he had played some wizard trick, Dermat knew not.
+
+He sat down to rest, full of vexation that the wizard-champion should
+have got off so easily. And what chafed him still more was that the Fena
+knew nought of what had happened, and that when he returned, he could
+tell them nothing of the strange hero; neither had he the least token or
+trophy to show them after his long fight.
+
+Then he began to think what was best to be done; and he made up his mind
+to stay near the well all night, with the hope of finding out something
+further about the wizard-champion on the morrow.
+
+He walked towards the nearest point of a great forest that stretched
+from the mountain down to the plain on his left; and as he came near, a
+herd of speckled deer ran by among the trees. He put his finger into the
+silken loop of his spear, and, throwing it with an unerring cast,
+brought down the nearest of the herd.
+
+Then, having lighted a fire under a tree, he skinned the deer and fixed
+it on long hazel spits to roast, having first, however, gone to the
+well, and brought away the drinking-horn full of water. And he sat
+beside the roasting deer to turn it and tend the fire, waiting
+impatiently for his meal; for he was hungry and tired after the toil of
+the day.
+
+When the deer was cooked, he ate till he was satisfied, and drank the
+clear water of the well from the drinking-horn; after which he lay down
+under the shade of the tree, beside the fire, and slept a sound sleep
+till morning.
+
+Night passed away and the sun rose, bringing morning with its abundant
+light. Dermat started up, refreshed after his long sleep, and, repairing
+to the forest, he slew another deer, and fixed it on hazel spits to
+roast at the fire as before. For Dermat had this custom, that he would
+never eat of any food left from a former meal.
+
+And after he had eaten of the deer's flesh and drunk from the horn, he
+went towards the well. But though his visit was early, he found the
+wizard-champion there before him, standing beside the pillar-stone,
+fully armed as before, and looking now more wrathful than ever. Dermat
+was much surprised; but before he had time to speak the wizard-champion
+addressed him--
+
+"Dermat O'Dyna, you have now put the cap on all your evil deeds. It was
+not enough that you took my drinking-horn and drank from my well: you
+have done much worse than this, for you have hunted on my grounds, and
+have killed some of my speckled deer. Surely there are many
+hunting-grounds in Erin of the green plains, with plenty of deer in
+them; and you need not have come hither to commit these robberies on me.
+But now for a certainty you shall not go from this spot till I have
+taken revenge for all these misdeeds."
+
+And again the two champions attacked each other, and fought during the
+long day, from morning till evening. And when the dusk began to fall,
+the wizard-champion leaped into the well, and disappeared down through
+it, even as he had done the day before.
+
+The selfsame thing happened on the third day. And each day, morning and
+evening, Dermat killed a deer, and ate of its flesh, and drank of the
+water of the well from the drinking-horn.
+
+On the fourth morning, Dermat found the wizard-champion standing as
+usual by the pillar-stone near the well. And as each morning he looked
+more angry than on the morning before, so now he scowled in a way that
+would have terrified any one but Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+And they fought during the day till the dusk of evening. But now Dermat
+watched his foe narrowly; and when he saw him about to spring into the
+well, he closed on him and threw his arms round him. The wizard-champion
+struggled to free himself, moving all the time nearer and nearer to the
+brink; but Dermat held on, till at last both fell into the well. Down
+they went, clinging to each other, Dermat and the wizard-champion; down,
+down, deeper and deeper they went; and Dermat tried to look round, but
+nothing could he see save darkness and dim shadows. At length there was
+a glimmer of light; then the bright day burst suddenly upon them; and
+presently they came to the solid ground, gently and without the least
+shock.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CIV.] See note, page 302.
+
+[CV.] The original word, which I have translated "wizard-champion," is
+_gruagach_. This word literally means "hairy," "a hairy fellow;" and it
+is often used in the sense of "giant." But in these romantic tales it is
+commonly used to signify a champion who has always something of the
+supernatural about him, yet not to such a degree as to shield him
+completely from the valour of a great mortal hero like Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA IN TIR-FA-TONN.[CVI.]
+
+
+At the very moment they reached the ground, the wizard-champion, with a
+sudden effort, tore himself away from Dermat's grasp and ran forward
+with great speed. Dermat leaped to his feet; and he was so amazed at
+what he saw around him that he stood stock still and let the
+wizard-champion escape: a lovely country, with many green-sided hills
+and fair valleys between, woods of red yew trees, and plains laughing
+all over with flowers of every hue.
+
+Right before him, not far off, lay a city of great tall houses with
+glittering roofs; and on the side nearest to him was a royal palace,
+larger and grander than the rest. On the level green in front of the
+palace were a number of knights, all armed, and amusing themselves with
+various warlike exercises of sword and shield and spear.
+
+Straight towards this assembly the wizard-champion ran; which, when
+Dermat saw, he set off in pursuit, hoping to overtake him. But the
+wizard-champion had too long a start, and when he reached the exercise
+green, the knights opened to the right and left, leaving a broad way
+through which he rushed. He never halted or looked behind till he had
+got inside the palace gate; and the moment he had passed in, the knights
+closed their ranks, and stood facing Dermat with threatening looks and
+gestures.
+
+Nothing daunted, Dermat held on his pace towards them; and now those of
+the front rank started forward with spears and swords, intending to
+crush him at once, and hew his body to mincemeat. But it was not terror
+nor weakness nor a desire of flight that this produced in Dermat, for
+his battle-fury was on him; and he rushed through them and under them
+and over them, as a hawk rushes among a flight of sparrows, or like a
+whale through a shoal of little fishes, or like a raging wolf among a
+flock of sheep, or like a vast billow among a fleet of small vessels, or
+like a great brown torrent rushing down the steep side of a mountain,
+that sweeps everything headlong before it. So did Dermat cleave a wide
+laneway through the hosts, till, from a solid band of warriors, he
+turned them into a scattered crowd, flying in all directions. And those
+that did not fall by his hand, ran hither and thither, some to hide
+themselves in the thick forests and remote, wooded glens of the
+surrounding country; while others rushed in through the outer gate of
+the palace, and shut themselves up in the strongest part of the
+fortress, neither did they deem themselves safe till they had shot home
+every bolt, and securely fastened every strong iron lock.
+
+At last not a living soul remained on the green, and Dermat sat down,
+weary after his battle-toil, and smarting all over with wounds. He was
+grieved and downcast also, for he knew not where he was, and he saw no
+chance that he should be able either to find any tidings of the friends
+he was in search of, or to return to his companions in the ship.
+
+At length, being quite overcome with weariness, he fell into a deep
+sleep. After sleeping for some time, he was awakened by a smart blow. He
+started up, and saw a young man standing over him, tall, and of a
+commanding appearance, with long, golden hair, and a manly, open
+countenance. Now this young man had come to Dermat, and finding him
+asleep in such a dangerous place, he struck him with the flat of his
+sword to awaken him. In an instant Dermat sprang to his feet and seized
+his arms; but the youth addressed him in a friendly voice, and said--
+
+"Dermat O'Dyna, put up your arms; I am no enemy, and I have come, not to
+harm, but to serve you. This, indeed, is a strange place for you to fall
+asleep, before the very door of the castle, and within sight of your
+enemies. Come now with me, and I will give you a better place to sleep
+in, where you will also get a welcome and kindly entertainment."
+
+This speech pleased Dermat very much; and he thanked the young man and
+went with him. After walking for some time, they came to a large
+splendid house, and passing through the outer gate they entered the
+banqueting hall. There they found a noble company of twelve score and
+ten knights, and almost as many beautiful ladies, with their long hair
+falling on their shoulders, shining like the golden flower of the
+marsh-flag, and gentle and modest in their looks and conversation. They
+wore mantles of scarlet satin, and each mantle was fastened in front by
+a brooch of burnished gold.
+
+The company sat at tables round the walls of the banquet hall, some
+feasting, some playing chess, and some listening to the music of harps.
+When the two heroes entered, all the knights and ladies rose and
+received them with much respect, and they welcomed Dermat and invited
+him to join their entertainment. But the young prince--for he was in
+truth a prince--pointing to Dermat's clothes and arms, all soiled and
+stained, told them that he had endured much toil that day, and that he
+wanted rest and refreshment.
+
+He then brought Dermat away, and ordered the attendants to prepare a
+bath in a great caldron. He put soothing balsams and healing herbs into
+it with his own hands, and when Dermat had bathed he was immediately
+healed of his wounds, and he came forth refreshed and cheerful. The
+prince then directed that his clothes should be put aside, and had him
+clad in rich garments like the others.
+
+Dermat now joined the company, and ate and drank, for he had taken
+neither food nor drink since he had made his meal on the deer early that
+morning near the well; after which he talked and was cheerful with the
+others. Then rose up the harpers, and the professors of divers arts and
+sciences, and one after another they played their sweet music, and
+recited their poems and their tales of the heroes of the olden time. And
+when they had ended, the knights gave them gifts of gold and silver and
+jewels. At last the company broke up, and Dermat was shown to a bed
+richly ornamented, and soft with the red feathers of wild fowl, and soon
+he fell into a sound sleep after his long day's adventures.
+
+Now Dermat marvelled much at all he saw and heard; and he knew not what
+place he was in, or who the people were, that had treated him with such
+kindness. So next morning, when the company had again assembled, he
+stood up, and addressed the prince with gentle words and modest
+demeanour; and this is what he said--
+
+"I am much surprised, O prince, at what I have seen, and at all that has
+befallen me in this land. Though I am here a stranger, thou hast shown
+me much kindness, and these noble knights and ladies have permitted me
+to join their sports, and have treated me with much gentleness and
+consideration. I wish to know, then, who thou art, O prince, and what
+country this is, of which I have never before heard, and who is the king
+thereof. Tell me also, I pray thee, the name of the champion who fought
+with me for four days at the well, till at last he escaped from me at
+the palace."
+
+The prince replied, "I will tell you all, Dermat, as you have asked,
+concealing nothing. This country is Tir-fa-tonn; the champion who fought
+with you is called the Knight of the Fountain, and that very champion is
+king of this land. I am the brother of the king, and my name is the
+Knight of Valour. Good reason indeed have I to be kind to you, Dermat
+O'Dyna, for though you do not remember me, I spent a year and a day in
+the household of Finn the son of Cumal.
+
+"A part of this kingdom belongs by right to me. But the king and his son
+have seized on my patrimony, and have banished me from the palace,
+forcing me to live here in exile with a few of my faithful followers.
+
+"It is my intention, however, to make war on the king for my part of the
+kingdom; and right glad I am that you have come hither, for I would
+rather have you on my side than all the other Fena put together, for
+your nobleness of mind and your valour in battle.
+
+"I have here in my household seven score and ten heroes, all champions
+of great deeds; and if you consent to aid me, these shall be placed
+under your command. By day you shall fight against the king of
+Tir-fa-tonn and his son, and by night you shall feast and rest and sleep
+with me in this palace. If you enter into friendship with me and fight
+on my side, well I know that I shall win back my right without delay."
+
+Dermat agreed to this. So he and the Knight of Valour made a covenant;
+and, placing hand in hand, they pledged themselves to observe faithfully
+the conditions of the league of friendship.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVI.] Tir-fa-tonn, literally "the country beneath the wave." (See note
+13 at the end.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+FINN, IN QUEST OF DERMAT, FIGHTS MANY BATTLES.
+
+
+As to Finn Mac Cumal and those that remained behind with him in the
+ship, I will now relate what befell them.
+
+It was now many days since Dermat had left them, and they marvelled much
+that he did not return with tidings of the Gilla Dacker. At length, when
+they began to be alarmed, the two sons of the king of Innia offered to
+go in search of him; but Finn said no, for that they should all go
+together.
+
+So Feradach and Foltlebar took all the cables and ropes they could find
+in the ship, and tied them end to end in hard, sure knots, till they had
+a rope long enough to reach from the top of the rock to the bottom. Then
+they clambered up the steep face of the cliff, bringing with them the
+end of the rope; and one by one they drew up Finn and the rest. And when
+they looked round, they were as much surprised and delighted as Dermat
+was at the look of the country.
+
+Foltlebar now made a search, and soon found the track of Dermat; and the
+whole party set out to walk across the plain, Foltlebar leading the way.
+Having travelled some distance, they saw the great fruit tree afar off;
+and, turning to the left, they found a place where a fire had been
+lighted, and near it the remains of several meals of deer's flesh. By
+this they knew that it was here Dermat had slept, for all were well
+aware of his custom not to eat of what was left from a meal.
+
+They then went towards the tree, and there they found the traces of
+deadly combat--the ground all trampled and ploughed up, and a broken
+spear handle lying at the brink of the well. While they stood pondering
+on these things, with anxious hearts, they saw a horseman at a distance,
+speeding towards them across the plain. In a little while he came up and
+reined in.
+
+He was a young man of majestic mien, fair and noble of countenance; and
+he rode a beautiful chestnut steed, with a bridle of twisted gold, and a
+saddle of surpassing splendour, ornamented all over with gold and
+jewels.
+
+He alighted and saluted Finn and the Fena, and told them they were
+welcome to his country, for that he was king; and he put his hand on
+Finn's neck and kissed his cheek three times. Then he invited them to go
+with him, saying that the Plain of the Fountain was a comfortless
+resting-place after a long journey.
+
+Finn's heart was glad at this, for he and his companions were weary;
+and they set out to walk across the plain with the young king. Having
+walked a good distance, they came in sight of a noble palace, with tall
+towers and carved front. As they came near, they were met by a company
+of knights on the level green in front, who welcomed them with gentle
+words. And so they passed into the palace. A bath was prepared, and they
+bathed and were refreshed after their toils. Then they sat down to
+supper; and while they ate and drank, the harpers played for them, and
+the poets told their tales and sang their songs.
+
+They slept that night in the palace; and next day they mingled with the
+knights on the green, and took part in their games and pastimes. In the
+evening they sat down to a feast. The people of the palace were ranged
+at tables according to rank and inheritance, every man in his proper
+place.
+
+Then the feast went on; and abundance of the newest food and of the
+oldest drink was served out; and they ate of the savoury food, and drank
+of the sparkling wines and of the strong ales, till they became merry
+and gently intoxicated. And Finn could not call to mind that he ever saw
+an entertainment in the house of either king or chief better ordered. In
+this manner they were feasted and entertained for three days and three
+nights.
+
+At the end of that time a meeting was held by the king on the palace
+green. And Finn stood up and said--
+
+"Tell me, I pray thee, thy name and the name of this country, which I
+have never seen before, or even heard of."
+
+"This country," replied the king, "is called Sorca, of which I am king;
+and although you know us not, we know you well, for the fame of your
+deeds has reached even to this land. But now I wish to know why you have
+come hither; also the reason why you have brought so few companions, and
+where the rest have tarried."
+
+Then Finn told him the whole story from beginning to end; how the Gilla
+Dacker and his great horse had carried off sixteen of their chief men;
+"And," added Finn, "I and these fifteen companions of mine are now in
+quest of them."
+
+The king replied, "This is a dangerous undertaking; and you and your
+fifteen men, valiant even as you are, are too few to venture into
+unknown lands, where you may meet with many enemies. Now my knights are
+brave and generous, and they love battle and adventure. Wherefore I will
+place a band of them under your command, who will follow you
+whithersoever you go, and who will not be behindhand even with the Fena
+in facing hardship and danger."
+
+Finn stood up to thank the king; but before he had time to speak, they
+saw a messenger speeding towards them across the plain from the
+north-west, breathless, and begrimed all over with mud and dust. When he
+had come in presence of the company, he bowed low to the king, and,
+standing up, waited impatient for leave to speak.
+
+The king asked him what news he had brought and he replied--
+
+"Bad and direful news I have for thee, O king. A foreign fleet has come
+to our shores, which seems to cover all the sea, even as far as the eye
+can reach; and until the stars of heaven are counted, and the sands of
+the sea, and the leaves of the woods, the hosts that are landing from
+their black ships shall not be numbered. Even already they have let
+loose their plunderers over the country, who are burning and spoiling
+the farmsteads and the great mansions; and many noble heroes and keepers
+of houses of hospitality, and many people of the common sort, have been
+slain by them. Some say that it is the King of the World and his host,
+who, after conquering every country he has yet visited, has come now to
+ravage this land with fire and sword and spear, and bring it under his
+power; but I know not if this be true. And this, O king, is the news I
+bring thee."
+
+When the messenger had ended, the king spoke nought, though his
+countenance, indeed, showed trouble; but he looked earnestly at Finn.
+Finn understood this to mean that the king sought his help; and, with
+clear voice, he spoke--
+
+"Thou hast been generous to me and my people in our day of need, O king
+of Sorca; and now thou shalt not find the Fena lacking in grateful
+memory of thy kindness. We will, for a time, give up the pursuit of the
+Gilla Dacker, and we will place ourselves under thy command, and help
+thee against these marauders. Neither do I fear the outcome of this
+war; for many a time have we met these foreigners on the shores of Erin
+and elsewhere, and they have always yielded to us in the battle-field."
+
+The king of Sorca was glad of heart when he heard these words; and he
+sent his swift scouts all over the country to gather his fighting men.
+And when all had come together, he arranged them in fighting order, and
+marched towards the shore where the foreigners were spoiling the land.
+And they met the plundering parties, and drove them with great slaughter
+back to their ships, retaking all the spoils.
+
+Then they formed an encampment on the shore, with ramparts and deep
+ditches and long rows of pointed stakes all round. And each day a party
+of the foreigners landed, led by one of their captains, who were met by
+an equal number of the men of Sorca, led by one of the Fena; and each
+time they were driven back to their ships, after losing their best men.
+
+When, now, this had continued for many days, the King of the World
+called a meeting of the chiefs of his army, and asked their counsel as
+to what should be done. And they spoke as one man, that their best
+chiefs had fallen, and that they were in worse case now for overcoming
+the men of Sorca than they were at first; that their sages and prophets
+had declared against them; and that they had met with ill luck from the
+day of their arrival. And the advice they gave the king was to depart
+from the shores of Sorca, for there seemed no chance of conquering the
+country as long as the Fena were there to help the king.
+
+So the king ordered the sails to be set, and he left the harbour in the
+night with his whole fleet, without bringing the king of Sorca under
+subjection, and without imposing tribute on the people.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+FINN AND DERMAT MEET.
+
+
+When the people of Sorca and the Fena arose next morning, not a ship was
+in sight; and they began to rejoice greatly, finding themselves freed
+from this invasion. And while the king and Finn, with the chiefs and
+people, stood eagerly conversing on all these matters, they saw a troop
+at a distance coming towards them, with banners and standards and arms
+glittering in the morning sun. Now they wondered much who these might
+be; and Finn desired that some one might go and bring back tidings.
+
+So Fergus Finnvel went with a few followers, and when he was yet a good
+way off, he knew Dermat O'Dyna at the head of the troop, and ran forward
+with joy to meet him. And they embraced, even as brothers embrace who
+meet after being long parted. Then they came towards the assembly; and
+when the Fena saw Dermat they shouted with joy and welcome And Dermat,
+on his part, could scarce restrain the excess of his joyfulness; for,
+indeed, he did not expect to meet his friends so soon; and he embraced
+them one by one, with glad heart, beginning with Finn.
+
+Then Finn inquired from Dermat all particulars, what places he had
+visited since the day he had climbed up the rock, and whether he had
+heard any news of their lost companions; and he asked him also who were
+they--those valiant-looking fighting men--he had brought with him.
+
+Dermat told him of all his adventures from first to last--of his long
+combat at the well with the Knight of the Fountain, of his descent to
+Tir-fa-tonn, and how the Knight of Valour had entertained him hospitably
+in his palace. He related also how he headed the men of the Knight of
+Valour, and made war on the king of Tir-fa-tonn (who was also called the
+Knight of the Fountain, the wizard-champion who fought with Dermat at
+the well), whom he slew, and defeated his army.
+
+"And now," continued he, bringing forth the Knight of Valour from among
+the strange host, "this is he who was formerly called the Knight of
+Valour, but who is now the king of Tir-fa-tonn. Moreover, this king has
+told me, having himself found it out by his druidical art, that it was
+Avarta the Dedannan (the son of Illahan of the Many-coloured Raiment)
+who took the form of the Gilla Dacker, and who brought the sixteen Fena
+away to the Land of Promise,[8] where he now holds them in bondage."
+
+Finn and the young king then put hand in hand and made covenants of
+lasting friendship with each other. And the Fena were much rejoiced that
+they had at last got some tidings of their lost companions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+CONAN AND HIS COMPANIONS FOUND AND RESCUED.
+
+
+Now after they had rested some days in the palace of the king of Sorca,
+Fergus Finnvel told Finn that it was time to begin once more their quest
+after Conan and the others. They held council, therefore; and the
+resolution they came to was to return to the rock at the spot where they
+had turned aside from the track of the Gilla Dacker, and to begin their
+search anew from that. And when both the king of Sorca and the king of
+Tir-fa-tonn would have sent men with them, Finn thanked them, but said
+that the small party of Fena he had with him were quite enough for that
+adventure.
+
+So they took leave of the two kings, and went back to the rock, and
+Foltlebar at once found the track. He traced it from the very edge of
+the rock across the plain to the sea at the other side; and they brought
+round their ship and began their voyage. But this time Foltlebar found
+it very hard to keep on the track; for the Gilla Dacker, knowing that
+there were not in the world men more skilled in following up a quest
+than the Fena, took great pains to hide all traces of the flight of
+himself and his horse; so that Foltlebar was often thrown out; but he
+always recovered the track after a little time.
+
+And so they sailed from island to island, and from bay to bay, over many
+seas and by many shores, ever following the track, till at length they
+arrived at the Land of Promise. And when they had made the land, and
+knew for a certainty that this was indeed the Land of Promise, they
+rejoiced greatly; for in this land Dermat O'Dyna had been nurtured by
+Mannanan Mac Lir of the Yellow Hair.
+
+Then they held council as to what was best to be done; and Finn's advice
+was that they should burn and spoil the country, in revenge of the
+outrage that had been done to his people. Dermat, however, would not
+hear of this. And he said--
+
+"Not so, O king. The people of this land are of all men the most skilled
+in druidic art; and it is not well that they should be at feud with us.
+Let us rather send to Avarta a trusty herald, to demand that he should
+set our companions at liberty. If he does so, then we shall be at peace;
+if he refuse, then shall we proclaim war against him and his people, and
+waste this land with fire and sword, till he be forced, even by his own
+people, to give us back our friends."
+
+This advice was approved by all. And then Finn said--
+
+"But how shall heralds reach the dwelling of this enchanter; for the
+ways are not open and straight, as in other lands, but crooked and made
+for concealment, and the valleys and plains are dim and shadowy, and
+hard to be traversed?"
+
+But Foltlebar, nothing daunted by the dangers and the obscurity of the
+way, offered to go with a single trusty companion; and they took up the
+track and followed it without being once thrown out, till they reached
+the mansion of Avarta. There they found their friends amusing themselves
+on the green outside the palace walls; for, though kept captive in the
+island, yet were they in no wise restrained, but were treated by Avarta
+with much kindness. When they saw the heralds coming towards them, their
+joy knew no bounds; they crowded round to embrace them, and asked them
+many questions regarding their home and their friends.
+
+At last Avarta himself came forth, and asked who these strangers were;
+and Foltlebar replied--
+
+"We are of the people of Finn Mac Cumal, who has sent us as heralds to
+thee. He and his heroes have landed on this island, guided hither by me;
+and he bade us tell thee that he has come to wage war and to waste this
+land with fire and sword, as a punishment for that thou hast brought
+away his people by foul spells, and even now keepest them in bondage."
+
+When Avarta heard this, he made no reply, but called a council of his
+chief men, to consider whether they should send back to Finn an answer
+of war or of peace. And they, having much fear of the Fena, were minded
+to restore Finn's people, and to give him his own award in satisfaction
+for the injury done to him; and to invite Finn himself and those who had
+come with him to a feast of joy and friendship in the house of Avarta.
+
+Avarta himself went with Foltlebar to give this message. And after he
+and Finn had exchanged friendly greetings, he told them what the council
+had resolved; and Finn and Dermat and the others were glad at heart. And
+Finn and Avarta put hand in hand, and made a league of friendship.
+
+So they went with Avarta to his house, where they found their lost
+friends; and, being full of gladness, they saluted and embraced each
+other. Then a feast was prepared; and they were feasted for three days,
+and they ate and drank and made merry.
+
+On the fourth day, a meeting was called on the green to hear the award.
+Now it was resolved to make amends on the one hand to Finn, as king of
+the Fena, and on the other, to those who had been brought away by the
+Gilla Dacker. And when all were gathered together, Finn was first asked
+to name his award; and this is what he said--
+
+"I shall not name an award, O Avarta; neither shall I accept an eric
+from thee. But the wages I promised thee when we made our covenant at
+Knockainy, that I will give thee. For I am thankful for the welcome thou
+hast given us here; and I wish that there should be peace and friendship
+between us for ever."
+
+But Conan, on his part, was not so easily satisfied; and he said to
+Finn--
+
+"Little hast thou endured, O Finn, in all this matter; and thou mayst
+well waive thy award. But hadst thou, like us, suffered from the sharp
+bones and the rough carcase of the Gilla Dacker's monstrous horse, in a
+long journey from Erin to the Land of Promise, across wide seas, through
+tangled woods, and over rough-headed rocks, thou wouldst then, methinks,
+name an award."
+
+At this, Avarta, and the others who had seen Conan and his companions
+carried off on the back of the big horse, could scarce keep from
+laughing; and Avarta said to Conan--
+
+"Name thy award, and I will fulfil it every jot: for I have heard of
+thee, Conan, and I dread to bring the gibes and taunts of thy foul
+tongue on myself and my people."
+
+"Well then," said Conan, "my award is this: that you choose fifteen of
+the best and noblest men in the Land of Promise, among whom are to be
+your own best beloved friends; and that you cause them to mount on the
+back of the big horse, and that you yourself take hold of his tail. In
+this manner you shall fare to Erin, back again by the selfsame track the
+horse took when he brought us hither--through the same surging seas,
+through the same thick thorny woods, and over the same islands and rough
+rocks and dark glens. And this, O Avarta, is my award," said Conan.
+
+Now Finn and his people were rejoiced exceedingly when they heard
+Conan's award--that he asked from Avarta nothing more than like for
+like. For they feared much that he might claim treasure of gold and
+silver, and thus bring reproach on the Fena.
+
+Avarta promised that everything required by Conan should be done,
+binding himself in solemn pledges. Then the heroes took their leave; and
+having launched their ship on the broad, green sea, they sailed back by
+the same course to Erin. And they marched to their camping-place at
+Knockainy, where they rested in their tents.
+
+Avarta then chose his men. And he placed them on the horse's back, and
+he himself caught hold of the tail; and it is not told how they fared
+till they made harbour and landing-place at Cloghan Kincat. They delayed
+not, but straightway journeyed over the selfsame track as before, till
+they reached Knockainy.
+
+Finn and his people saw them afar off coming towards the hill with great
+speed; the Gilla Dacker, quite as large and as ugly as ever, running
+before the horse; for he had let go the tail at Cloghan Kincat. And the
+Fena could not help laughing heartily when they saw the plight of the
+fifteen chiefs on the great horse's back; and they said with one voice
+that Conan had made a good award that time.
+
+When the horse reached the spot from which he had at first set out, the
+men began to dismount. Then the Gilla Dacker, suddenly stepping forward,
+held up his arm and pointed earnestly over the heads of the Fena
+towards the field where the horses were standing; so that the heroes
+were startled, and turned round every man to look. But nothing was to be
+seen except the horses grazing quietly inside the fence.
+
+Finn and the others now turned round again, with intent to speak to the
+Gilla Dacker and bring him and his people into the tents; but much did
+they marvel to find them all gone. The Gilla Dacker and his great horse
+and the fifteen nobles of the Land of Promise had disappeared in an
+instant; and neither Finn himself nor any of his chiefs ever saw them
+afterwards.
+
+
+So far we have related the story of the pursuit of the Gilla Dacker and
+his horse.
+
+
+
+
+THE PURSUIT OF DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+FINN, THE SON OF CUMAL, SEEKS THE PRINCESS GRANIA TO WIFE.
+
+
+On a certain day, Finn, the son of Cumal, rose at early morn in Allen of
+the broad hill-slopes, and, going forth, sat him down on the green lawn
+before the palace, without companion or attendant. And two of his people
+followed him, namely, Oisin his son, and Dering the son of Dobar
+O'Baskin.
+
+Oisin spoke to him and asked, "Why, O king, hast thou come forth so
+early?"
+
+"Cause enough have I indeed," replied Finn; "for I am without a wife
+since Manissa, the daughter of Garad of the Black Knee, died; and who
+can enjoy sweet sleep when his life is lonely like mine, with no wife to
+comfort and cheer him? This, my friends, is the cause of my early
+rising."
+
+And Oisin said, "Why should you be without a wife if you desire one? For
+there is not, within the sea-circle of green Erin, a maiden that we will
+not bring you, either by consent or by force, if you only turn the
+light of your eyes on her."
+
+Then Dering spoke and said, "I know where there is a maiden, who in all
+respects is worthy to be thy wife."
+
+And when Finn asked who she was, Dering replied--
+
+"The maiden is Grania, daughter of king Cormac,[22] the son of Art, the
+son of Conn the Hundred-fighter; the most beautiful, the best
+instructed, and the most discreet in speech and manner of all the
+maidens of Erin."
+
+"There has been strife between me and Cormac for a long time," said
+Finn, "and it may happen that he will not give me his daughter in
+marriage. But go ye to Tara in my name, you and Oisin, and ask the
+maiden for me: if the king should refuse, so let it be; but I can better
+bear a refusal to you than to myself."
+
+"We will go," said Oisin; "but it is better that no man know of our
+journey till we return."
+
+So the two heroes took leave of Finn and went their way; and nothing is
+told of what befell them till they reached Tara. It chanced that the
+king was at this time holding a meeting; and the chiefs and great nobles
+of Tara were assembled round him. And when the two warriors arrived,
+they were welcomed, and the meeting was put off for that day; for the
+king felt sure that it was on some business of weight they had come.
+
+After they had eaten and drunk, the king, sending away all others from
+his presence, bade the two chiefs tell their errand. So Oisin told him
+they had come to seek his daughter Grania in marriage for Finn the son
+of Cumal.
+
+Then the king said, "In all Erin there is scarce a young prince or noble
+who has not sought my daughter in marriage; and she has refused them
+all. And it is on me that the ill feeling and reproach caused by her
+refusals have fallen; for she has ever made me the bearer of her
+answers. Wherefore now you shall come to my daughter's presence, and I
+will not mention the matter to her till she give you an answer from her
+own lips: so shall I be blameless if she refuse."
+
+So they went to the apartments of the women, at the sunny side of the
+palace. And when they had entered the princess's chamber, the king sat
+with her on the couch and said--
+
+"Here, my daughter, are two of the people of Finn the son of Cumal, who
+have come to ask thee as a wife for him."
+
+And Grania, giving, indeed, not much thought to the matter, answered, "I
+know not whether he is worthy to be thy son-in-law; but if he be, why
+should he not be a fitting husband for me?"
+
+The two messengers were satisfied with this answer, and retired. And
+Cormac made a feast for them; and they ate and drank and made merry with
+the chiefs and nobles of the palace; after which the king bade them tell
+Finn to come at the end of a fortnight to claim his bride.
+
+So the two heroes returned to Allen, and told how they had fared in
+their quest. And as all things come at last to an end, so this fortnight
+wore slowly away; and at the end of the time, Finn, having collected
+round him the chief men of the seven standing battalions of the Fena to
+be his guard, marched to Tara. The king received him with great honour,
+and welcomed the Fena, and they were feasted with the nobles of Erin in
+the great banquet hall of Micorta.[CVII.] And the king sat on his throne
+to enjoy the feast with his guests, having Finn on his right hand, and
+on his left the queen, Etta, the daughter of Atan of Corca; and Grania
+sat next the queen, her mother, on the left. And all the others sat
+according to their rank and patrimony.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+DERMAT O'DYNA SECRETLY ESPOUSES THE PRINCESS GRANIA.
+
+
+Now while the feast went on, it chanced that Dara of the Poems, one of
+Finn's druids, sat near Grania. And he recited for her many lays about
+the deeds of her forefathers; after which a pleasant conversation arose
+between them. And when they had talked for some time, she asked him--
+
+"What means all this feasting? And why has Finn come with his people on
+this visit to my father the king?"
+
+Dara was surprised at this question, and answered, "If thou dost not
+know, it is hard for me to know."
+
+And Grania answered, "I wish, indeed, to learn from you what has brought
+Finn to Tara."
+
+"It is strange to hear thee ask this question," said the druid. "Knowest
+thou not that he has come to claim thee for his wife?"
+
+Grania was silent for a long time after hearing this. And again she
+spoke--
+
+"If, indeed, Finn had sought me for his son Oisin, or for the youthful
+Oscar, there would be nothing to wonder at; but I marvel much that he
+seeks me for himself, seeing that he is older than my father."
+
+Then Grania meditated in silence; and after a time she said to the
+druid--
+
+"This is a goodly company, but I know not one among them, except only
+Oisin, the son of Finn. Tell me now who is that warrior on the right of
+Oisin."
+
+"That knightly warrior," answered the druid, "is Gaul Mac Morna the
+Terrible in Battle."
+
+"Who is the youthful champion to the right of Gaul?" asked Grania.
+
+"That is Oscar, the son of Oisin," said the druid.
+
+"Who is the graceful and active-looking chief sitting next Oscar?" asked
+the princess.
+
+"That is Kylta Mac Ronan the Swift-footed," said the druid.
+
+"Next to Kylta Mac Ronan sits a champion with fair, freckled skin,
+raven-black curls, a gentle, handsome, manly countenance, and soft
+voice: pray who is he?"
+
+"That is Dermat O'Dyna of the Bright Face, the favourite of maidens, and
+beloved of all the Fena for his high-mindedness, his bravery, and his
+generous disposition."
+
+"Who is he sitting at Dermat's shoulder?" asked Grania.
+
+"That is Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin," replied the druid; "a
+valiant champion, and also a druid and a man of science."
+
+Then Grania called her handmaid, and said to her, "Bring me the large
+jewelled, gold-chased drinking-horn that lies in my chamber."
+
+The handmaid brought the drinking-horn; and Grania, having filled it to
+the brim, said--
+
+"Take it now to Finn from me, and tell him that I desire him to drink
+from it."
+
+The handmaiden did so, and Finn took a full draught. He passed the
+drinking-horn to the king, and the king drank; and after him the queen.
+Then again Grania bade the handmaid bring it to Carbri of the Liffey,
+the king's son; and she ceased not till all she wished to drink had
+drunk from the gold-chased horn. And after a little time, those who had
+drunk fell into a deep sleep, like the sleep of death.
+
+Then the princess rose from her seat, and, walking softly across the
+hall, sat down near Dermat O'Dyna; and with downcast eyes and low voice,
+she said--
+
+"Wilt thou, Dermat, return my love if I give it to thee?"
+
+Dermat heard her at first with amazement and alarm. Then for a moment,
+even before he was aware, his heart leaped with joy; but when he
+bethought him of his duty to his chief, he hardened his mind, and
+answered with cold looks and words--
+
+"The maiden who is betrothed to Finn, I will not love; and even if I
+were so minded, I dare not."
+
+And with eyes still cast down, Grania said, "I know well it is thy duty,
+and not thy heart, that prompts thee to speak so. Thou seest how it is
+with me; and I am forced to speak more boldly than a maiden should. Finn
+has come to ask me for his wife; but he is an old man, even older than
+my father, and I love him not. But I love thee, Dermat, and I beseech
+thee to save me from this hateful marriage. And, lest thou think that my
+love for thee is only a passing fancy, hear now what befell.
+
+"Of a day when a hurling match was played on the green of Tara, between
+Mac Luga and the Fena on the one side, and Carbri of the Liffey and the
+men of Tara on the other, I sat high up at the window of my sunny
+chamber to see the game. Thou didst remain sitting with some others that
+day, not meaning to take part in the play. But at last, when the game
+began to go against thy friends, I saw thee start up; and, snatching the
+hurlet from the man nearest to thee, thou didst rush into the thick of
+the crowd; and before sitting down thou didst win the goal three times
+on the men of Tara. At that hour my eyes and my heart were turned to
+thee; and well I knew thee to-day in this banquet hall, though I knew
+not thy name till the druid told me. At that same hour, too, I gave thee
+my love--what I never gave, and never will give, to any other."
+
+Then was Dermat sore troubled. He strove with himself, but strove in
+vain; for he could not help loving the princess with his whole heart.
+Yet none the less did he hide his thoughts; for his duty to his chief
+prevailed. And with looks and words cold and stern, he replied--
+
+"I marvel greatly that thou hast not given thy love to Finn, who
+deserves it much better than any other man alive. And still more do I
+marvel that thou hast lighted on me beyond all the princes and nobles of
+Tara; for truly there is not one among them less worthy of thy love than
+I. But that thou shouldst be my wife, by no means can this be; for even
+were I to consent, there is not in Erin a fastness or a wilderness,
+however strong or remote, that could shelter us from Finn's vengeance."
+
+Then Grania said, "I read thy thoughts; and I know thou art striving
+against what thy heart prompts. And now, O Dermat, I place thee under
+gesa,[12] and under the bonds of heavy druidical spells--bonds that true
+heroes never break through, that thou take me for thy wife before Finn
+and the others awaken from their sleep; and save me from this hateful
+marriage."
+
+And Dermat, still unyielding, replied, "Evil are those gesa thou hast
+put on me; and evil, I fear, will come of them. But dost thou not know,
+princess, that whenever Finn sleeps at Tara, it is one of his privileges
+to have in his own keeping the keys of the great gates; so that even if
+we so willed it, we should not be able to leave the fortress?"
+
+"There is a wicket gate leading out from my apartments," said Grania,
+"and through that we shall pass forth."
+
+"That I cannot do," answered Dermat; "for it is one of my gesa[12] never
+to enter a king's mansion, or leave it, by a wicket gate."
+
+And Grania answered, "I have heard it said that every true champion, who
+has been instructed in all the feats that a warrior should learn, can
+bound over the highest rampart of a fort by means of the handles of his
+spears; and well I know that thou art the most accomplished champion
+among the Fena. I will now pass out through the wicket gate; and even if
+thou dost not follow, I will fly alone from Tara."
+
+And so she went forth from the banquet hall.
+
+Then Dermat, much doubting how to act, spoke to his friends and asked
+counsel of them. And first he addressed Oisin, the son of Finn, and
+asked him how he should deal with the heavy gesa-bonds that had been
+laid on him by the princess; and what he should do in the case.
+
+"You are blameless in regard to these bonds," answered Oisin; "and I
+counsel you to follow Grania; but guard yourself well against the wiles
+of Finn."
+
+"O dear friend Oscar," spoke Dermat again, "what think you is best for
+me to do, seeing that these heavy gesa-bonds have been put on me?"
+
+"I say you should follow Grania," answered Oscar; "for he, indeed, is
+but a pitiful champion who fears to keep his bonds."
+
+"What counsel do you give me, Kylta?" said Dermat to Kylta Mac Ronan.
+
+"I say," answered Kylta, "that I would gladly give the world's wealth
+that the princess had given me her love; and I counsel you to follow
+her."
+
+Last of all, Dermat spoke to Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, and
+said, "Give me your judgment in this hard matter, friend Dering."
+
+And Dering answered, "If you espouse Grania, I foresee that your death
+will come of it, which grieves me even to think of; but even so, I
+counsel you to follow the princess rather than break through your gesa."
+
+And Dermat, doubting even still, asked for the last time, "Is this, my
+friends, the counsel you all give?"
+
+And they all answered, "Yes," as with the voice of one man.
+
+Then Dermat arose and put on his armour and his helmet; and he took his
+shield, and his two heavy spears, and his sword. And with tears he bade
+farewell to his dear companions; for well he knew that it would be long
+before they should meet again; and he foresaw trouble and danger.
+
+Then he went forth to where the steep side of the inner mound
+overlooked the outer rampart; and, placing his two spears point
+downwards, and leaning on them after the manner of skilful champions,
+with two light, airy bounds he cleared rampart and ditch, and measured
+the length of his two feet on the level green outside. And there the
+princess met him; and he said to her, with voice and manner still
+distant and stern--
+
+"Evil will certainly come of this espousal, O princess, both to thee and
+to me. Far better would it be for thee to choose Finn and to pass me by;
+for now we shall wander without home or rest, fleeing from his wrath.
+Return, then, princess, return even now through the wicket gate, for the
+sleepers have not yet awakened; and Finn shall never learn what has
+happened."
+
+But Grania, gentle and sad indeed, but quite unmoved, replied, "I will
+never return; and until death takes me I will not part from thee."
+
+Then at last Dermat yielded and strove no longer; and putting off his
+sternness of manner and voice, he spoke gently to the princess and
+said--
+
+"I will hide my thoughts from thee no more, Grania. I will be thy
+husband, all unworthy of thee as I am; and I will guard thee and defend
+thee to the death from Finn and his hirelings."
+
+And they plighted their faith, and vowed solemn vows to be faithful to
+each other as man and wife for ever.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVII.] See foot-note, page 55.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+FLIGHT AND PURSUIT.
+
+
+Then Grania showed Dermat the fenced meadow where her father's horses
+grazed, and bade him yoke two horses to a chariot. And when he had done
+so, he and Grania sat in the chariot and travelled with all speed
+westward, till they reached Ath-Luan.[CVIII.]
+
+And when they had come to the ford, Dermat said, "Finn will doubtless
+pursue us, and it will be all the easier for him to follow our track,
+that we have the horses."
+
+And Grania answered, "As we are now so far from Tara, we may leave the
+chariot and horses here, and I will fare on foot henceforward."
+
+So they alighted from the chariot; and Dermat, leading one of the horses
+across, left them both some distance above the ford, one at each side of
+the river. And he took up Grania in his strong arms, and brought her
+tenderly across the ford, so that not even the sole of her foot, or the
+skirt of her mantle was wetted. Then they walked against the stream for
+a mile, and turned south-west, till they reached the Wood of the two
+Tents.[CIX.]
+
+In the midst of the wood, where it was thickest, Dermat lopped off
+branches and wove a hut, where they rested. And he brought Grania the
+wild animals of the wood to eat, and gave her the water of a clear
+spring to drink.
+
+As to Finn, the son of Cumal, I will now tell what befell him. When the
+king and his guests arose from their sleep at early dawn next morning,
+they found Dermat and Grania gone; and a burning jealousy seized on
+Finn, and his rage was so great that for a time all his strength left
+him. Then he sent for his tracking-men, namely, the Clann Navin; and he
+commanded them forthwith to follow the track of Dermat and Grania. This
+they did with much ease as far as Ath-Luan, while Finn and the others
+followed after; but when they had come to the ford, they lost the track.
+Whereupon Finn, being now indeed easily kindled to wrath, told them that
+unless they took up the track again speedily, he would hang every man of
+the Clann Navin on the edge of the ford.
+
+So the trackers, being sore afraid, searched upwards against the stream,
+and found the two horses where they had been left, one on each side of
+the river. And going on a mile further, they came to the spot where
+Dermat and Grania had turned from the river; and there they lighted on
+the south-west track, Finn and the Fena still following. And when the
+Clann Navin had pointed out to Finn the direction of the track, he
+said--
+
+"Well do I know now where we shall find Dermat and Grania; for of a
+certainty they have hidden themselves in the Wood of the two Tents."
+
+Now it chanced that Oisin, and Oscar, and Kylta, and Dering were present
+when Finn spoke these words; and they were troubled, for they loved
+Dermat. And going aside, they held council among themselves, and Oisin
+spoke--
+
+"There is much likelihood, friends, that Finn speaks truth; for he is
+far-seeing, and judges not hastily. It is needful, therefore, that we
+send Dermat warning, lest he be taken unawares. My counsel is that you,
+Oscar, find out Finn's hound, Bran, and tell him to go to the Wood of
+the two Tents with a warning to Dermat; for Bran does not love his own
+master Finn better than he loves Dermat."
+
+So Oscar called Bran secretly, and told him what he should do. Bran
+listened with sagacious eye and ears erect, and understood Oscar's words
+quite well. Then, running back to the rear of the host, so that Finn
+might not see him, he followed the track without once losing it, till he
+arrived at the Wood of the two Tents. There he found Dermat and Grania
+asleep in their hut, and he put his head into Dermat's bosom.
+
+Dermat started up from his sleep, and seeing Bran, he awakened Grania,
+and said--
+
+"Here is Bran, Finn's hound; he has come to warn me that Finn himself is
+near."
+
+And Grania trembled and said, "Let us take the warning, then, and fly!"
+
+But Dermat answered, "I will not leave this hut; for however long we
+fly, we cannot escape from Finn; and it is not worse to fall into his
+hands now than at any other time. Howbeit, they shall not come into this
+fastness unless I permit them."
+
+Then great fear fell on Grania; but, seeing Dermat gloomy and downcast,
+she urged the point no further.
+
+Again Oisin spoke to his three companions and said, "I fear me that Bran
+may not have been able to baffle Finn, or that some other mischance may
+have hindered him from finding Dermat; so we must needs send him another
+warning. Bring hither, therefore, Fergor, Kylta's errand-man."
+
+And Kylta brought forward Fergor.
+
+Now this Fergor had a voice so loud that his shout was heard over the
+three nearest cantreds.
+
+So they caused him to give three shouts that Dermat might hear. And
+Dermat heard Fergor's shouts, and, awakening Grania from her sleep, said
+to her--
+
+"I hear the shout of Fergor, Kylta's errand-man. And he is with Kylta,
+and Kylta is with Finn; and I know that my friends have sent me this
+warning, as a sign that Finn himself is coming."
+
+And again Grania trembled and said, "Let us take this warning and fly!"
+
+But Dermat answered, "I will not fly; and we shall not leave this wood
+till Finn and the Fena overtake us. Howbeit, none shall come into this
+fastness unless I permit them."
+
+And Grania was in great fear; but this time Dermat looked gloomy and
+stern, and she pressed the matter no further.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CVIII.] Ath-Luan, now Athlone, on the Shannon. In ancient times the
+river had to be crossed by a ford, where the bridge is now built.
+
+[CIX.] The Wood of the two Tents was situated in the territory of
+Clanrickard, in the county Galway.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE FASTNESS OF THE SEVEN NARROW DOORS.
+
+
+Now as to Finn. He and the others went forward till they reached the
+Wood of the two Tents. And he sent forward the Clann Navin to make
+search; who went, and having made their way to the thickest part of the
+wood, they came to a fence which they could not cross.
+
+For Dermat had cleared a space round his hut, and surrounded it with a
+fence that no man could pierce, with seven narrow doors of strong poles
+woven with saplings, to face seven different parts of the wood.
+
+Then the Clann Navin climbed up to a high tree branch, and looked over
+the fence; and they saw Dermat with a lady. And when they had returned,
+Finn asked them if Dermat and Grania were in the wood. And they
+answered--
+
+"Dermat, indeed, is there, and we saw a lady with him; but whether she
+be Grania or not we cannot tell, for we know not the princess."
+
+"May ill luck attend Dermat, and all his friends for his sake!" said
+Finn. "I know he is in this wood; and he shall never leave it till he
+give me quittance for the injury he has done me."
+
+And Oisin said, "Certain it is, that you, Finn, are blinded by jealousy;
+else you would never think that Dermat would await you on this plain,
+with no stronger fastness to shelter him from your wrath than the Wood
+of the two Tents."
+
+To which Finn, being angry, replied, "Your words will profit you
+nothing, Oisin; neither will your friendship for Dermat avail him aught.
+Well I knew, indeed, when I heard Fergor's three shouts, that it was ye
+who caused him to shout, as a warning signal to Dermat; and I know also
+that ye sent my dog Bran to him with another warning. But these warnings
+will not avail you; for he shall never leave this wood till he pay me
+such eric[10] as I seek for the injury he has done me."
+
+Then Oscar spoke and said, "Surely, Finn, it is mere folly to believe
+that Dermat would wait here for you, knowing, as he does, that you seek
+his head."
+
+As Oscar spoke these words, they arrived at the fence; and Finn
+answered, "Who then, think you, has cleared the wood in this manner, and
+fenced the space with this strong, sheltering enclosure, and fitted it
+with these narrow doors? But indeed," added he, "I will find out the
+truth of the matter in another way." So, raising his voice a little, he
+called out, "Tell us now, Dermat, which of us is telling truth, Oscar or
+I."
+
+And Dermat, who would not hide when called on, answered from within,
+"You never erred in your judgment, O king: Grania and I are here; but
+none shall come in unless I permit them."
+
+Then Finn placed his men around the enclosure, a company at each narrow
+door; and he said to each company, "If Dermat tries to escape by this
+door, seize him and keep him securely for me."
+
+Now when Grania saw these preparations, and overheard Finn's words, she
+was overcome with fear, and wept and trembled very much. And Dermat had
+pity on his wife, and comforted her; and he kissed her three times,
+bidding her be of good cheer, for that all would be well with them yet.
+
+And when Finn saw this--for he stood with some others viewing the hut
+from a mound at a little way off--a flame of burning jealousy went
+through his heart; and he said--
+
+"Now of a certainty Dermat shall not escape from me; and I shall have
+his head for all these injuries!"
+
+Now Angus of Bruga,[1] the wisest and most skilled in magic arts of all
+the Dedannan race, was Dermat's foster father. For he had reared him
+from childhood, and had taught him all the arts and accomplishments of a
+champion; and he loved him even as a father loves his only son.
+
+And it was revealed to Angus that Dermat was in deadly strait So he
+arose and travelled on the wings of the cool, east wind, neither did he
+halt till he reached the Wood of the two Tents; and he passed into the
+hut without being perceived by Finn and his men. And when Dermat saw the
+old man his heart leaped with joy.
+
+Angus greeted Dermat and Grania, and said, "What is this thing thou hast
+done, my son?"
+
+And Dermat answered, "The princess Grania, daughter of the king of Tara,
+asked me to take her for my wife, putting heavy gesa-bonds on me; and I
+did so, and we fled from her father's house. And Finn, the son of Cumal,
+has pursued us with intent to kill me, for he sought the princess to
+wife for himself."
+
+And Angus said, "Come now, children, under my mantle, one under each
+border, and I will bring you both away from this place without the
+knowledge of Finn."
+
+But Dermat answered, "Take Grania; but for me, I will not go with you.
+However, I will leave this place; and if I am alive I will follow you.
+But if they slay me, send the princess to her father, and tell him to
+treat her neither better nor worse on account of taking me for her
+husband."
+
+Then Dermat kissed Grania, and bade her be of good cheer, for that he
+feared not his foes. And Angus placed her under his mantle, and, telling
+Dermat whither to follow, went forth from the enclosure without the
+knowledge of Finn and the Fena. They turned south then, and nothing is
+told of what befell them till they came to the Wood of the two Sallows,
+which is now called Limerick.
+
+Now as to Dermat. After Angus and Grania had left him, he girded on his
+armour, and took his sharp weapons in his hands; and he stood up tall
+and straight like a pillar, meditating in silence for a space. Then he
+went to one of the seven narrow doors, and asked who was outside.
+
+"No enemy of thine is here, but Oisin and Oscar, with the men of the
+Clann Baskin. Come out to us, and no one will dare to harm thee."
+
+"I must needs find the door where Finn himself keeps guard," answered
+Dermat; "so I will not go out to you."
+
+He went to the second narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Kylta Mac Ronan with the Clann Ronan around him. Come out at this door,
+and we will fight to the death for thy sake."
+
+"I will not go out to you," answered Dermat; "for I do not wish to bring
+Finn's anger on you for treating me with kindness."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Conan of the Grey Rushes and the Clann Morna. We are no friends to
+Finn; but thee we all love. Come out to us, then, and no one will dare
+to harm thee."
+
+"Of a certainty I will not go out at this door," answered Dermat; "for
+well I know that Finn would rather see you all dead than that I should
+escape!"
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"A friend and a dear comrade of thine is here; Cuan, the chief of the
+Munster Fena, and his Munster men with him. Thou and we come from the
+same territory; and if need be we will give our lives in fight for thy
+sake."
+
+"I will not go out to you," said Dermat; "for it would bring Finn's sure
+displeasure on you to act kindly towards me."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Finn, the son of Glore of the Loud Voice, chief of the Fena of Ulster,
+and the Ulster men around him. Thou and we come not from the same
+territory; but we all love thee, Dermat; and now come forth to us, and
+who will dare to wound or harm thee?"
+
+"I will not go out to you," replied Dermat; "you are a faithful friend
+of mine, and your father in like manner; and I do not wish you to earn
+the enmity of Finn on my account."
+
+He went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"No friend of thine! Here stand the Clann Navin watching for thee;
+namely, Aed the Lesser, and Aed the Tall, and Gonna the Wounder, and
+Gothan the Loud-voiced, and Cuan the Tracker, with all their men. We
+bear thee no love; and if thou come out at this door, we shall make thee
+a mark for our swords and spears!"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Lying and mean-faced dogs! It is not fear of you
+that keeps me from going forth at this door; but I do not wish to defile
+my spear with the blood of your shoeless, tracking vagabonds!"
+
+And he went to another narrow door, and asked who was there.
+
+"Finn, the son of Cumal, the son of Art, the son of Trenmore O'Baskin,
+and with him the Leinster Fena. No love awaits thee here; and if thou
+come forth we will cleave thee, flesh and bones!"
+
+"The door I have sought I have found at last!" cried Dermat; "for the
+door where thou, Finn, standest, that, of a certainty, is the very door
+by which I shall pass out!"
+
+Then Finn charged his men, under pain of death, not to let Dermat pass.
+But Dermat, watching an unguarded place, rose by means of his two spears
+with a light, airy bound over the fence, and alighted on the clear space
+outside; and running swiftly forward, was in a moment beyond the reach
+of sword and spear. And so dismayed were they by his threatening look,
+that not a man attempted to follow him.
+
+Then, turning southward, he never halted till he came to the Wood of the
+two Sallows, where he found Angus and Grania in a warm hut, with a boar
+fixed on hazel spits roasting before a great flaming fire. Dermat
+greeted them; and the spark of life all but leaped from Grania's heart
+with joy when she saw him.[CX.] So he told them all that had befallen
+him; and they ate their meal and slept in peace that night, till the
+morning of next day filled the world with light.
+
+Then Angus arose with the dawn, and said to Dermat, "I will now depart,
+my son; but Finn will still pursue you, and I leave you this counsel to
+guide you when I am gone. Go not into a tree having only one trunk;
+never enter a cave that has only one opening; never land on an island of
+the sea that has only one channel of approach; where you cook your food,
+there eat it not; where you eat, sleep not there; and where you sleep
+to-night, sleep not there to-morrow night!"
+
+So Angus bade them farewell; and they were sad after him.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CX.] Original: "It was little but that the salmon of her life fled
+through her mouth with joy before Dermat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR THREE VENOMOUS HOUNDS ON THE TRACK OF
+DERMAT AND GRANIA.
+
+
+After Angus was gone, Dermat and Grania journeyed westward, keeping the
+Shannon on their right, till they reached the Rough Stream of the
+Champions, which is now called the Laune.[CXI.] They rested there; and
+Dermat killed a salmon with his spear, and fixed it on a hazel spit to
+broil on the near bank; and he crossed the river with Grania, to eat it
+on the further bank, as Angus had told him. And after they had eaten,
+they sought a sleeping-place further west.
+
+They rose early next morning, and journeyed still west, till they
+reached the Grey Moor of Finnlia.[CXII.] There they met a man of great
+size, noble in gait and feature, but with arms and armour not befitting
+his appearance. Dermat greeted him, and asked who he was; and he
+replied--
+
+"My name is Modan, and I am seeking a lord whom I may serve for pay."
+
+"If I take you into my service," asked Dermat, "what can you do for us?"
+
+"I will serve you by day and watch for you by night," answered Modan.
+
+Whereupon they entered into bonds of agreement with one another, Modan
+to serve by day and watch by night, and Dermat to pay him wages.
+
+Then the three went westward till they reached the river of
+Carra,[CXIII.] and Modan lifted Dermat and Grania with the greatest
+ease, and bore them dry across the stream. From that further west to
+Beha,[CXIV.] and Modan bore them over this stream in like manner. Here
+they found a cave, on the side of the hill over that part of the sea
+called Tonn Toma,[CXV.] namely, the hill of Curra-Kenn-Ammid; and Modan
+prepared a couch of soft rushes and birch tops in the innermost part of
+the cave, for Dermat and Grania. After this he went to the nearest wood
+and cut him a long, straight quicken tree rod; and, having put a hair
+and a hook on the rod, and a holly berry on the hook, he stood on the
+brink of the stream, and with three casts he hooked three salmon. Then
+he put the rod by for next day; and, putting the hook and the hair under
+his girdle, he returned to Dermat and Grania. And he broiled the fish,
+and they ate their meal, Modan giving the largest salmon to Dermat, the
+second in size to Grania, and keeping the smallest for himself. After
+which Dermat and Grania went to sleep in the cave, and Modan kept watch
+and ward at the mouth, till morning arose with its abundant light.
+
+Dermat rose early and set out for the nearest high hill, to look round
+the country, telling Grania to keep watch at the mouth of the cave while
+Modan slept. Having come to the top of the hill, he viewed the country
+all round to the four points of the sky; and after a little while, he
+saw a fleet of black ships approaching from the west. When they had come
+near enough to the shore, a company of nine nines landed at the very
+foot of the hill where Dermat stood. He went to them, and, after
+greeting them, asked who they were, and from what country they had come.
+
+"We are three sea-champions from the Iccian Sea,[CXVI.] who are at the
+head of this troop," replied they, "and our names are Ducoss, Fincoss,
+and Trencoss;[CXVII.] and we have come hither at the suit of Finn the
+son of Cumal. For a certain chief named Dermat O'Dyna has rebelled
+against him, and is now an outlaw, flying through the country from one
+fastness to another. And Finn has asked us to come with our fleet to
+watch the coast, while he himself watches inland, so that this marauder
+may no longer escape punishment. We hear, moreover, that this Dermat is
+valiant and dangerous to attack, and we have brought hither three
+venomous hounds to loose them on his track, and scent him to his
+hiding-place: fire cannot burn them, water cannot drown them, and
+weapons cannot wound them. And now tell us who thou art, and whether
+thou hast heard any tidings of this Dermat O'Dyna."
+
+"I saw him, indeed, yesterday," answered Dermat. "I know him well too,
+and I counsel you to follow your quest warily; for if you meet with
+Dermat O'Dyna you will have no common man to deal with."
+
+Then he asked if they had got any wine in their ships. They replied
+that they had; so he asked that a tun might be brought, as he wished to
+drink; and he told them he would show them a champion-feat after he had
+drunk. Two men were accordingly sent on board for a tun of wine. When
+they had brought it, Dermat raised it in his arms and drank; and the
+others drank in like manner till the tun was empty.
+
+Then he said, "I will now show you a champion-feat that Dermat O'Dyna
+taught me; and I challenge any man among you to do it after me. And from
+this you may learn what manner of man you will have to deal with, should
+you have the ill luck to meet with Dermat himself."
+
+So saying, he brought the tun to the crest of the hill, and set it down
+at the edge of a steep cliff. Then, leaping up on it, he turned it
+cunningly aside from the cliff, and let it roll down the smooth slope of
+the hill till it reached the very bottom, while he himself remained
+standing on it the whole time. And three times did he do this while the
+strangers looked on.
+
+But they laughed, mocking him, and said, "Do you call that a
+champion-feat indeed? Truly, you have never in your life seen a good
+champion-feat!"
+
+Thereupon one among them started up and brought the tun to the top of
+the hill, intending to do the same feat; and, placing it on the edge of
+the cliff, he leaped up on it. And while he stood on it, Dermat pushed
+it with his foot to set it going. But the moment it moved, the man lost
+his balance, and while the tun went rolling down the face of the hill,
+he himself fell over the cliff, and was dashed to pieces on the sharp
+edges and points of the rocks.
+
+Another man tried the same thing, and he in like manner fell down and
+was killed among the rocks. And the end of the matter was, that before
+they would acknowledge themselves beaten, fifty of their men attempted
+the feat, and every man of the fifty fell over the cliff and was killed.
+So the others went on board their ships, gloomy and heart-sore.
+
+Dermat returned to the cave, and Grania's heart was glad when she saw
+him. Modan went then, and putting the hair and the hook on the rod as
+before, he hooked three salmon; and he went back to the cave and broiled
+them on hazel spits. And they ate their meal; and Modan kept watch and
+ward, while Dermat and Grania slept in the cave, till the pleasant
+morning filled the world with light.
+
+Dermat rose up with the dawn, and telling Grania to keep watch while
+Modan slept, he went to the same hill, and found the three sea-champions
+with their men on the shore before him. He greeted them, and asked
+whether they wished for any more champion-feats. But they answered that
+they would much rather he would give them some tidings of Dermat O'Dyna.
+Whereupon he said--
+
+"I have seen a man who saw him this very morning. And now I will show
+you a champion-feat he taught me, in order that you may know what is
+before you, should you meet with Dermat O'Dyna himself."
+
+When he had said this, he threw off helmet and tunic and armour, till
+only his shirt remained over his brawny shoulders; and, taking the
+Ga-boi,[CXVIII.] the spear of Mannanan Mac Lir, he fixed it firmly in
+the earth, standing point upwards. Then, walking back some little way,
+he ran towards the spear, and, rising from the earth with a bird-like
+bound, he alighted softly on the very point; and, again leaping off it,
+he came to the ground on his feet without wound or hurt of any kind.
+
+Then arose one of the strange warriors and said, "If you call that a
+champion-feat, it is plain that you have never seen a good champion-feat
+in your life!"
+
+And so saying, he ran swiftly towards the spear and made a great bound;
+but he fell heavily on the sharp point, so that it pierced him through
+the heart, and he was taken down dead. Another man attempted the feat,
+and was killed in like manner; and before they ceased, fifty of their
+men were slain by Dermat's spear. Then they bade him draw his spear from
+the earth, saying that no more should try that feat; and they went on
+board their ships.
+
+So Dermat returned to the cave; and Modan hooked three salmon; and
+Dermat and Grania ate their meal and slept till morning, Modan keeping
+watch.
+
+Next morning, Dermat went to the hill, bringing two strong forked poles
+cut from the wood. He found the three sea-champions with their men on
+the shore; and he greeted them, and said--
+
+"I have come to-day to show you a champion-feat I learned from Dermat
+O'Dyna, that you may know what to expect if you should meet with Dermat
+himself."
+
+He then fixed the poles standing firmly in the earth; and he placed the
+Morallta, that is, the long sword of Angus of the Bruga, in the forks,
+edge upwards, the hilt on one, and the point on the other, binding it
+firmly with withes. Then, rising up with a bound, he alighted gently on
+the edge; and he walked cunningly three times from hilt to point, and
+from point to hilt, and then leaped lightly to the earth without wound
+or hurt. And he challenged the strangers to do that feat.
+
+Then one arose and said, "There never yet was done a champion-feat by a
+man of Erin, that one among us will not do likewise."
+
+And he leaped up, intending to alight on his feet; but he came down
+heavily on the sharp edge, so that the sword cut him clean in two.
+Another tried the same, and was killed also; and, they ceased not till
+as many were killed that day by Dermat's sword as were killed on each of
+the two days before.
+
+When they were about to return to their ships, they asked him had he got
+any tidings of Dermat O'Dyna; and he answered--
+
+"I have seen him this day: I will now go to seek him, and methinks I
+shall bring him to you in the morning."
+
+Then he returned to the cave; and he and Grania ate their meal, and
+slept that night, while Modan kept watch.
+
+Next morning, Dermat arose with the dawn, and this time he arrayed
+himself for battle. He put on his heavy armour--no man who wore it could
+be wounded through it, or above it, or beneath it. He hung the Morallta
+at his left hip, the sword of Angus of the Bruga, which never left
+anything for a second blow; and he took his two thick-handled spears,
+the Ga-derg and the Ga-boi, whose wounds no one ever recovered.
+
+Then he awakened Grania, telling her to keep watch till he returned,
+that Modan might sleep. And when she saw him so arrayed, she trembled
+with fear, for she well knew that this was his manner of preparing for
+battle. And she asked him what he meant to do to-day, and whether Finn's
+pursuers had found them. But he, to quiet her fears, put off the matter
+lightly, and said, "It is better to be prepared, lest the enemy come in
+my way;" and this soothed her.
+
+So he went to the hill, and met the strangers on the shore as before.
+And they asked him had he any tidings to give them of Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+He answered, "He is not very far off, for I have seen him just now."
+
+"Then," said they, "lead us to his hiding-place, that we may bring his
+head to Finn the son of Cumal."
+
+"That would, indeed, be an ill way of repaying friendship," answered he.
+"Dermat O'Dyna is my friend; and he is now under the protection of my
+valour: so of this be sure, I will do him no treachery."
+
+And they replied wrathfully, "If thou art a friend to Dermat O'Dyna,
+thou art a foe to Finn; and now we will take thy head and bring it to
+him along with the head of Dermat."
+
+"You might indeed do that with much ease," answered Dermat, "if I were
+bound hand and foot; but being as I am, free, I shall defend myself
+after my usual custom."
+
+Then he drew the Morallta from its sheath, and, springing forward to
+meet them as they closed on him, he clove the body of the foremost in
+two with one blow. Then he rushed through them and under them and over
+them, like a wolf among sheep, or a hawk among sparrows, cleaving and
+slaughtering them, till only a few were left, who hardly escaped to
+their ships.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXI.] The river Laune, flowing from the Lakes of Killarney into Dingle
+Bay.
+
+[CXII.] The Grey Moor of Finnlia (_Bogach-Fhinnleithe_ in the original)
+was somewhere between the river Laune and the river Caragh, but the name
+is now forgotten.
+
+[CXIII.] The river of Carra, the Caragh river, flowing into Dingle Bay
+from the beautiful lake Caragh, twenty miles west of Killarney.
+
+[CXIV.] Beha, the river Behy, about a mile and a half west from the
+Caragh, flowing through Glanbehy into Rossbehy creek.
+
+[CXV.] Tonn Toma, the wave of Toma (a woman). The word Tonn (a wave or
+billow) was often applied to the sea-waves that break over certain
+sandbanks and rocks with an exceptionally loud roaring. Tonn Toma is the
+name of a sandbank at the head of Dingle Bay, just outside the extreme
+point of Rossbehy peninsula; and in the winter storms, the sea thunders
+on this sandbank, and indeed on the whole length of the beach of the
+peninsula, so as often to be heard twenty miles inland. This roaring is
+popularly believed to predict rain.
+
+There is a chain of three hills, Stookaniller, Knockatinna, and
+Knockboy, lying between Behy bridge on the east and Drung mountain on
+the west, and isolated from the hills to the south-east by the valley of
+Glanbehy. These hills rise directly over Tonn Toma; and the old Gaelic
+name, Currach-Cinn-Adhmuid (the moor of the head [or hill] of timber)
+must have been anciently applied to one or all of them.
+
+(See, for an account of the great historical _tonns_ of Ireland, the
+author's "Origin and History of Irish Names of Places," series ii. page
+251.)
+
+[CXVI.] Iccian Sea (Irish, _Muir nIcht_), the Irish name for the sea
+between England and France.
+
+[CXVII.] Ducoss, Fincoss, and Trencoss, _i.e._ Blackfoot, Whitefoot, and
+Strongfoot.
+
+[CXVIII.] Dermat had two spears, the great one called the Ga-derg or
+Crann-derg (red javelin), and the small one called Ga-boi or Crann-boi
+(yellow javelin): he had also two swords: the Morallta (great fury), and
+the Begallta (little fury). These spears and swords he got from Mannanan
+Mac Lir and from Angus of the Bruga. He carried the great spear and
+sword in affairs of life and death; and the smaller in adventures of
+less danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+WHAT BEFELL THE THREE SEA-CHAMPIONS AND THEIR THREE VENOMOUS HOUNDS.
+
+
+After this Dermat returned to the cave without wound or hurt; and he and
+Grania ate and slept, and Modan watched till morning. Then he repaired
+to the hill, fully armed as before, and standing right over the ships,
+he struck his hollow-sounding shield[CXIX.] with his spear for a
+challenge, till the whole shore and the surrounding hills re-echoed. And
+Ducoss straightway armed himself and came ashore to fight Dermat single
+hand.
+
+Now Dermat by no means wished to slay his foe immediately, being,
+indeed, intent on worse punishment. So he closed with Ducoss; and the
+two champions, throwing aside their weapons, seized each other round the
+waists with their sinewy arms. Then they twisted and tugged and wrestled
+in deadly silence; and their swollen sinews strained and crackled; and
+the earth trembled beneath their feet; like two great writhing serpents,
+or like two raging lions, or like two savage bulls that strive and
+struggle to heave each other with horns interlocked. Thus did the heroes
+contend; till at last Dermat, heaving Ducoss on his shoulder, dashed him
+helpless and groaning to the ground; and instantly seizing him, he bound
+him in hard iron bonds.
+
+Fincoss came next against Dermat, and after him Trencoss; but he
+overcame them both, and bound them with like bonds; and then, leaving
+the three writhing with pain, he said to them--
+
+"I would strike off your heads, but that I wish to prolong your
+torment; for none can release you from these bonds till you die!"
+
+Dermat then returned to the cave; and he and Grania ate their meal and
+slept that night, Modan watching. In the morning, Dermat told Grania all
+that had happened from beginning to end; how fifty of the foreigners had
+been killed each day for the first three days; how he had slain a much
+greater number on the fourth day; and how he had overcome and bound the
+three sea-champions in hard iron bonds.
+
+"I have left them bound on the hill," continued he, "instead of killing
+them; because I would rather their torment to be long than short. For
+there are only four men in Erin that can loosen the bonds I tie; that is
+to say, Oisin, and Oscar, and Mac Luga, and Conan Mail; and I think no
+one of these will free them. Finn will doubtless hear of their state,
+and the news will sting him to the heart. But he will know that we are
+here; so we must now leave this cave, to escape him, and also to escape
+the three venomous dogs."
+
+So they came forth from the cave, and travelled eastward till they came
+to the Grey Moor of Finnlia; and whenever Grania was tired, or when they
+had to walk over rugged places, Modan lifted her tenderly and carried
+her, without ever being in the least tired himself. And so they
+journeyed, till they reached the broad, heathery slopes of Slieve
+Lougher;[CXX.] and they sat down to rest on the green bank of a stream
+that wound through the heart of the mountain.
+
+Now as to the sea-strangers. Those of them that were left alive landed
+from their ships, and coming to the hill, found their three chiefs bound
+tightly, hand and foot and neck. And they tried to loose them, but only
+made their bonds the tighter. While they were so engaged, they saw
+Finn's errand-woman coming towards them, with the speed of a swallow, or
+of a weasel, or of the swift, cold wind blowing over a mountain-side.
+When she had come near, she greeted them, and, seeing the bodies of the
+slain, she asked who it was that had made that fearful slaughter.
+
+"Tell us first," said they, "who art thou that makest this inquiry?"
+
+"I am Derdri of the Black Mountain, the errand-woman of Finn the son of
+Cumal," she replied; "and he has sent me hither to look for you."
+
+And they said, "We know not who made this slaughter; but we can tell
+thee his appearance, for that we know well. He was a tall warrior, with
+a fair, handsome, open countenance, and jet-black, curly hair. He has
+been three days fighting against us; and what grieves us even more than
+the slaughter of our men is that our three chiefs lie here bound by him
+so firmly that we are not able to loose them from their bonds."
+
+"Alas, friends!" said Derdri; "you have sped but badly at the very
+beginning of your quest; for this man was Dermat O'Dyna himself. And now
+loose your three venomous dogs on his track without delay; and I will
+return and send Finn to meet you."
+
+Then they brought forth the three hounds, and loosed them on the track
+of Dermat; and leaving one of their druids to attend to the three
+fettered chiefs, they followed the hounds till they came to the cave,
+where they found the soft, rushy bed of Dermat and Grania. From that
+they fared east, and crossing the Carra, and the Grey Moor of Finnlia,
+and the Laune, they reached at length the broad, heathy Slieve Lougher.
+
+As Dermat sat by the mountain stream with Grania and Modan, looking
+westward, he saw the silken banners of the foreigners at a distance as
+they approached the hill. In front of all marched three warriors with
+mantles of green, who held the three fierce hounds by three chains. And
+Dermat, when he saw the hounds, was filled with loathing and hatred of
+them. Then Modan lifted Grania, and walked a mile with Dermat up the
+stream into the heart of the mountain.
+
+When the green-clad warriors saw them, they loosed one of the three
+hounds; and when Grania heard his hoarse yelps down the valley, she was
+in great dread. But Modan bade her not fear, for that he would deal with
+this hound; and then, turning round, he drew forth from beneath his
+girdle a small hound-whelp, and placed it on the palm of his hand. There
+it stood till the great hound came up raging, with jaws wide open; when
+the little whelp leaped from Modan's hand down the dog's throat, and
+broke his heart, so that he fell dead. And after that the whelp leaped
+back again on Modan's hand; and Modan put him under his girdle.
+
+Then they walked another mile up the stream through the mountain, Modan
+bringing Grania. But the second hound was loosed, and soon overtook
+them; and Dermat said--
+
+"I will try the Ga-derg on this hound. For no spell can guard against
+the magic spear of Angus of the Bruga; and I have heard it said also
+that there is no charm that can shield the throat of an animal from
+being wounded."
+
+Then, while Modan and Grania stood to look, Dermat, putting his finger
+into the silken loop of the spear, threw a cast, and drove the
+spear-head down the hound's throat, so that the entrails of the brute
+were scattered about; and Dermat, leaping forward, drew the spear, and
+followed Modan and Grania.
+
+After they had walked yet another mile, the third hound was loosed; and
+Grania, seeing him coming on, said, trembling--
+
+"This is the fiercest of the three, and I greatly fear him; guard
+yourself, Dermat, guard yourself well against this hound!"
+
+Even while she spoke, the hound overtook them at the place called
+Duban's Pillar-stone; and as they stood looking back at him, Dermat
+stepped in front of Grania to shield her. The hound rose with a great
+spring over Dermat's head to seize Grania; but Dermat grasped him by
+the two hind legs as he passed, and, swinging him round, he struck his
+carcase against a rock and dashed out his brains.
+
+Then, putting his tapering finger into the silken string of the Ga-derg,
+he threw the spear at the foremost of the green-clad knights, and slew
+him. He made another cast of the Ga-boi and brought down the second
+warrior; and, drawing the Morallta, he sprang on the third, and swept
+off his head.
+
+When the foreigners saw their leaders slain, they fled hither and
+thither in utter rout. And Dermat fell upon them with sword and spear,
+scattering and slaughtering them, so that there seemed no escape for
+them, unless, indeed, they could fly over the tops of the trees, or hide
+themselves under the earth, or dive beneath the water. And when Derdri
+of the Black Mountain saw this havoc, she ran, panic-stricken and crazed
+with fright, off the field towards the hill where the three kings lay
+bound.
+
+Now as to Finn. Tidings were brought to him of what happened to the
+three sea-kings, and how they were lying bound in hard bonds on the hill
+over Tonn-Toma. So he set out straightway from Allen, and travelled by
+the shortest ways till he reached the hill. And when he saw the three
+champions, he was grieved to the heart; for he knew of old that the iron
+fetters bound by Dermat slew by slow torment, and that none could loose
+them except Oisin, or Oscar, or Mac Luga, or Conan Mail.
+
+And Finn asked Oisin to loose the bonds and relieve the kings.
+
+"I cannot do so," answered Oisin, "for Dermat bound me under gesa[12]
+never to loose any warrior that he should bind."
+
+He next asked Oscar; but the young warrior answered, "None shall be
+released by me who seeks to harm Dermat O'Dyna. Fain would I indeed put
+heavier bonds on them."
+
+And when he asked Mac Luga and Conan, they refused in like manner.
+
+Now while they were speaking in this wise, they saw the errand-woman,
+Derdri of the Black Mountain, running towards them, breathless and with
+failing steps, and her eyes starting from the sockets with terror. And
+Finn asked her what tidings she had brought.
+
+"Tidings indeed, O king, tidings of grievous mishap and woe!" Whereupon
+she told him all that she had seen--how Dermat O'Dyna had killed the
+three fierce hounds, and had made a slaughter of the foreigners. "And
+hardly, indeed," she cried, "hardly have I myself got off scathless with
+the news!"
+
+The three kings, hearing this, and being worn out with the straitness
+and torment of their bonds, died at the same moment. And Finn caused
+them to be buried in three wide graves; and flagstones were placed over
+them with their names graved in Ogam;[CXXI.] and their funeral rites
+were performed. Then, with heart full of grief and gall, Finn marched
+northwards with his men to Allen of the green hill-slopes.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXIX.] A usual form of challenge among the ancient Irish warriors. It
+is very curious that this custom is remembered to the present day in the
+_patois_ of the peasantry, even where the Irish language is no longer
+spoken. In the south, and in parts of the west, they call a
+distinguished fighting man a _buailim sciach_, an expression which means
+literally, "I strike the shield."
+
+[CXX.] Slieve Lougher, a mountain near Castle Island. (See note, page
+237.)
+
+[CXXI.] See note, page 36.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+SHARVAN, THE SURLY GIANT, AND THE FAIRY QUICKEN TREE OF DOOROS.
+
+
+Now touching Dermat and Grania. They travelled eastward from Slieve
+Lougher, through Hy Conall Gavra, keeping the Shannon on their left,
+till they reached the Wood of the two Sallow Trees, which is now called
+Limerick. Here they rested; and Dermat killed a wild deer, and they ate
+of its flesh, and drank pure spring water, and slept that night. Next
+morning Modan bade them farewell, and left them. And Dermat and Grania
+were sad after him, for he was very gentle, and had served them
+faithfully.
+
+On that same day they departed from the Wood of the two Sallows; and
+nothing is related of what befell them till they arrived at the Forest
+of Dooros, in the district of Hy Ficra[CXXII.] of the Moy, which was at
+that time guarded by Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann.
+
+Now this is the history of Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann. On a certain
+occasion, a game of hurley was played by the Dedannans against the Fena,
+on the plain beside the Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth.[CXXIII.] They
+played for three days and three nights, neither side being able to win a
+single goal from the other during the whole time. And when the
+Dedannans found that they could not overcome the Fena, they suddenly
+withdrew from the contest, and departed from the lake, journeying in a
+body northwards.
+
+The Dedannans had for food during the game, and for their journey
+afterwards, crimson nuts and arbutus apples and scarlet quicken berries,
+which they had brought from the Land of Promise.[CXXIV.] These fruits
+were gifted with many secret virtues; and the Dedannans were careful
+that neither apple nor nut nor berry should touch the soil of Erin. But
+as they passed through the Wood of Dooros, in Hy Ficra of the Moy, one
+of the scarlet quicken berries dropped on the earth; and the Dedannans
+passed on, not heeding.
+
+From this berry a great quicken tree[CXXV.] sprang up, which had the
+virtues of the quicken trees that grow in Fairyland. For its berries had
+the taste of honey, and those who ate of them felt a cheerful flow of
+spirits, as if they had drunk of wine or old mead; and if a man were
+even a hundred years old, he returned to the age of thirty, as soon as
+he had eaten three of them.
+
+Now when the Dedannans heard of this tree, and knew of its many virtues,
+they would not that any one should eat of the berries but themselves;
+and they sent a Fomor[CXXVI.] of their own people to guard it, namely,
+Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann; so that no man dared even to approach
+it. For this Sharvan was a giant of the race of the wicked Cain, burly
+and strong; with heavy bones, large, thick nose, crooked teeth, and one
+broad, red, fiery eye in the middle of his black forehead. And he had a
+great club tied by a chain to an iron girdle which was round his body.
+He was, moreover, so skilled in magic that fire could not burn him,
+water could not drown him, and weapons could not wound him; and there
+was no way to kill him but by giving him three blows of his own club. By
+day he sat at the foot of the tree, watching; and at night he slept in a
+hut he had made for himself, high up among the branches.
+
+Into this land Dermat came, knowing well that he should be safe there
+from the pursuit of Finn. For Sharvan did not let any of the Fena hunt
+in Hy Ficra. And neither they nor any others dared to come near the
+great Wood of Dooros, for dread of the giant; so that the land around
+the quicken tree for many miles was a wilderness.
+
+Dermat, leaving Grania behind in safe shelter, went boldly to the giant,
+where he sat at the foot of the tree, and told him he wished to live
+amidst the woods of Hy Ficra, and chase its wild animals for food.
+Whereupon the giant, bending his red eye on him, told him, in words few
+and surly, that he might live and hunt where he pleased, as long as he
+did not take and eat the berries of the quicken tree.
+
+So Dermat built him a hunting-booth near a spring, in the thick of the
+Forest of Dooros; and, clearing a space all round, fenced it with strong
+stakes interwoven with tough withes, leaving one narrow door well
+barred and secured. And they lived in peace for a time, eating the flesh
+of the wild animals of Dooros, which Dermat brought down each day in the
+chase, and drinking the water of the well.
+
+Now let us speak of Finn, the son of Cumal. One day, soon after his
+return to Allen, as he and his household troops were on the exercise
+green before the palace, a company of fifty horsemen were seen
+approaching from the east, led by two taller and nobler looking than the
+others. Having come near, they bowed low and greeted the king; and when
+he asked them who they were, and from whence they had come, they
+answered--
+
+"We are enemies of thine, who now desire to make peace; and our names
+are Angus, the son of Art Mac Morna, and Aed, the son of Andala Mac
+Morna. Our fathers were present at the battle of Knocka,[27] aiding
+those who fought against thy father, Cumal, when he was slain; for which
+thou didst afterwards slay them both, and didst outlaw us, their sons,
+though indeed we were blameless in the matter, seeing that we were not
+born till after the death of Cumal. However, we have come now to ask
+this boon of thee: that thou make peace with us, and give us the places
+our fathers held in the ranks of the Fena."
+
+"I will grant your request," answered Finn, "provided you pay me eric
+for the death of my father."
+
+"We would indeed pay thee eric willingly if we could," answered they;
+"but we have neither gold, nor silver, nor cattle, nor wealth of any
+kind to give."
+
+And then Oisin spoke and said, "Ask them not for eric, O king; surely
+the death of their fathers should be eric enough."
+
+But Finn replied, "Of a truth, I think, Oisin, that if any one should
+slay me, it would not be hard to satisfy you in the matter of an eric.
+But, indeed, none of those who fought at Knocka against my father, and
+none of their sons, shall ever get peace from me, or join the Fena,
+without such eric as I demand."
+
+Then Angus, one of the two, asked, "What eric dost thou require, O
+king?"
+
+"I ask only one or the other of two things," answered Finn; "namely, the
+head of a warrior, or the full of my hand of the berries of a quicken
+tree."
+
+"I will give you counsel, ye sons of Morna, that will stand you in good
+stead, if you follow it," said Oisin, addressing the two strange chiefs;
+"and my counsel is, that you return to the place from whence you came,
+and seek this peace no longer. Know that the head the king seeks from
+you is the head of Dermat O'Dyna, the most dangerous of all the Fena to
+meddle with, who is well able to defend himself, even if you were twenty
+times as many as you are; and who will certainly take your heads if you
+attempt to take his. Know also that the berries Finn seeks from you are
+the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros. And it is hard to say if this
+be not a more perilous quest than the other; for the quicken tree
+belongs to the Dedannans, who have sent Sharvan, the surly giant of
+Lochlann, to guard it day and night."
+
+But the two chiefs, unmoved by what they had heard from Oisin, said that
+they would rather perish in seeking out the eric than return to their
+mother's country. So, leaving their people in the care of Oisin, they
+set out on their quest. They travelled through the Wood of the two
+Sallows, and from that to Dooros of the Moy, where they found the track
+of Dermat and Grania, and followed it till they came to the
+hunting-booth. Dermat heard their voices and footsteps outside, and,
+snatching up his weapons, went to the door and asked who was there.
+
+"We are Aed, the son of Andala Mac Morna, and Angus, the son of Art Mac
+Morna," they replied. "We have come hither from Allen of Leinster, to
+get either the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or a handful of the berries of the
+quicken tree of Dooros; for Finn, the son of Cumal, has demanded of us
+that we bring him either the one or the other, as an eric for the
+killing of his father."
+
+Dermat laughed when he heard this, and said, "Truly this is not pleasant
+news for me to hear, for I am Dermat O'Dyna. But however, friends, I am
+not willing to give you my head, and you will find it no easy matter to
+take it. And as for the berries, these are quite as hard to get; for you
+will have to fight the surly giant Sharvan, who cannot be burned with
+fire, or drowned with water, or wounded with weapons. But woe to the man
+who falls under the power of Finn, the son of Cumal. And you have come,
+methinks, on a bootless quest; for even if you should be able to bring
+him either of the two things he asks for, he will not grant you the
+place or the rank ye seek after all. And now," asked Dermat, "which of
+the two do ye wish to strive for first, my head or the quicken berries?"
+
+And they answered, "We will do battle with thee first."
+
+So Dermat opened the door, and they made ready for the combat. Now this
+is the manner in which they agreed to fight: to throw aside their
+weapons, and to use the strength of their hands alone. And if the sons
+of Morna were able to overcome Dermat, they should take his head to
+Finn; but if, on the other hand, they were overpowered and bound by
+Dermat, their heads should be in like manner forfeit to him. But the
+fight was, indeed, a short one; for these two chiefs were even as
+children in Dermat's hands, and he bound them in close and bitter bonds.
+
+Now when Grania heard of the berries of the quicken tree, she was seized
+with a longing desire to taste them. At first she strove against it and
+was silent, knowing the danger; but now she was not able to hide it any
+longer, and she told Dermat that she should certainly die if she did not
+get some of the berries to eat. This troubled Dermat, for he did not
+wish to quarrel with the giant Sharvan; but, seeing that harm might come
+to Grania if she did not get the berries, he told her he would go and
+get some for her, either by good will or by force.
+
+When the sons of Morna heard this, they said, "Loose these bonds, and we
+will go with thee and help thee to fight the giant."
+
+But Dermat answered, "Not much help, indeed, could ye give me, as I
+think, for the mere sight of this giant would be enough to unman you.
+But even were it otherwise, I would not seek your help, for if I fight
+at all I shall fight unaided."
+
+And they said, "Even so, let us go. Our lives are now forfeit to thee,
+but grant us this request before we die, to let us see thee fight this
+giant."
+
+And he consented to this.
+
+So Dermat went straightway to the quicken tree, followed by the two sons
+of Morna; and he found the giant lying asleep at the foot of the tree.
+He dealt him a heavy blow to awaken him, and the giant, raising his
+head, glared at him with his great red eye, and said--
+
+"There has been peace between us hitherto; do you now wish for strife?"
+
+"I seek not strife," answered Dermat; "but the Princess Grania, my wife,
+the daughter of king Cormac Mac Art, longs to taste of these quicken
+berries; and if she does not get them she will die. This is why I have
+come; and now I pray you give me a few of the berries for the princess."
+
+But the giant answered, "I swear that if the princess and her child were
+now dying, and that one of my berries would save them, I would not give
+it!"
+
+Then Dermat said, "I do not wish to deal unfairly with you; and I have
+accordingly awakened you from your sleep, and made my request openly,
+wishing for peace. But now understand that before I leave this spot, I
+will have some of these quicken berries, whether you will or no."
+
+When the giant heard this, he rose up, and, seizing his club, dealt
+Dermat three great blows, which the hero had much ado to ward off; nor
+did he escape without some hurt, even though his shield was tough and
+his arm strong. But now, watching narrowly, and seeing that the giant
+expected to be attacked with sword and spear, he suddenly threw down his
+weapons and sprang upon him, taking him unguarded. He threw his arms
+round his body, and, heaving him with his shoulder, hurled him with
+mighty shock to the earth; and then, seizing the heavy club, he dealt
+him three blows, dashing out his brains with the last.
+
+Dermat sat down to rest, weary and breathless. And the sons of Morna,
+having witnessed the fight from beginning to end, came forth rejoiced
+when they saw the giant slain. Dermat told them to drag the body into
+the wood and bury it out of sight, lest Grania might see it and be
+affrighted; and when they had done so, he sent them for the princess.
+When she had come, Dermat said to her--
+
+"Behold the quicken berries, Grania: take now and eat."
+
+But she answered, "I will eat no berries except those that are plucked
+by the hands of my husband."
+
+So Dermat stood up and plucked the berries; and Grania ate till she was
+satisfied. And he also plucked some for the sons of Morna, and said--
+
+"Take these berries now, friends, as much as you please, and pay your
+eric to Finn; and you may, if you are so minded, tell him that it was
+you who slew Sharvan the Surly, of Lochlann."
+
+They answered, "We will bring to Finn as much as he demanded, one
+handful and no more; and we grudge even so much."
+
+Then they thanked Dermat very much; for he had given them the berries,
+what they should never have been able to get for themselves; and though
+their lives were forfeit to him, he had not so much as mentioned the
+matter, but had allowed them to return freely. And after bidding Dermat
+and Grania farewell, they went their ways.
+
+After that Dermat left his hunting-booth, and he and Grania lived
+thenceforth in Sharvan's hut among the branches. And they found the
+berries on the top of the tree the most delicious of all; those on the
+lower branches being as it were bitter in comparison.
+
+When the sons of Morna reached Allen, Finn asked them how they had
+fared, and whether they had brought him the eric: and they answered--
+
+"Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann, is slain; and here we have
+brought thee the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros as eric for the
+death of thy father, Cumal, that we may have peace from thee, and be
+placed in our due rank among the Fena."
+
+Finn took the berries and knew them; and he smelled them three times,
+and said--
+
+"These, indeed, are the berries of the quicken tree of Dooros; but they
+have passed through the hands of Dermat O'Dyna, for I smell his touch.
+And sure I am that it was Dermat, and not you, who slew Sharvan, the
+surly giant. It shall profit you nothing, indeed, to have brought me
+these berries; neither will you get from me the peace you seek, nor your
+place among the Fena, till you pay me fair eric for my father's death.
+For you have gotten the berries not by your own strength; and you have,
+besides, made peace with my enemy. And now I shall go to the Wood of
+Dooros, to learn if Dermat abides near the quicken tree."
+
+After this he gathered together the choice men of the seven battalions
+of the Fena, and marched with them to Dooros of Hy Ficra. They followed
+Dermat's track to the foot of the quicken tree, and found the berries
+without any one to guard them; and they ate of them as much as they
+pleased.
+
+Now it was noon when they had come to the tree; and the sun shone hot,
+and Finn said--
+
+"We shall rest under this tree till evening come, and the heat pass
+away; for well I know that Dermat O'Dyna is on the tree among the
+branches."
+
+And Oisin said, "Truly your mind must be blinded by jealousy, if you
+think that Dermat O'Dyna has waited for you on that tree, since he knows
+well that you seek his head."
+
+Finn answered nothing to this speech, but called for a chess-board and
+men.[26] And he and Oisin sat down to a game; while Oscar and Mac Luga
+and Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, sat near Oisin to advise him; for
+Finn played against them all. They played on for a time warily and
+skilfully, till at last Oisin had only one move to make; and Finn said--
+
+"One move more would win you the game, Oisin, but I challenge all your
+helpers to show you that move." And Oisin was puzzled.
+
+Dermat had been viewing the game from the beginning, where he sat among
+the branches; and he said, speaking to himself--
+
+"Pity that you should be in a strait, Oisin, and I not near to advise
+your move."
+
+Grania, sitting near, overheard him, and said, "It is a small matter
+whether Oisin win or lose a game; far worse is it for you to be in this
+hut, while the men of the seven battalions of the Fena are round about
+you, waiting to kill you."
+
+Then Dermat, not giving heed to Grania's words, plucked a berry, and,
+flinging it down with true aim, struck Oisin's chess-man--the man that
+should be moved. And Oisin moved the man, and won the game against Finn.
+
+The game was begun again, and it went on till it came to the same pass
+as before, Oisin having to make only one move to win, but that move hard
+to make out. And again Dermat threw a berry and struck the right man;
+and Oisin made the move, and won the game.
+
+A third time the game went on, and Dermat struck the chess-man as
+before; and Oisin won the game the third time. Whereupon the Fena raised
+a mighty shout.
+
+"I marvel not that you should win the game, Oisin," said Finn, "seeing
+that you have the best help of Oscar, and the zeal of Dering, and the
+skill of Mac Luga; and that, along with all, you have been prompted by
+Dermat O'Dyna."
+
+"It shows a mind clouded by great jealousy," said Oscar, "that you
+should think that Dermat O'Dyna is in that tree waiting for you to kill
+him."
+
+"Which of us tells truth, Dermat," said Finn, looking up, "Oscar or I?"
+
+"You, Finn, have never yet erred in your judgment," answered Dermat from
+the tree; "for indeed I am here with the princess Grania, in the hut of
+Sharvan, the surly giant of Lochlann."
+
+And, looking up, Finn and the others saw them plainly through an opening
+in the branches.
+
+But now Grania, seeing the danger, began to tremble with great fear, and
+to weep; and Dermat, taking pity on her, comforted her and kissed her
+three times.
+
+And Finn, seeing this, said, "Much more than this did it grieve me the
+night you espoused Grania, and brought her away from Tara before all the
+men of Erin; but even for these kisses you shall certainly pay quittance
+with your head!"
+
+Whereupon Finn, being now bent on killing Dermat, arose, and ordered his
+hirelings to surround the tree, catching hand in hand, so as to leave no
+gap; and he warned them, on pain of death, not to let Dermat pass out.
+Having done this, he offered a suit of armour and arms, and a high place
+of honour among the Fena, to any man who would go up into the tree, and
+either bring him the head of Dermat O'Dyna, or force him to come down.
+
+Garva of Slieve Cua[CXXVII.] started up and said, "Lo, I am the man! For
+it was Dermat's father, Donn, that slew my father; and I will now avenge
+the deed."
+
+And he went up the tree.
+
+Now it was revealed to Angus of the Bruga that Dermat was in deadly
+strait; and he came to the tree to his aid, without the knowledge of the
+Fena; and Dermat and Grania were filled with joy when they saw the old
+man.
+
+And when Garva, climbing from branch to branch, had come near the hut,
+Dermat dealt him a blow with his foot, which dashed him to the ground
+among the Fena. And Finn's hirelings cut off his head on the spot, for
+Angus had caused him to take the shape of Dermat; but after he was slain
+he took his own shape, so that all knew that it was Garva of Slieve Cua
+that had been killed.
+
+Then Garva of Slieve Crot[CXXVIII.] said, "It was Dermat's father,
+Donn, that slew my father; and I will now avenge the deed on Dermat."
+
+So saying, he went up the tree. But Angus gave him a blow which hurled
+him to the ground under the shape of Dermat, so that the hirelings fell
+on him and slew him. And then Finn told them that it was not Dermat they
+had killed, but Garva of Slieve Cua.
+
+Garva of Slieve Gora[CXXIX.] next started up, and said that his father
+had been slain by Dermat's father; and he began to climb up the tree to
+take Dermat's head in revenge. But Dermat flung him down like the
+others, while Angus gave him for the time the shape of Dermat, so that
+the hirelings slew him.
+
+And so matters went on till the nine Garvas had fallen; namely, Garva of
+Slieve Cua, Garva of Slieve Crot, Garva of Slieve Gora, Garva of Slieve
+Mucka,[CXXX.] Garva of Slieve-more, Garva of Slieve Luga, Garva of
+Ath-free, Garva of Slieve Mish, and Garva of Drom-more. And full of
+grief and bitterness was the heart of Finn, witnessing this.
+
+Then Angus said he would take Grania away from that place of danger. And
+Dermat was glad, and said--
+
+"Take her with thee; and if I live till evening I will follow you. But
+if Finn slays me, send her to Tara to her father, and tell him to use
+her well."
+
+Then Dermat kissed his dear wife; and Angus, having thrown his mantle
+round her, passed out from the tree without the knowledge of the Fena,
+and went straightway to Bruga of the Boyne.
+
+After Angus and Grania had gone, Dermat, addressing Finn from the tree,
+said--
+
+"I will now go down from this tree; and I will slaughter many of thy
+hirelings before they slay me. For I see that thou art resolved to
+compass my death; and why should I fear to die now more than at a future
+time? There is, indeed, no escape for me, even should I pass from this
+place unharmed; since I can find no shelter in Erin from thy wrath.
+Neither have I a friend in the far-off countries of this great world to
+give me protection, seeing that I have from time to time dealt defeat
+and slaughter among them, every one, for thy sake. For never have the
+Fena been caught in any strait or danger, that I did not venture my life
+for them and for thee. When we went to battle, moreover, I was always in
+front of you; and I was always behind you when leaving the field. And
+now I care no longer to seek to prolong my life; but of a certainty thou
+shalt purchase my death dearly, for I shall avenge myself by dealing
+destruction among thy hirelings."
+
+"Dermat speaks truly," said Oscar; "and now let him have mercy and
+forgiveness; for he has suffered enough already."
+
+"I swear that I will never grant him peace or forgiveness to the end of
+my life," answered Finn, "till he has given me the eric I seek from him
+for the injury he has done me; that is to say, his head."
+
+"Shame it is to hear thee say so, and a sure mark of jealousy," answered
+Oscar. "And now I take the body and life of Dermat under the protection
+of my knighthood and valour; and I pledge the word of a true champion,
+that sooner shall the firmament fall on me, or the earth open up and
+swallow me, than that I shall let any man harm Dermat O'Dyna!"
+
+Then, looking upwards, he said, "Come down now, Dermat, and thou shalt
+certainly go in safety from this place; for as long as I am alive, no
+man will dare to offer thee hurt!"
+
+Then Dermat, choosing that side of the tree where the men stood nearest
+to the trunk, walked along a thick branch unseen, and, leaning on the
+shafts of his spears, he sprang forward and downward with a light, airy
+bound, and alighted outside the circle of those who stood round with
+joined hands; and in a moment he was beyond the reach of sword and
+spear. And Oscar joined him, looking back threateningly, so that no man
+of Finn's hirelings durst follow.
+
+So the two heroes fared on together, crossing the Shannon; and nothing
+is told of what befell them till they reached Bruga of the Boyne, where
+they met Angus and Grania. And Grania was almost beside herself with joy
+when she saw Dermat without wound or hurt of any kind. And the two
+champions were welcomed by Angus; and Dermat related to him and Grania
+the whole story, how he had escaped from Finn and his hirelings, Oscar
+helping. And as Grania listened, her spirit almost left her, at the
+deadly peril Dermat had passed through.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXII.] Hy Ficra, now the barony of Tireragh, in Sligo.
+
+[CXXIII.] The Lake of Lein of the Crooked Teeth, _i.e._ Loch Lein, or
+the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+[CXXIV.] The Land of Promise, or Fairyland. (See note 8 at the end.)
+
+[CXXV.] Quicken tree. (See note, page 177.)
+
+[CXXVI.] Fomor, a giant. (See note, page 227.)
+
+[CXXVII.] Slieve Cua, the ancient name of the highest of the
+Knockmeal-down mountains, in Waterford.
+
+[CXXVIII.] Slieve Crot, the ancient name of the Galty mountains.
+
+[CXXIX.] Slieve Gora, a mountainous district in the barony of Clankee,
+County Cavan.
+
+[CXXX.] Slieve Mucka, now Slievenamuck (the mountain of the pig), a long
+mountain ridge in Tipperary, separated from the Galties by the Glen of
+Aherlow. Slieve Luga, a mountainous district, formerly belonging to the
+O'Garas, in the barony of Costello, county Mayo. Slieve Mish, a mountain
+range west of Tralee.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE ATTACK OF THE WITCH-HAG.
+
+
+Now as regards Finn. After the departure of Dermat and Oscar, his heart
+was filled with anger and bitterness, and he vowed he would never rest
+till he had revenged himself on Dermat. And, leaving the Wood of Dooros,
+he marched eastward till he reached Allen. Making no delay, he ordered
+his trusted servants to make ready his best ship, and to put therein
+food and drink for a voyage. Then going on board, he put out to sea; and
+nothing is told of him till he reached the Land of Promise,[8] where his
+old nurse lived.
+
+When he appeared before her, she gave him a joyful welcome. And after he
+had eaten and drunk, she asked him the cause of his journey, knowing
+that some weighty matter had brought him thither. So he told her the
+whole story of what Dermat O'Dyna had done against him; and said that he
+had come to seek counsel from her how he should act. "For," he said, "no
+strength or cunning of men can compass his death; magic alone can
+overmatch him."
+
+Then the old woman told him that she would go with him next day and work
+magic against Dermat. Whereupon Finn was much rejoiced, and they rested
+that night.
+
+Next day, they set out, Finn and his people and his nurse; and it is not
+told how they fared till they reached Bruga of the Boyne. And the men of
+Erin knew not that they had come thither, for the witch-hag threw a
+druidical mist round them, so that no man might see them.
+
+It chanced that Dermat hunted that day in the forest, alone; for Oscar
+had gone from Bruga the day before. When this was known to the
+witch-hag, she caused herself to fly into the air by magic, on a
+water-lily, having by her spells turned the pale flat leaf into a broad
+millstone with a hole in the middle. And, rising over the tops of the
+trees, she floated on the clear, cold wind, till she had come straight
+over the hero. Then, standing on the flat millstone, she began to aim
+deadly poisoned darts at him through the hole. And no distress Dermat
+ever suffered could compare with this; for the darts stung him even
+through his shield and armour, the witch having breathed venomous spells
+on them.
+
+Seeing at last that there was no escape from death unless he could slay
+the witch-hag, he seized the Ga-derg, and, leaning backwards, flung it
+with sure aim at the millstone, so that it went right through the hole,
+and pierced the hag; and she fell dead at Dermat's feet. Then he
+beheaded her, and brought the head to Angus of the Bruga; and he
+related to him and to Grania how he had escaped that great danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+PEACE AND REST AT LAST.
+
+
+Angus arose next morning, and, going to Finn, asked him whether he would
+make peace with Dermat. Finn, seeing that he was worsted in every
+attempt against the hero, and that moreover he had lost his nurse and
+many of his men, told Angus that he was weary of the quarrel, and that
+he was fain to make peace on whatever terms Dermat should choose.
+
+He next went to Tara to the king, Cormac, the grandson of Conn. Him he
+asked in like manner whether he was willing to grant Dermat peace and
+forgiveness; and Cormac answered that he was quite willing.
+
+Then he came to Dermat and said, "Peace is better for thee: art thou
+willing now to be at peace with Finn and Cormac?"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Gladly will I make peace, if they grant me such
+conditions as befit a champion and the husband of the princess Grania."
+
+And when Angus asked what these conditions were, he answered--
+
+"The cantred which my father had, that is to say, the cantred of
+O'Dyna,[CXXXI.] without rent or tribute to the king of Erin; also the
+cantred of Ben-Damis,[CXXXII.] namely, Ducarn of Leinster. These two to
+be granted to me by Finn; and he shall not hunt over them, nor any of
+his Fena, without my leave. And the king of Erin shall grant me the
+cantred of Kesh-Corran,[CXXXIII.] as a dowry with his daughter. On these
+conditions will I make peace."
+
+Angus went to Finn, and afterwards to the king, with these conditions.
+And they granted them, and forgave Dermat all he had done against them
+during the time he was outlawed. So they made peace. And Cormac gave his
+other daughter to Finn to wife.
+
+Dermat and Grania went to live in the cantred of Kesh-Corran, far away
+from Finn and Cormac; and they built a house for themselves, namely,
+Rath-Grania, in which they abode many years in peace. And Grania bore
+Dermat four sons and one daughter. And his possessions increased year by
+year, insomuch that people said that no man of his time was richer than
+Dermat, in gold and silver and jewels, in sheep, and in cattle-herds.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXI.] The cantred of O'Dyna, now the barony of Corkaguiny, in Kerry.
+(See note, page 237.)
+
+[CXXXII.] The cantred of Ben-Damis, or Ducarn of Leinster, probably the
+district round Douce mountain, in the county Wicklow.
+
+[CXXXIII.] The district round the mountain of Kesh-Corran, in Sligo.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DEATH OF DERMAT.
+
+
+Now when many years had passed, Grania said one day to Dermat--
+
+"It is surely a thing unworthy of us, seeing the greatness of our
+household and our wealth, and the number of our folk, that we should
+live in a manner so much removed from the world. And in a special manner
+it is unbecoming that the two most illustrious men in Erin have never
+been in our house, namely, my father the king, and Finn the son of
+Cumal."
+
+For indeed she had not seen her father since the night she had left Tara
+with Dermat, and her heart yearned for him.
+
+"Wherefore say you this, Grania?" answered Dermat; "for though there is
+indeed peace between us, they are both none the less enemies of mine;
+and for this reason have I removed my dwelling far apart from them."
+
+And Grania said, "Their enmity has surely softened with length of time:
+and now I would that you give them a feast: so shall we win back their
+friendship and love."
+
+And in an evil hour Dermat consented.
+
+For a full year were they preparing for that great feast, and when it
+was ready, messengers were sent to invite the king, with his house-folk,
+and Finn, with the chief men of the seven batallions of the Fena. So
+they came, with their attendants and followers, their horses and dogs;
+and they lived for a whole year in Rath-Grania, hunting and feasting.
+
+It chanced one night, at the end of the year, long after all had gone to
+rest, that Dermat heard, through the silence of the night, the distant
+yelping of a hound; and he started up from his sleep. But Grania, being
+scared, started up also, and, throwing her arms round him, asked him
+what he had seen.
+
+"I have heard the voice of a hound," answered Dermat; "and I marvel much
+to hear it at midnight."
+
+"May all things guard thee from harm!" said Grania. "This is surely a
+trap laid for thee by the Dedannans, unknown to Angus of the Bruga: and
+now lie down on thy bed again."
+
+Dermat lay down, but did not sleep, and again he heard the hound's
+voice. He started up, and this time was fain to go and look to the
+matter; but Grania caught him and kept him back a second time, saying
+that it was not meet for him to seek a hound whose voice he heard in the
+night.
+
+A gentle slumber now fell on Dermat, and he slept through a good part of
+the night. But the yelping of the hound came a third time, and awakened
+him, so that he started up; and it being now broad day, he told Grania
+that he would go to seek the hound, and find out why he was abroad in
+the night.
+
+And though Grania consented, she felt, she knew not why, ill at ease;
+and she said--
+
+"Bring with you the Morallta, the sword of Mannanan Mac Lir, and the
+Ga-derg,[A] Angus's spear; for there may be danger."
+
+But Dermat, regarding the matter lightly, and forced by fate to the
+worse choice, answered--
+
+"How can danger arise from such a small affair? I will bring the
+Begallta and the Ga-boi;[CXXXIV.] and I will also bring my good hound
+Mac-an-coill, leading him by his chain."
+
+So Dermat went forth, and he delayed not till he reached the summit of
+Ben-Gulban,[CXXXV.] where he found Finn; and Dermat, offering him no
+salute, asked him who it was that held the chase. Finn answered--
+
+"Some of our men came out from Rath-Grania at midnight with their
+hounds; and one of the hounds coming across the track of a wild boar,
+both men and dogs have followed it up. I indeed would have held them
+back, but the men were eager, and left me here alone. For this is the
+track of the wild boar of Ben-Gulban, and they who follow him are bent
+on a vain and dangerous pursuit. Often has he been chased; and he has
+always escaped, after killing many men and dogs. Even now thou canst see
+in the distance that the Fena are flying before him; and he has slain
+several this morning. He is coming towards this hillock where we stand;
+and the sooner we get out of his way the better."
+
+But Dermat said he would not leave the hillock through fear of any wild
+boar.
+
+"It is not meet that thou shouldst tarry here," answered Finn. "Dost
+thou not know that thou art under gesa[12] never to hunt a boar?"
+
+Dermat answered, "I know nothing of these gesa; wherefore were they
+placed on me?"
+
+And Finn said, "I will tell thee of this matter, for well do I remember
+it. When thou wert taken to Bruga of the Boyne, to be fostered by Angus,
+the son of Angus's steward was fostered with thee, that he might be a
+companion and playmate to thee. Now the steward, being a man of the
+common sort, agreed to send each day to Bruga, food and drink for nine
+men, as a price for having his son fostered with thee--thy father, Donn,
+being one of the nobles of the Fena. And thy father was accordingly
+permitted to visit the house of Angus when it pleased him, with eight
+companions, and claim the food sent by the steward; and when he did not
+come, it was to be given to Angus's house-folk.
+
+"It chanced on a certain day that I was at Allen of the broad
+hill-slopes, with the chief men of the seven battalions of the Fena. And
+Bran Beg O'Bucan brought to my mind, what indeed I had forgotten, that
+it was forbidden to me to sleep at Allen more than nine nights one after
+another, and that the next would be the tenth.
+
+"Now this restriction had not been placed on any of the Fena save
+myself, and they all went into the hall except thy father and a few
+others. Then I asked where we should get entertainment for that night.
+And thy father, Donn, answered that he would give me entertainment at
+Bruga of the Boyne; where food and drink awaited himself and his
+companions whenever he visited Angus. Donn said, moreover, that he had
+not been to see his son for a year, and that we were sure to get a
+welcome.
+
+"So Donn and I and the few that were with us went to the house of Angus,
+bringing our hounds; and Angus welcomed us. And thou and the steward's
+son were there, two children. After a while we could see that Angus
+loved thee, Dermat, very much, but that the house-folk loved the son of
+the steward; and thy father was filled with jealousy, that the people
+should show fondness for him and not for thee.
+
+"After night had fallen, it chanced that our hounds quarrelled over some
+broken meat we had thrown to them, and began to fight in the court; and
+the women and lesser people fled from them hither and thither. The son
+of the steward happened to run between thy father's knees, who, calling
+now to mind how the people favoured him more than thee, gave him a
+sudden strong squeeze with his knees, and killed him on the spot. And,
+without being seen by any one, he threw him under the feet of the
+hounds.
+
+"When at last the dogs were put asunder, the child was found dead; and
+the steward uttered a long, mournful cry. Then he came to me and said--
+
+"'Of all the men in Angus's house to-night, I have come worst out of
+this uproar; for this boy was my only child. And now, O Finn, I demand
+eric from thee for his death; for thy hounds have slain him.'
+
+"I told him to examine the body of his son, and that if he found the
+mark of a hound's tooth or nail, I would give him eric. So the child was
+examined, but no hurt--either bite or scratch--was found on him.
+
+"Then the steward laid me under fearful bonds of druidical gesa,[12] to
+find out for him who slew his son. So I called for a chess-board and
+some water, and, having washed my hands, I put my thumb under my tooth
+of knowledge;[25] and then it was revealed to me that the boy had been
+slain by thy father. Not wishing to make this known, I now offered to
+pay eric for the boy; but the steward refused, saying that he should
+know who killed his son. So I was forced to tell him: whereupon he
+said--
+
+"'It is easier for Donn to pay me eric than for any other man in this
+house. And the eric I demand is that his son be placed between my knees:
+if the lad gets off safe, then I shall follow up the matter no further.'
+
+"Angus was very wroth at this; and thy father would have struck off the
+steward's head if I had not come between and saved him.
+
+"The steward said no more, but went aside and brought forth a druidical
+magic wand, and, striking his son with it, he turned him into a great
+bristly wild boar, having neither ears nor tail. And, holding the wand
+aloft, he chanted this incantation over the boar--
+
+ "By this magical wand,
+ By the wizard's command,
+ I appoint and decree,
+ For Dermat and thee,
+ The same bitter strife,
+ The same span of life:
+ In the pride of his strength,
+ Thou shalt slay him at length:
+ Lo, Dermat O'Dyna
+ Lies stretched in his gore;
+ Behold my avengers,
+ The tusks of the boar!
+ And thus is decreed,
+ For Donn's cruel deed,
+ Sure vengeance to come--
+ His son's bloody doom;
+ By this wand in my hand,
+ By the wizard's command!
+
+"The moment he had ended the incantation, the boar rushed out through
+the open door, and we knew not whither he betook himself.
+
+"When Angus heard the steward's words, he laid a command on thee never
+to hunt a wild boar, that so thou mightest avoid the doom foretold for
+thee.
+
+"That same boar is the wild boar of Binbulbin; and he is now rushing
+furiously towards us. Come, then, let us leave this hill at once, that
+we may avoid him in time!"
+
+"I know nothing of these incantations and prohibitions," replied Dermat;
+"or if, as thou sayest, they were put on me in my boyhood, I forget them
+all now. And neither for fear of this wild boar of Ben-Gulban nor of any
+other wild beast will I leave this hillock. But thou, before thou goest,
+leave me thy hound, Bran, to help and encourage my dog, Mac-an-coill."
+
+"I will not leave him," answered Finn; "for often has Bran chased this
+boar, and has always barely escaped with his life. And now I leave; for
+lo, here he comes over yonder hill-shoulder."
+
+So Finn went his ways, and left Dermat standing alone on the hill. And
+after he had left Dermat said--
+
+"I fear me, indeed, that thou hast begun this chase hoping that it would
+lead to my death. But here will I await the event; for if I am fated to
+die in this spot, I cannot avoid the doom in store for me."
+
+Immediately the boar came rushing up the face of the hill, with the Fena
+following far behind. Dermat loosed Mac-an-coill against him, but to no
+profit; for the hound shied and fled before him at the first glance.
+Then Dermat said, communing with himself--
+
+"Woe to him who does not follow the advice of a good wife! For this
+morning Grania bade me bring the Morallta and the Ga-derg; but I brought
+instead the Begallta and the Ga-boi, disregarding her counsel."
+
+Then, putting his white taper finger into the silken loop of the Ga-boi,
+he threw it with careful aim, and struck the boar in the middle of the
+forehead; but to no purpose, for the spear fell harmless to the ground,
+having neither wounded nor scratched the boar, nor disturbed even a
+single bristle.
+
+Seeing this, Dermat, though indeed he knew not fear, felt his courage a
+little damped. And thereupon drawing the Begallta from its sheath, he
+dealt a blow on the boar's neck, with the full strength of his brawny
+arm. But neither did he fare better this time; for the sword flew in
+pieces, leaving the hilt in his hand, while not a bristle of the boar
+was harmed.
+
+And now the boar rushed on him as he stood defenceless, and with furious
+onset hurled him headlong to the earth; and, turning round, he gashed
+the hero's side with his tusk, inflicting a deep and ghastly wound.
+Turning again, he was about to renew the attack, when Dermat flung the
+hilt of the sword at him, and drove it through the skull to his brain,
+so that the brute fell dead on the spot.
+
+Finn and the Fena now came up, and found Dermat lying pale and bleeding,
+in the pangs of death. And Finn said--
+
+"It likes me well, Dermat, to see thee in this plight; only I am grieved
+that all the women of Erin cannot see thee also. For now, indeed, the
+surpassing beauty of thy form, that they loved so well, is gone from
+thee, and thou art pale and deformed!"
+
+And Dermat answered, "Alas, O Finn! these words surely come from thy
+lips only, and not from thy heart. And indeed it is in thy power to heal
+me even now if thou wilt."
+
+"How should I heal thee?" asked Finn.
+
+"It is not hard for thee to do so," answered Dermat. "For when, at the
+Boyne, the noble gift of foreknowledge was given to thee,[25] this gift
+also thou didst receive--that to whomsoever thou shouldst give a drink
+of water from the closed palms of thy two hands, he should be healed
+from sickness or wounds, even though he stood at the point of death."
+
+"Why should I heal thee by giving thee drink from my hands?" replied
+Finn. "For of a certainty thou of all men dost least deserve it from
+me."
+
+"Thou surely speakest hastily, not remembering past services," answered
+Dermat. "Well, indeed, do I deserve that thou shouldst heal me. Dost
+thou forget the day thou didst go with the chiefs and nobles of the
+Fena, to the house of Derca, the son of Donnara, to a banquet? And even
+as we sat down, and before the feast began, Carbri of the Liffey, son of
+Cormac, with the men of Tara, and of Bregia, and of Meath, and of
+Carmna, surrounded the palace, intent on slaying thee and all thy
+people. And they uttered three great shouts, and threw firebrands to
+burn the palace over our heads. Then thou didst arise and prepare to
+issue forth, but I put thee back and bade thee enjoy thy feast; and,
+leaving the banquet untasted, I rushed forth with a chosen few of my own
+men, and quenched the flames. Thrice we made a circuit of the palace,
+dealing slaughter amongst thy foes, so that we left fifty of them dead
+after each circuit. And having put Carbri and his men to flight, we
+returned to join the feast. Had I asked thee for a drink that night,
+gladly wouldst thou have given it to me. And yet, not more justly was it
+due to me then than it is now."
+
+"Ill dost thou deserve a healing drink from me, or any other favour,"
+said Finn; "for it was thy part to guard Grania the night we came to
+Tara; but thou didst espouse her secretly, and didst fly with her from
+Tara, knowing that she was betrothed to me."
+
+"Lay not the blame of that on me," said Dermat; "for Grania put me under
+heavy gesa, which for all the wealth of the world I would not break
+through--no, not even for life itself. Neither did I rest on my own
+judgment in the matter; for well thou knowest that Oisin, and Oscar, and
+Dering, and Mac Luga counselled me to the course I took.
+
+"And now, O Finn, I pray thee let me drink from thy hands, for I feel
+the weakness of death coming on me. And thou wilt not gainsay that I
+deserve it, if thou wilt only remember the feast that Midac, the son of
+Colga, made for thee in the Fairy Palace of the Quicken Trees.[CXXXVI.]
+To this feast Midac invited thee and thy companions; while to the Palace
+of the Island he brought secretly the King of the World with a great
+host, and the three kings of the Island of the Torrent, with intent to
+slay thee and all thy Fena.
+
+"Now Midac caused some of the clay of the Island of the Torrent to be
+placed under you, with foul spells, in the Palace of the Quicken Trees,
+so that your feet and your hands clove to the ground. And it was
+revealed to thee that the King of the World was about to send a chief
+with a troop of warriors, to slay you, helpless as you were, and to
+bring him your heads to the Palace of the Island.
+
+"But at that same time, I came to thee outside the Palace of the Quicken
+Trees; and thou didst make known to me your deadly strait. Then did I
+take thee, Finn, and those who were with thee, under the protection of
+my knighthood and valour; and I went to the ford to defend it against
+the foreigners.
+
+"And after a little time the three dragon-like kings of the Island of
+the Torrent came towards the palace: but I defended the ford, and,
+venturing my life for thee, I bore their attack and slew them all three.
+And I swept off their heads, and brought them, all gory as they were, in
+the hollow of my shield, to the palace where you lay miserably bound;
+and, sprinkling the clay with the blood, I broke the spell and set you
+free. And had I asked thee for a drink on that night, O Finn, of a
+surety thou wouldst not have refused me.
+
+"And many another deadly strait did I free you from, since the day I was
+admitted among the Fena, always putting myself forward to the post of
+danger, and perilling my life for your safety; and now why dost thou
+requite me with this foul treachery?
+
+"Moreover, many a king's son and many a brave warrior hast thou slain;
+and thou hast earned the enmity of powerful foes: neither is there yet
+an end of it. For the day will come--I see it even now--a day of direful
+overthrow and slaughter,[CXXXVII.] when few, alas! of the Fena will be
+left to tell the tale. Then thou shalt sorely need my help, O Finn, and
+sorely shalt thou rue this day. I grieve not, indeed, for thee, but for
+my dear, faithful companions--for Oscar and Mac Luga and Dering, and
+more than all for Oisin, who shall long outlive the others in sad old
+age.[CXXXVIII.] Alas! how deadly shall be their strait when I am not
+near to aid them!"
+
+Then Oscar, moved with pity even to tears, addressing Finn, said,
+"Although I am nearer akin to thee, O king, than to Dermat, yet I cannot
+suffer that he die, when a drink from thy hands would heal him. Bring
+him, then, a drink without delay."
+
+And Finn answered, "I know of no well on this mountain from which to
+bring drink."
+
+"Therein thou speakest not truth," said Dermat; "for thou knowest that
+not more than nine paces from thee, hidden under yonder bush, is a well
+of crystal water."
+
+Thereupon Finn went to the well, and, holding his two hands tightly
+together, he brought up some of the water, and came towards Dermat; but
+after he had walked a little way, he let it spill through his fingers,
+saying that he was not able to bring water in his hands so far.
+
+"Not so, Finn," said Dermat. "I saw thee that of thy own will thou didst
+let it spill. And now, O king, hasten, for death is on me."
+
+Again he went to the well, and was bringing the water slowly, while
+Dermat followed the dripping hands with his eyes; but when Finn thought
+of Grania he let the water spill a second time. And Dermat, seeing
+this, uttered a piteous sigh of anguish.
+
+And now was Oscar no longer able to contain his grief and rage; and he
+said, "I swear, O king, if thou dost not bring the water, that only one
+of us two--thou or I--shall leave this hill alive!"
+
+Hearing Oscar's words, and seeing the frowning looks of the others, Finn
+dipped up the water a third time, and was hastening forward; but before
+he had got half-way, Dermat's head dropped backwards, and his life
+departed.
+
+And all the Fena present raised three long loud cries of sorrow for
+Dermat O'Dyna.
+
+Then Oscar, looking fiercely on Finn, spoke and said, "Would that thou
+thyself lay dead here instead of Dermat! For now indeed the noblest
+heart of the Fena is still; and our mainstay in battle and danger is
+gone. Ah! why did I not foresee this? Why was I not told that Dermat's
+life was linked with the life of the wild boar of Ben-Gulban? Then would
+I have stayed this chase, and put off the evil day!"
+
+And Oscar wept; and Oisin, and Dering, and Mac Luga wept also, for
+Dermat was much loved by all.
+
+After a time, Finn said, "Let us now leave this hill, lest Angus of the
+Bruga overtake us. For although we had no hand in Dermat's death,
+nevertheless he may not believe us."
+
+So Finn and the Fena departed from the hill, Finn leading Dermat's dog,
+Mac-an-coill. But Oisin, and Oscar, and Dering, and Mac Luga turned
+back, and with tears, threw their mantles over Dermat; after which they
+followed the others.
+
+Grania sat that day on the highest rampart of Rath-Grania, watching for
+Dermat's return; for a dark fear haunted her mind on account of this
+chase. And when at last the Fena came in view, she saw Dermat's dog led
+by Finn; but not seeing Dermat himself, she said--
+
+"Ah me! what is this I see? Surely if Dermat were alive, it is not by
+Finn that Mac-an-coill would be led to his home!"
+
+And as she spoke she fell forward off the rampart, and lay long in a
+swoon as if her spirit had fled, while her handmaid stood over her,
+weeping and distracted. And when at last she opened her eyes, then
+indeed they told her that Dermat was dead; and she uttered a long and
+piteous cry, so that her women and all the people of the court came
+round her to ask the cause of her sorrow. And when they were told that
+Dermat had perished by the wild boar of Ben-Gulban, they raised three
+loud, bitter cries of lamentation, which were heard in the glens and
+wildernesses around, and which pierced the clouds of heaven.
+
+When at length Grania became calm, she ordered that five hundred of her
+people should go to Ben-Gulban, to bring home the body of Dermat. Then,
+turning to Finn, who still held Mac-an-coill in his hand, she asked him
+to leave her Dermat's hound; but Finn refused, saying that a hound was a
+small matter, and that he might be allowed to inherit at least so much
+of Dermat's riches. When Oisin heard this, he came forward and took the
+hound from the hand of Finn and gave him to Grania.
+
+At the time that the men left Rath-Grania to go for the body of Dermat,
+it was revealed to Angus that the hero was lying dead on Ben-Gulban. And
+he set out straightway, and travelling on the pure, cool wind, soon
+reached the mountain; so that when Grania's people came up, they found
+him standing over the body, sorrowing, with his people behind him. And
+they held forward the wrong sides of their shields in token of peace.
+
+Then both companies, having viewed the dead hero, raised three mighty
+cries of sorrow, so loud and piercing that they were heard in the wastes
+of the firmament, and over the five provinces of Erin.
+
+And when they had ceased, Angus spoke and said, "Alas! why did I abandon
+thee, even for once, O my son? For from the day I took thee to Bruga, a
+tender child, I have watched over thee and guarded thee from thy foes,
+until last night. Ah! why did I abandon thee to be decoyed to thy doom
+by the guileful craft of Finn? By my neglect hast thou suffered, O
+Dermat; and now, indeed, I shall for ever feel the bitter pangs of
+sorrow!"
+
+Then Angus asked Grania's people what they had come for. And when they
+told him that Grania had sent them to bring the body of Dermat to
+Rath-Grania, he said--
+
+"I will bring the body of Dermat with me to Bruga of the Boyne; and I
+will keep him on his bier, where he shall be preserved by my power, as
+if he lived. And though I cannot, indeed, restore him to life, yet I
+will breathe a spirit into him, so that for a little while each day he
+shall talk with me."
+
+Then he caused the body to be placed on a golden bier, with the hero's
+javelins fixed one on each side, points upwards. And his people raised
+the bier and carried it before him; and in this manner they marched
+slowly to Bruga of the Boyne.
+
+Grania's people then returned; and when they had told her the whole
+matter, though she was grieved at first, yet in the end she was content,
+knowing how Angus loved Dermat.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXIV.] See note, page 302.
+
+[CXXXV.] Now Benbulbin, a mountain five miles north of the town of
+Sligo.
+
+[CXXXVI.] See this story told at length, page 177.
+
+[CXXXVII.] A prophetic allusion to the battle of Gavra. (See note 28 at
+the end.)
+
+[CXXXVIII.] A prophetic allusion to the events related in the story of
+"Oisin in Tirnanoge," page 385.
+
+
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE CULLINN.
+
+IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW FINN'S HAIR WAS CHANGED IN ONE DAY FROM THE
+COLOUR OF GOLD TO SILVERY GREY.[CXXXIX.]
+
+
+Culand, the smith of the Dedannans,[1] who lived at Slieve
+Cullinn,[CXL.] had two beautiful daughters, Milucra and Aina. They both
+loved Finn,[23] and each sought him for her husband.
+
+As they walked together one evening near Allen,[CXLI.] they fell to
+talking of many things; and their conversation turning at last on their
+future husbands, Aina said she would never marry a man with grey hair.
+
+When Milucra heard this, she resolved with herself that if she could not
+get Finn, she would plan so that he should not marry her sister Aina. So
+she departed immediately, and, turning her steps northwards, she
+summoned the Dedannans to meet her at Slieve Cullinn. Having brought
+them all together, she caused them to make her a lake[CXLII.] near the
+top of the mountain; and she breathed a druidical virtue on its waters,
+that all who bathed in it should become grey.
+
+On a morning not long after this, Finn happened to be walking alone on
+the lawn before the palace of Allen, when a doe sprang out from a
+thicket, and, passing quite close to him, bounded past like the wind.
+Without a moment's delay, he signalled for his companions and dogs; but
+none heard except his two hounds, Bran and Skolan. He instantly gave
+chase, with no other arms than his sword, Mac-an-Lona, and accompanied
+only by his two dogs; and before the Fena[23] knew of his absence, he
+had left Allen of the green slopes far behind.
+
+The chase turned northwards; and though the hounds kept close to the
+doe, the chief kept quite as close to the hounds the whole way. And so
+they continued without rest or pause, till they reached Slieve Cullinn,
+far in the north.
+
+Here the doe made a sudden turn and disappeared; and what direction she
+took, whether east or west, Finn knew not, for he never caught sight of
+her after. And he marvelled much that any doe in the world should be
+able to lead Bran and Skolan so long a chase, and escape from them in
+the end. Meantime they kept searching, Finn taking one side of the hill
+and the dogs another, so that he was at last left quite alone.
+
+While he was wandering about the hill and whistling for his hounds, he
+heard the plaintive cry of a woman at no great distance; and, turning
+his steps towards the place, he saw a lady sitting on the brink of a
+little lake, weeping as if her heart would break. Never before did the
+chieftain see a maiden so lovely. The rose colour on her cheeks was
+heightened by her grief; her lips were like ruddy quicken berries; the
+delicate blossom of the apple tree was not more white than her neck; her
+hair fell in heavy golden ringlets on her shoulders; and as she looked
+up at the chief, her eyes beamed like stars on a frosty night.
+
+Finn accosted her; and, seeing that she ceased her weeping for a moment,
+he asked her had she seen his two hounds pass that way.
+
+"I have not seen thy hounds," she replied, "nor have I been at all
+concerned in the chase; for, alas, there is something that troubles me
+more nearly, a misadventure that has caused me great sorrow!"
+
+And as she spoke these words, she burst out weeping and sobbing more
+bitterly than before.
+
+Finn was greatly moved at this, so much so, that he quite forgot all
+about his hounds and his own troubles; and he asked her--
+
+"What is the cause of this great grief, gentle lady? Has death robbed
+you of your husband or your child, or what other evil has befallen you?
+I am much concerned to see a lady in such distress; and I wish you to
+tell me if anything can be done to lighten your sorrow, or to remove the
+cause of it?"
+
+She replied, "I had a precious gold ring on my finger, which I prized
+beyond anything in the world; and it has fallen from me into the water.
+I saw it roll down the steep slope at the bottom, till it went quite out
+of my sight. This is the cause of my sorrow, and thou canst remedy the
+mishap if thou wilt. The Fena are sworn never to refuse help to a woman
+in distress; and I now put on thee those gesa[12] that true heroes dare
+not break through, to search for the ring, and cease not till thou find
+it and restore it to me."
+
+Though the chief had indeed at the moment no inclination to swim, he
+could not refuse a prayer urged in this manner. So he plunged in without
+a moment's hesitation, and examined the lake on all sides, diving and
+searching into every nook and cranny at the bottom.
+
+After swimming in this manner three times round and round the lake, he
+found the ring at last; and, approaching the lady, he handed it to her
+from the water. The moment she had got it she sprang into the lake
+before his eyes, and, diving down, disappeared in an instant.
+
+The chief, wondering greatly at this strange behaviour, stepped forth
+from the water; but as soon as his feet had touched the dry land, he
+lost all his strength, and fell on the brink, a withered, grey old man,
+shrunken up and trembling all over with weakness. He sat him down in
+woful plight; and soon his hounds came up. They looked at him wistfully
+and sniffed and whined around him; but they knew him not, and, passing
+on, they ran round the lake, searching in vain for their master.
+
+On that day the Fena were assembled in the banquet hall of the palace of
+Allen; some feasting and drinking, some playing chess, and others
+listening to the sweet music of the harpers. While all were in this wise
+pleasantly engaged, Kylta Mac Ronan[23] stood up in the midst, and said
+in the hearing of all--
+
+"I have observed, friends, that our master and king, Finn the son of
+Cumal, has not been amongst us to-day, as is his wont; and I wish to
+know whither he has gone."
+
+This speech caused a sudden alarm amongst us; for no one knew aught of
+the chief, or was aware till that moment that he was absent at all; and
+we knew not wherefore he had disappeared or whither he had gone. In the
+midst of our anxious tumult, the envious and foul-mouthed Conan Mail[23]
+stood up, and said--
+
+"I have never heard sweeter music than your words, Kylta! The Fena are
+now about to seek for their king; and my only wish is that their quest
+may last for a whole year, and that it may prove a vain search in the
+end! Be not cast down, however, O Fena; if you should fail to find the
+son of Cumal, you will not be so ill off as you think; for I will
+undertake to be your king from this time forth!"
+
+Though we were at the time more inclined to be sad than mirthful, being
+weighed down with much anxiety, we could not help laughing when we heard
+the loud, foolish talk of Conan Mail; but we took no further notice of
+him.
+
+Inquiring now from the lesser people about the palace, we found that the
+chief and his two dogs had followed a doe northwards. So, having
+mustered a strong party of the Fena, we started in pursuit. Kylta and I
+took the lead, the rest keeping close behind; and in this order we
+followed the track, never taking rest or slackening speed till we
+reached Slieve Cullinn.
+
+We began to search round the hill, hoping to find either the chief
+himself or some person who might give us tidings of him. After wandering
+among brakes and rough, rocky places, we at last espied a grey-headed
+old man sitting on the brink of a lake. I went up to him to ask a
+question, followed by the rest of the Fena. At first I thought he might
+be a fisherman who had come up from the plains to fish; but when we came
+near him, he seemed so wretched an old creature, all shrivelled up, with
+the skin hanging in wrinkles over the bare points of his bones, that I
+felt quite sure he was not a fisherman, and that he was reduced to that
+state more by sickness and want than by old age.
+
+I asked the poor old man if he had seen a noble-looking hero pass that
+way, with two hounds, chasing a doe. He never answered a word, neither
+did he stir from where he sat, or even look up; but at the question, his
+head sank on his breast, and his limbs shook all over as with palsy.
+Then he fell into a sudden fit of grief, wringing his hands and uttering
+feeble cries of woe.
+
+We soothed him and used him gently for a time, hoping he might speak at
+last; but to no purpose, for he still kept silent. Then at last growing
+impatient, and thinking that this might be a mere headstrong humour, we
+drew our swords, and threatened him with instant death if he did not at
+once tell us all he knew of the chief and his hounds--for we felt sure
+he had seen them. But he only lamented the more, and still answered
+nothing.
+
+At last, after this had gone on for some time, and when we were about to
+leave him, he beckoned to Kylta Mac Ronan; and when Kylta had come near,
+the old man whispered into his ear the dreadful secret. And then we all
+came to know the truth. When we found that the withered old man was no
+other than our beloved king, Finn, himself, we uttered three shouts of
+lamentation and anger, so loud and prolonged that the foxes and badgers
+rushed affrighted from their dens in the hollows of the mountain.
+
+Conan now stepped forward, looking very fierce; and, unsheathing his
+sword with mighty bluster, he began in a loud voice to revile Finn and
+the Fena with the foulest language he could think of. And he ended by
+saying that he meant to slay the king that moment--
+
+"Now, O Finn Mac Cumal, I will certainly strike off your head; for you
+are the man that never gave me credit for valour, or praised my noble
+deeds in battle. Ever since your father, Cumal of the Hosts, was slain
+on the field of Knocka[CXLIII.] by the Clann Morna[23] of the Golden
+Shields, you have been our bitter foe; and it is against your will that
+any of us are now alive. I am very glad to see you, Finn Mac Cumal,
+brought down to what you now are; and I only wish that the rest of the
+Clann Baskin[23] were like you. Then should I very soon make short work
+of them all; and joyful to me would be the task of raising a great carn
+to their memory!"
+
+To which Oscar replied with great scorn, "It is not worth while drawing
+a sword to punish thee, Conan Mail, vain and foolish boaster as thou
+art; and besides, we have at present something else to think of. But if
+it were not for the trouble that now lies heavy on us on account of our
+king, I would of a certainty chastise thee by breaking all the bones of
+thy mouth with my fist!"
+
+"Cease, Oscar," returned Conan, in a voice still louder than before;
+"cease your foolish talk! It is actions and not words that prove a man;
+and as to the noble warlike deeds done in past times by the Fena, it
+was by the Clann Morna they were performed, and not by the
+chicken-hearted Clann Baskin!"
+
+The fiery Oscar could bear this no longer. He rushed towards Conan Mail;
+but Conan, terrified at his vengeful look, ran in amongst the Fena with
+great outcry, beseeching them to save him from the rage of Oscar. We
+straightway confronted the young hero, and checked him in his headlong
+career; and after much ado, we soothed his anger and made peace between
+him and Conan.
+
+When quietness was restored, Kylta asked Finn how this dread evil had
+befallen him, who was the enchanter, and whether there was any hope of
+restoring him to his own shape. Finn told him that it was the daughter
+of Culand the smith who had transformed him by her spells. And then he
+recounted how she had lured him to swim in the lake, and how, when he
+came forth, he was turned into a withered old man.
+
+We now made a framework litter of slender poles, and, placing our king
+on it, we lifted him tenderly on our shoulders. And, turning from the
+lake, we marched slowly up-hill till we came to the fairy palace of
+Slieve Cullinn, where we knew the daughter of Culand had her dwelling
+deep under ground.[19] Here we set him down, and the whole troop began
+at once to dig, determined to find the enchantress in her cave-palace,
+and to take vengeance on her if she did not restore our chief.
+
+For three days and three nights we dug, without a moment's rest or
+pause, till at length we reached her hollow dwelling; when she,
+affrighted at the tumult and at the vengeful look of the heroes,
+suddenly started forth from the cave and stood before us. She held in
+her hand a drinking-horn of red gold, which was meant for the king. Yet
+she appeared unwilling, and held it back, notwithstanding the
+threatening looks of the Fena. But, happening to cast her eyes on the
+graceful and manly youth, Oscar, she was moved with such admiration and
+love for him that she wavered no longer, but placed the fairy
+drinking-horn in the hands of the king. No sooner had he drunk from it,
+than his own shape and features returned, save only that his hair
+remained of a silvery grey.
+
+When we gazed on our chief in his own graceful and manly form, we were
+all pleased with the soft, silvery hue of the grey hairs. And, though
+the enchantress appeared ready to restore this also, Finn himself told
+her that it pleased him as it pleased the others, and that he chose to
+remain grey for the rest of his life.
+
+When the king had drunk from the horn, he passed it to Mac Reth, who
+drank from it in like manner and gave it to Dering. Dering, after
+drinking, was about to hand it to the next, when it gave a sudden twist
+out of his hand, and darted into the loose earth at our feet, where it
+sank out of sight. We ran at once to recover it; but, though we turned
+up the earth deeply all round, we were not able to find the
+drinking-horn. This was a disappointment that vexed us exceedingly, for
+if we had all drunk from it, we should have been gifted with a
+foreknowledge of future events.
+
+A growth of slender twigs grew up afterwards over the spot where it sank
+into the ground; and this little thicket is still gifted with a part of
+the virtue of the golden drinking-horn. For any one who looks on it in
+the morning fasting, will know in a moment all things that are to happen
+that day.
+
+So ended the Chase of Slieve Cullinn; and in this wise it came to pass
+that Finn's hair was turned in one day from golden yellow to silvery
+grey.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXXXIX.] It is necessary to remind the reader that this story and the
+two following are related by Oisin, in his old age, to St. Patrick. (See
+the prefatory note to the story of "Oisin in Tirnanoge," p. 385; and see
+also note 23 at the end.)
+
+[CXL.] Now Slieve Gullion, a lofty, isolated mountain in the south of
+the county Armagh, celebrated in legendary lore.
+
+[CXLI.] The Hill of Allen, in Kildare, where Finn had his palace. (See
+note 23 at the end.)
+
+[CXLII.] The little lake for which this legendary origin is assigned
+lies near the top of Slieve Gullion. There were several wells in Ireland
+which, according to the belief of old times, had the property of turning
+the hair grey. Giraldus Cambrensis tells us of such a well in Munster;
+and he states that he once saw a man who had washed a part of his head
+in this well, and that the part washed was white, while the rest was
+black!
+
+It is to be observed that the peasantry of the district retain to this
+day a lingering belief in the power of the lake of Slieve Gullion to
+turn the hair grey.
+
+[CXLIII.] Knocka, now Castleknock, near Dublin. (See note 27 at the
+end.)
+
+
+
+
+THE CHASE OF SLIEVE FUAD.
+
+
+IN WHICH IT IS RELATED HOW AILNA, THE WIFE OF MERGAH OF THE SHARP
+SPEARS, IN ORDER TO BE REVENGED ON THE FENA FOR THE DEATH OF HER
+HUSBAND, TRANSFORMED HERSELF INTO A DEER, AND DECOYED THEM TILL SHE GOT
+THEM INTO THE POWER OF HER BROTHER, DRYANTORE, A GIANT AND AN ENCHANTER;
+HOW HE THREW THEM INTO A DUNGEON, WITH INTENT TO KILL THEM; AND HOW THEY
+WERE IN THE END SET FREE BY CONAN MAIL.[CXLIV.]
+
+
+Finn and the Fena[23] went one day to hunt at Slieve Fuad.[CXLV.] When
+they had come very near to the top of the mountain, a deer suddenly
+bounded from a thicket right before them, very large and fierce, with a
+great pair of sharp, dangerous antlers. At once they loosed their dogs
+and gave chase; and those who were scattered here and there about the
+hill gave up the pursuit of smaller game to join the main body for it
+was very seldom they fell in with a deer that promised better sport.
+
+She led them through rugged places, over rocks and bogs, and into deep
+glens. The hounds several times surrounded her; but she fought her way
+with so much strength and fury that she always escaped, after killing
+many of the dogs and disabling some of the men.
+
+Soon she left Slieve Fuad behind, nor did she slacken speed till she
+reached the green hill of Lidas, while the hunters and dogs followed in
+full chase close behind. She then made her way across the open country
+to a rugged and bushy hill--the hill of Carrigan;[CXLVI.] and here they
+suddenly lost her among the rocks and thickets. They searched round the
+hill without avail, north, south, east, and west, till all, both men and
+dogs, were quite scattered; and Finn and Dara the Melodious were left
+alone.
+
+At length Finn's dog, Skolan, started the deer once more, and again the
+chase began. Back over the selfsame course she ran, by the hill of
+Lidas, and straight on towards Slieve Fuad, Finn and Dara close on her
+track; while the main body of the Fena followed far behind, guided by
+the cries of the dogs.
+
+When the deer reached Slieve Fuad, she again took cover and disappeared
+at the very spot where they had first started her; and the two chiefs,
+after beating the thickets on every side, were at length forced to give
+up the search.
+
+A druidical mist now rose up, darkening the air, and enfolding them on
+every side; so that they lost their way. They tried many times to regain
+the path, but to no purpose; for they only lost themselves more and
+more among the quagmires and thickets. At last they sat down to rest,
+weary and baffled; and Dara played a mournful strain on his timpan;
+after which they sounded the Dord-Fian,[CXLVII.] as a signal to their
+friends.
+
+When the Fena heard the Dord-Fian sounding afar off, they felt sure that
+their leader was in trouble or strait of some kind; and they started to
+his relief, making northwards straight towards the point from which they
+thought the signal came. But they had not gone far when they heard it
+sounding from the east, and altered their course accordingly. Again it
+changed to the west; and no sooner had they set forward in that
+direction than it seemed to come from the south. In this manner were
+they led hither and thither, till they became quite bewildered; and they
+found themselves no nearer to those they were in search of, for every
+time they heard the Dord-Fian, it seemed as far off as ever.
+
+Meantime Finn and Dara, after resting for a time, again started off,
+intent on trying once more to reach their friends; for they heard their
+shouts, and knew they were seeking them. As they were making their way
+through the thick fog, they heard a voice at a little distance, as if
+from one in distress; and, turning their steps that way, they met a
+young woman, very beautiful, and very pleasing in manner, but looking
+weary and sore perplexed, and all over in sad plight from the bogs and
+brambles.
+
+Finn accosted her in a gentle voice, asking how she came to be alone in
+a place so wild.
+
+She replied, "I and my husband were journeying along over the plain,
+when we heard the melodious cry of hounds; and he left me to follow the
+chase, telling me to continue along the same path, and promising to
+rejoin me without delay. But this fairy fog has risen around me, and I
+have lost my way, so that I know not now in what direction to go."
+
+Finn then asked her name and the name of her husband.
+
+"My husband's name is Lavaran, and mine is Glanlua. But I perceive that
+you are one of the Fena; and indeed I think, from your arms and from
+your noble mien, that you must be the great chief Finn himself. If this
+be so, I place myself under your protection; and I know well that you
+will lead me safely out of this place to my husband; for the Fena never
+yet refused their help to a woman in distress."
+
+Finn replied, "You are quite right, lady, for I am Finn; and this chase
+that has parted you and your husband belongs to me. We will certainly
+take you under our protection, and we will neither abandon you on this
+mountain, nor suffer any one to harm you. But as to leading you to your
+husband, it is not at present in our power to do that; for you must
+know, lady, that we also have been set astray by this magical fairy fog.
+Nevertheless, we will do the best we can; and now you had better come
+with us."
+
+So the three set forward in the direction they thought most likely to
+lead to the open plain.
+
+After walking for some time, they heard a low, sweet strain of fairy
+music; and they stopped to listen. It seemed to be near them and around
+them in the fog, so that Finn thought it came from the spot where the
+lady stood; and she thought it came from Finn or Dara: and the music was
+followed by shouts and noise, as if from a great company. When the noise
+ceased, the music began again more sweetly than before; so that they
+felt heavy, and as if inclined to sleep. Still more drowsy and powerless
+they became as they listened; and at last they all three sank on the
+ground, in a trance deep and deathlike.
+
+After a time they awoke, and slowly regained their senses; though they
+were so weak that they could scarcely move. The fog had cleared away,
+leaving the air bright and warm; and when they were able to look around,
+they found themselves on the margin of a blue lake. The part of the lake
+that lay in front of them was narrow, and quite calm and smooth; but on
+each side, to the right and left, it opened out into two broad,
+green-bordered seas, with great waves tumbling wildly about, as if the
+waters were torn up by whirlwinds. But where they sat, not a breath was
+blowing. And looking across the narrow part, they saw a stately palace
+right before them on the opposite shore.
+
+As they were gazing at all these strange things, silent and much
+astonished, they saw a warrior coming forth from the palace, in size
+like a giant, rough and fierce-looking, with a beautiful woman by his
+side. The two walked quickly down to the shore, and, plunging in, they
+swam straight across the middle of the lake. And Dara and Glanlua,
+turning to Finn, said--
+
+"Of a surety, it is not for our good yonder strangers are approaching;
+but to work us treachery and mischief!"
+
+This forecast turned out to be true. The large warrior and the beautiful
+lady had no sooner gained the land than they came up to Finn and his two
+companions; and without speaking a word, the giant seized them roughly,
+and led them down to the shore of the lake. For the two heroes were
+still so weak from the spell of the fairy music that they were not able
+to raise a hand to defend either the lady or themselves.
+
+The giant and his companion, making no delay, plunged in, and swam back
+towards the palace, bringing the three with them; and as soon as they
+had reached the shore, the strange warrior, addressing Finn in a fierce
+and surly manner, said--
+
+"For a long time have I sought Finn Mac Cumal, the evil-minded and
+crafty; and now, O Finn, now that thou hast been by a well-laid plan
+cast under my power, I will take good care that thou shalt not escape
+till I take revenge, even to the full, for all the injuries thou hast
+done to me and to my sister!"
+
+Finn listened to this speech with much surprise, for he could not call
+to mind that he had ever seen the hero before; and he said--
+
+"Tell me, I pray thee, who thou art; for I know thee not; neither do I
+know of any injury thou hast suffered at my hands. Thou art, indeed,
+large of body, and fierce and boastful in speech; but know that to take
+revenge on a foe who is unable to defend himself, is a deed quite
+unbecoming a hero!"
+
+The large man replied, "Do you not remember the treachery you practised
+on Mergah of the Sharp Spears, and on my sons, two fair youths, whom you
+slew by unfair means, at the battle of Knockanare?[CXLVIII.] Well indeed
+do I know thee, Finn, for I am Dryantore, and this is Ailna my sister,
+the wife of Mergah. She is left without her husband, and I without my
+sons, by your cruel wiles; for it was by fraud and foul play, and not by
+fair fighting, that you gained the battle of Knockanare, and slew Mergah
+and his host!"
+
+"I remember well," said Finn, "that they all fell on the battle-field;
+but it was not by craft or treachery. Mergah of the Sharp Spears came
+with a mighty host to conquer Erin, and lay it under tribute. But they
+were met at Knockanare, and every man of them slain in fair, open fight,
+though not without sore loss to the Fena."
+
+"You may say what you please on the matter," said Dryantore; "but it is
+quite enough for me that you have slain Ailna's husband and my two sons.
+And now, indeed, I shall take revenge--of that be sure--both on you and
+on all the Fena that come within my reach."
+
+And having so spoken, he began without more ado to bind Finn, Dara, and
+Glanlua in strong fetters; and having done so, he threw them into a
+dungeon, where he left them without food or drink or comfort of any
+kind.
+
+Meantime the Fena ceased not to search for their king. They knew, by the
+sad strain they had heard in the distance, and by the strange manner in
+which the music had shifted from place to place, that he was caught
+under some druidic spell; and they vowed they would never rest till they
+had found him and punished the enchanter, whoever he might be.
+
+Next day, Ailna visited the dungeon; and Finn addressed her--
+
+"Hast thou forgotten, Ailna, that when thou didst come to Erin after the
+death of thy husband, Mergah of the Sharp Spears, the Fena received thee
+hospitably, and, pitying thy distress, treated thee with much kindness?
+But for this thou hast indeed given us an ungrateful and unbecoming
+return; for thou hast shut us up in this dungeon, without food or drink,
+having, by guileful druidical spells, taken away our strength."
+
+"I remember very well," said Ailna, "that you treated me kindly. But you
+killed my husband; and I am well pleased that it has now come to my
+turn to avenge his death. I do not feel the least pity for you; and I
+only wish that the whole of the Fena were with you in that dungeon, to
+be dealt with by my brother."
+
+Then, casting her eyes on Glanlua, she began to upbraid her in bitter
+words for having been in the company of Finn and Dara. But Glanlua
+explained the matter, saying that she had never seen either of the
+chiefs before, and that it was only by chance she had fallen on them
+when she had lost her way in the fog.
+
+"If that be so," said Ailna, "it is not just that you should be punished
+for the evil deeds of the others."
+
+And she went and told Dryantore, who came forthwith to release the lady.
+
+Glanlua took leave of Finn and Dara, and left the prison, grieving much
+for their evil plight; for she was grateful for their kindness on the
+mountain. Ailna led her to the palace; and, having placed food before
+her, bade her eat. But Glanlua, being overcome by weakness, suddenly
+fell into a swoon, and remained for a long time without sense or motion,
+like one dead. When at last she opened her eyes, she saw Ailna standing
+near, holding in her hand a golden drinking-horn. And Ailna gave her to
+drink, and immediately the spells lost their power; and she regained her
+strength; and the bloom and beauty of her countenance returned.
+
+But now she bethought her of the two heroes; and, remembering their
+dismal plight in the dungeon, she became sorrowful, and began to sigh
+and weep. And when Ailna and Dryantore came to know the cause of her
+tears, they told her with much severity that Finn and Dara deserved
+their punishment; and that both should stay in prison till the time had
+come to put them to death.
+
+"I seek not to release them from prison or to save them from death,"
+said Glanlua; "but that they are left without food and drink--this it is
+that moves me to pity."
+
+And Dryantore said, "If only that has caused your tears, you may, if you
+so please, bring them food. Besides, I do not mean to put them to death
+immediately. I shall let them live yet awhile, that I may decoy by them
+the other Fena, who are now wandering hither and thither in quest of
+their chief. And it is my firm belief that in a little time I shall have
+them all in that dungeon."
+
+So Glanlua went to the prison, bringing food and drink, and Ailna went
+with her. They found the heroes sitting on the floor, sorrowing, their
+strength and activity all gone; for the music-spell still held them, and
+they suffered also from want of food. And when they saw the two ladies,
+they shed bitter tears. Glanlua, on her part, wept with pity when she
+looked on the wasted face of the chief. But not so Ailna; she was
+pleased at their distress, for her heart was hardened with vengeance,
+and she longed for the time when they should suffer death. Howbeit,
+Glanlua placed food and drink before them, and they ate and drank and
+were strengthened for the time.
+
+When the two ladies returned, Dryantore asked Glanlua if it were true
+what he had heard, that Dara was a favourite among the Fena; and why it
+was that they loved him so.
+
+Glanlua replied, "I only know that he is a very skilful musician; for I
+never heard melody sweeter than the strains he played yesterday, when I
+met himself and Finn in the fog."
+
+"I should like very much to hear this music," said Dryantore, "if it be
+so melodious as you say;" and as he spoke these words he went towards
+the dungeon.
+
+And when he had come to the door, he said to Dara, in a loud, harsh,
+surly voice--
+
+"I have heard that you are a skilful musician, and can play very sweet
+strains. I wish you to play for me now that I may know if this be true."
+
+To which Dara replied, "If I had the Fena around me, I could delight
+them with the melody of my timpan; but as for you, guileful and cruel as
+you are, I do not believe that you can take any pleasure in music.
+Moreover, how can you expect that I should play sweet music for you,
+seeing that I am shut up here in this dismal dungeon, and that all manly
+strength and cheerfulness of mind have left me through your foul
+spells?"
+
+"I will take off the spells if only you play for me," said Dryantore;
+"and if your strains be as delightful as I have heard reported, I will
+bring you forth from your prison, and I will keep you for ever in my
+castle, and you shall play for me whensoever I wish for music."
+
+"I shall never consent to be released, neither will I play any music for
+you, so long as my chief lies in bondage and under enchantment," said
+Dara; "for I grieve not indeed for myself, but for him."
+
+Dryantore replied, "I will lift the spells from both of you for a time;
+but as to releasing Finn, that is a matter I do not wish to talk of
+now."
+
+Whereupon Dryantore removed the spells, and the heroes regained their
+strength and courage.
+
+Dara then played a low, sweet tune; and Dryantore, who had never before
+heard such music, listened with delight and wonder. He was so charmed
+that he called Ailna and Glanlua, that they also might hear; and they
+were as much delighted as the giant. But what pleased Glanlua most was
+to see the heroes restored to their wonted cheerfulness.
+
+Now all this time the Fena were seeking among the glens and hollows of
+the mountain for Finn and Dara. After walking for some time over a stony
+and rugged way, a faint strain of music struck on their ears. They
+stopped to listen, breathless; and every man knew the sound of Dara's
+timpan; and they raised a shout of gladness, which reached Finn and Dara
+in their dungeon. At the same moment they came in view of the palace,
+and they drew their swords and put their shields and spears in
+readiness, as men do going to battle. And they went forward warily, for
+they feared foul play, and their hearts had a forecast that a foe was
+near. But, indeed, they little deemed what manner of foe they should
+meet.
+
+When Dryantore heard the shouts, he hid himself from the view of the
+Fena, and forthwith betook him to his magic arts. And again the spell
+fell on the two heroes, and their strength departed; and Dara's hand,
+losing its cunning, trembled on the strings, so that his music became
+dull and broken.
+
+And when Dara's music ceased, the Fena heard a low, hoarse murmur,
+which, growing each moment louder, sounded at last like the hollow roar
+of waves. And anon their strength and their swiftness left them, and
+they fell to the ground every man, in a deep trance as if they slept the
+sleep of death.
+
+Then Dryantore and Ailna came forth, and having bound them one by one in
+strong, hard fetters, they roused them up and led them helpless and
+faltering to the dungeon, where they shut them in with Finn and Dara.
+
+The Fena looked sadly on their king; and he, on his part, shed bitters
+tears to think that he had decoyed them--though, indeed, he had done so
+unwittingly--into the hands of their foe.
+
+In the midst of their sighs and tears they heard the loud voice of the
+giant, who, looking in on them from the open door, addressed them--
+
+"Now at last, ye Fena, you are in my safe keeping. Truly you have done
+great deeds in your time, but yet, methinks, you will not be able to
+escape from this prison till I have taken just vengeance on you for
+slaying Mergah of the Sharp Spears, and my two sons, at the battle of
+Knockanare!"
+
+And having so spoken, he shut the door and went his way.
+
+When he came to the palace, he found that Glanlua's husband, Lavaran,
+had been there. Upon which he fell into a mighty rage; for he feared to
+let any man know the secrets of the palace; and he feared also that
+Lavaran might try to aid Finn and the others. He inquired of the two
+ladies whither he had gone; but they replied they did not know. He then
+began to search through the rooms, and, raising his voice, he called
+aloud for Lavaran; and the Fena, even in their dungeon, heard the roar
+quite plainly.
+
+Lavaran, hearing him, was sore afraid, and answered from a remote part
+of the palace. And as he came forward, the giant placed him under his
+spells, and, having bound him, flung him into the dungeon with the
+others.
+
+Dryantore's fury had not in the least abated; and, entering the dungeon,
+he struck off the heads of several of the Fena with his great sword,
+saying he would visit them each day, and do in like manner till he had
+killed them all.
+
+During this time the Fena were unable to defend themselves; for, besides
+that their strength had gone out from their limbs on account of the
+spells, they found that from the time the enchanter entered the prison,
+they were all fixed firmly in their places, every man cleaving to the
+ground, in whatsoever position he chanced to be, sitting, lying, or
+standing. And Finn shed tears--even tears of blood in sight of
+all--seeing his men fall one by one, while he had to look on without
+power to help them.
+
+After Dryantore had in this manner slain several, he approached Conan
+Mail,[23] with intent to end that day's work by cutting off his head;
+and as it chanced, Conan was lying full length on the floor. Now Conan,
+though he was large-boned and strong, and very boastful in his speech,
+was a coward at heart, and more afraid of wounds and death than any man
+that ever lived.
+
+So when he saw Dryantore coming towards him with his sword in his hand
+all dripping, he shouted aloud--
+
+"Hold thy hand, Dryantore! Hold thy hand for a little while, and be not
+guilty of such treachery!"
+
+But the giant, not heeding in the least Conan's words, raised his sword
+with his two hands and rose on tiptoe for a mighty blow. Then Conan,
+terrified beyond measure, put forth all his strength to free himself,
+and bounded from the floor clear outside the range of the sword; but
+left behind him, clinging to the floor, all the skin of his back, even
+from the points of his shoulders to the calves of his legs.
+
+When he saw the giant still making towards him in a greater rage than
+ever for missing his blow, he again cried aloud--
+
+"Hold your hand this time, Dryantore! Is it not enough that you see me
+in this woful plight? For it is plain that I cannot escape death. Leave
+me, then, to die of my wounds, and slay me not thus suddenly!"
+
+Dryantore held his hand; but he told Conan that he would for a certainty
+kill him next time he came, if he did not find him already dead of his
+wounds. Then he stalked out of the dungeon, and, shutting close the
+door, left the Fena in gloom and sadness.
+
+Though Lavaran had been only a little while in the palace, he made good
+use of his time, and now approaching Finn, he whispered in his ear--
+
+"There is that in yonder palace which would free us from those accursed
+spells if we only could get at it."
+
+And when Finn asked what it was, he replied, "A magical golden
+drinking-horn of wondrous virtue. I saw it in the palace among many
+other precious jewels."
+
+And when Finn again questioned him how he knew of its secret power, he
+said--
+
+"Glanlua, my wife, told me. For she said that, being herself at the
+point of death, Ailna fetched this drinking-horn and bade her drink. And
+when she had drunk, she was immediately freed from spells and sickness.
+She told me, moreover, that it would remove the spell from the Fena, and
+bring back their strength and heal their wounds, if they could get to
+drink from it."
+
+Conan, being near, overheard this conversation; and he inwardly
+resolved that he would try to secure the drinking-horn, if perchance he
+might be able to heal his wounds by means of it.
+
+Not long after, the giant again came to the prison, sword in hand, and
+addressed Conan in these words--
+
+"Come forward now, O big, bald man, for I am about to fulfil my promise
+to you! Come forward, that I may strike off your large head; for I see
+that your wounds have not killed you!"
+
+But Conan, instead of coming forward, fell back even to the farthest
+part of the dungeon, and replied--
+
+"You must know, Dryantore, that I, of all men alive, am the most
+unwilling to die any death unworthy of a brave hero. You see my evil
+plight, all wounded and faint from loss of blood; and, being as I am a
+valiant warrior, it would surely be a shameful thing and a foul blot on
+my fame, to be slain while in this state. I ask only one favour--that
+you cure me of my wounds first. After this, you may put me to death in
+any manner that is most agreeable to you."
+
+To this Dryantore consented, seeing that Conan was secure; and he called
+to Ailna and bade her fetch him the magical golden drinking-horn. "For I
+wish," said he, "to heal the wounds of yonder big, bald man."
+
+But Ailna replied, "Of what concern are his wounds to us? Is it not
+better that he should die at once, and all the other Fena with him?"
+
+Conan spoke out from where he stood, "Lovely Ailna, I seek not to escape
+death. I ask only to be healed first and slain afterwards!"
+
+Ailna went to the palace and soon returned, bringing, not the
+drinking-horn, but a large sheepskin, covered all over with a long
+growth of wool. Dryantore took it from her, and doing as she told him,
+he fitted it on Conan's back, where it cleaved firmly, so that his
+wounds were all healed up in an instant.
+
+As long as Conan lived afterwards, this sheepskin remained on his back;
+and the wool grew upon it every year, even as wool grows on the back of
+a living sheep. And from that time forth, the other Fena were always
+mocking him and laughing at him and calling him nicknames.
+
+As soon as Conan felt his wounds healed, he again spoke to the giant--
+
+"It is my opinion, Dryantore, that it would be a very unwise thing for
+you to put me to death. I see plainly you want a servant. Now, although
+I am large of bone and strong of body, and very brave withal, still I am
+very harmless. And if you let me live, I shall be your servant for ever,
+and you will find me very useful to you."
+
+The giant saw the force and wisdom of Conan's words; and he felt that he
+wanted a servant very much, though he never perceived it till that
+moment, when Conan reminded him of it.
+
+So he said, "I believe, indeed, Conan, that your words are truth.
+Wherefore, I will not put you to death. You are now my servant, and so
+shall you be for the rest of your life."
+
+He then led Conan forth from the dungeon towards the palace; and he was
+in such good humour at having got a servant, that he forgot to kill any
+of the Fena on that occasion.
+
+He called to him Ailna and Glanlua, to tell them of what he had done.
+And he said to them--
+
+"I find that I need a servant very much. Wherefore, I have made Conan my
+servant. And I am now about to free him from the spell and give him back
+his strength by a drink from the golden drinking-horn, so that he may be
+able to wait on me and do my work."
+
+For Conan, though his wounds were healed, was still so weak from the
+spell that he was scarce able to walk.
+
+"I do not at all approve what you have done," said Ailna. "It would be,
+methinks, much better to put him straightway to death along with all the
+others. As long as he is with us as our servant, I shall never think
+myself free from danger; for the Fena are treacherous all alike."
+
+"As for the other Fena," replied Dryantore, "you need not be in any
+trouble on their account, for their time is short. As soon as I have got
+Conan free from the spell, I will go straight to the dungeon and kill
+them, every man. And when they are fairly put out of the way, it seems
+to me that we need not fear danger from this big, bald man with the
+sheepskin on his back."
+
+When Ailna heard that the death of the Fena was near at hand, she no
+longer gainsaid her brother. So Dryantore led Conan to the palace; and
+placing the magical drinking-horn in his hand, bade him drink. And Conan
+drank; and immediately his strength and his spirits returned.
+
+Now it so happened, while these things went on, that Finn asked Dara to
+play one of his sweet, sad tunes, that they might hear the music of his
+timpan before they died. And Dara took his timpan, and began to play;
+and historians say that no one either before or since ever played
+sweeter strains.
+
+At the very moment that Conan had finished drinking, he and Dryantore
+heard the music sounding faintly in the distance; and the giant opened
+the door and stood on the threshold to listen. He was so charmed that he
+quite forgot all about Conan and the drinking-horn; and finding that he
+could not hear the music plainly enough where he stood, he walked
+hastily towards the dungeon, leaving Conan behind with the drinking-horn
+in his hand.
+
+No sooner had he gone out than Conan hid the drinking-horn under his
+cloak, and went to the dungeon after him.
+
+And when the giant saw him he said, "Why have you followed me; and what
+business have you here? Are you not my servant; and why have you come
+without being bidden by me?"
+
+"I thought," replied Conan, "that you were about to put the Fena to
+death; and I came to look at them once more before they died."
+
+Then suddenly Dryantore bethought him of the drinking-horn, and he
+said, "Where is the golden drinking-horn I gave you?"
+
+"I left it," said Conan, "just where I found it in the palace."
+
+The giant ran hastily towards the palace to secure the drinking-horn;
+and no sooner was he out of sight than Conan, drawing forth the horn,
+put it to the lips of each to drink, beginning with Finn. Only Finn and
+Oscar had drunk, when they heard the heavy steps of the giant running
+towards the dungeon; and now they saw that he was indeed inflamed with
+fury. Oscar seized his great, polished spear, and sprang to the door;
+and the others raised a mighty shout of joy; while Conan went on
+releasing the heroes one by one.
+
+When Dryantore saw Oscar, he uttered a roar of rage and disappointment;
+and then called aloud to Ailna to come to him. And she came forth; and
+when she saw how matters stood, she was seized with such grief and
+terror that she dropped down and died immediately. Glanlua was standing
+near at hand, rejoicing at the release of her husband and friends; but
+when she saw Ailna fall to the ground dead, she became sad, and,
+stooping down, wept over her.
+
+All this Oscar saw from where he stood; and it was with much ado he
+checked his tears. For though my son was the bravest of the heroes, and
+the most terrible in battle, he had a gentle heart, and never saw a
+woman or a child in distress without being moved to pity.
+
+But Conan felt not the least pity. On the contrary, he was very glad to
+see Ailna dead; and he told Oscar that it was very well she was out of
+the way, for that she was a vicious woman, and had wrought the Fena much
+trouble and woe.
+
+And now Oscar, casting his eyes again on Dryantore, hardened his heart
+for battle, and addressed the giant in these words--
+
+"It has at last come to pass, O Dryantore, that you are in the power of
+the Fena; and there is no escape for you, though you are a large and
+strong giant, and a druid with powerful magical spells. But the Fena
+never yet treated an enemy ungenerously. You indeed dealt unfairly and
+treacherously with us; and meant to kill us all, after having taken away
+our strength and valour by your black, guileful magic. But even so, we
+give you your choice; and we challenge you now to single combat with any
+of our champions you may wish to choose."
+
+To which Dryantore replied, "It is very true that the Fena have
+prevailed over me; and it is a just punishment for my folly in releasing
+Conan the Bald from my spells. I desire single combat. I will fight the
+Fena one after another, till I either fall myself or slay them all; and
+I will begin with you!"
+
+Oscar then took his shield and made ready for battle. Meantime the
+giant, harbouring great wrath against Conan, approached him unawares;
+and when he had come near enough, he sprang suddenly on him, and aimed a
+blow with all his might at his head. But Conan, springing aside, barely
+escaped the edge of the sword; and, running in great fear, called to
+Oscar with great outcry to save him from the giant.
+
+Then Oscar ran between; and he and the giant fought a long and fierce
+fight, while we looked on with anxious hearts. The giant was furious and
+strong; but my son was active and watchful and fearless of heart; and
+Dryantore at length fell at the door of his own palace, pierced through
+and through by the long, smooth spear of Oscar.
+
+When the Fena saw the giant fall, they raised three mighty shouts of
+joy. And Glanlua brought the magic drinking-horn to Oscar, from which he
+drank, so that his wounds were healed, and his strength straightway
+returned to him.
+
+The Fena then went into the palace, where they found food in great
+plenty, with wine and mead in golden bowls and drinking-horns. And they
+ate and drank and made merry; after which they rested that night on soft
+beds and couches.
+
+When they awoke in the morning, all was changed. The palace and the lake
+were gone; and the heroes found themselves lying on the heathy side of
+Slieve Fuad, at the selfsame spot where they had first started the deer;
+with the morning sun shining brightly over their heads.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXLIV.] This story is told by Oisin to St. Patrick. (See the prefatory
+note to the next story, "Oisin in Tirnanoge," page 385.)
+
+[CXLV.] Slieve Fuad was the ancient name of the highest of the Fews
+mountains, near Newtown Hamilton, in Armagh; but the name is now lost.
+
+[CXLVI.] Now probably the village of Carrigans, on the river Foyle, five
+miles south-west of Londonderry.
+
+[CXLVII.] Dord-Fian, a sort of musical war-cry. (See note, page 195.)
+
+[CXLVIII.] Knockanare (the hill of slaughter), where a great battle was
+fought between the Fena under Finn, and the foreigners under Mergah of
+the Sharp Spears, in which Mergah was defeated and slain. This battle
+forms the subject of a poetical romance. It may be as well to observe
+that this hill is _not_ Knockanare in Kerry, near the mouth of the
+Shannon, as some say.
+
+
+
+
+OISIN IN TIRNANOGE;[CXLIX.]
+
+OR,
+
+THE LAST OF THE FENA.
+
+ [According to an ancient legend, Finn's son, Oisin, the hero-poet,
+ survived to the time of St. Patrick, two hundred years (the legend
+ makes it three hundred) after the other Fena. On a certain occasion,
+ when the saint asked him how he had lived to such a great age, the
+ old hero related the following story.]
+
+
+A short time after the fatal battle of Gavra,[CL.] where so many of our
+heroes fell, we were hunting on a dewy morning near the brink of Lough
+Lein,[CLI.] where the trees and hedges around us were all fragrant with
+blossoms, and the little birds sang melodious music on the branches. We
+soon roused the deer from the thickets, and as they bounded over the
+plain, our hounds followed after them in full cry.
+
+We were not long so engaged, when we saw a rider coming swiftly towards
+us from the west; and we soon perceived that it was a maiden on a white
+steed. We all ceased from the chase on seeing the lady, who reined in as
+she approached. And Finn and the Fena were greatly surprised, for they
+had never before seen so lovely a maiden. A slender golden diadem
+encircled her head; and she wore a brown robe of silk, spangled with
+stars of red gold, which was fastened in front by a golden brooch, and
+fell from her shoulders till it swept the ground. Her yellow hair flowed
+far down over her robe in bright, golden ringlets. Her blue eyes were as
+clear as the drops of dew on the grass; and while her small, white hand
+held the bridle and curbed her steed with a golden bit, she sat more
+gracefully than the swan on Lough Lein. The white steed was covered with
+a smooth, flowing mantle. He was shod with four shoes of pure yellow
+gold, and in all Erin a better or more beautiful steed could not be
+found.
+
+As she came slowly to the presence of Finn, he addressed her courteously
+in these words--
+
+"Who art thou, O lovely youthful princess? Tell us thy name and the name
+of thy country, and relate to us the cause of thy coming."
+
+She answered in a sweet and gentle voice, "Noble king of the Fena, I
+have had a long journey this day, for my country lies far off in the
+Western Sea. I am the daughter of the king of Tirnanoge, and my name is
+Niam of the Golden Hair."
+
+"And what is it that has caused thee to come so far across the sea? Has
+thy husband forsaken thee; or what other evil has befallen thee?"
+
+"My husband has not forsaken me, for I have never been married or
+betrothed to any man. But I love thy noble son, Oisin; and this is what
+has brought me to Erin. It is not without reason that I have given him
+my love, and that I have undertaken this long journey: for I have often
+heard of his bravery, his gentleness, and the nobleness of his person.
+Many princes and high chiefs have sought me in marriage; but I was quite
+indifferent to all men, and never consented to wed, till my heart was
+moved with love for thy gentle son, Oisin."
+
+When I heard these words, and when I looked on the lovely maiden with
+her glossy, golden hair, I was all over in love with her. I came near,
+and, taking her small hand in mine, I told her she was a mild star of
+brightness and beauty, and that I preferred her to all the princesses in
+the world for my wife.
+
+"Then," said she, "I place you under gesa,[12] which true heroes never
+break through, to come with me on my white steed to Tirnanoge, the land
+of never-ending youth. It is the most delightful and the most renowned
+country under the sun. There is abundance of gold and silver and jewels,
+of honey and wine; and the trees bear fruit and blossoms and green
+leaves together all the year round. You will get a hundred swords and a
+hundred robes of silk and satin, a hundred swift steeds, and a hundred
+slender, keen-scenting hounds. You will get herds of cows without
+number, and flocks of sheep with fleeces of gold; a coat of mail that
+cannot be pierced, and a sword that never missed a stroke and from
+which no one ever escaped alive. There are feasting and harmless
+pastimes each day. A hundred warriors fully armed shall always await you
+at call, and harpers shall delight you with their sweet music. You will
+wear the diadem of the king of Tirnanoge, which he never yet gave to any
+one under the sun, and which will guard you day and night, in tumult and
+battle and danger of every kind. Lapse of time shall bring neither decay
+nor death, and you shall be for ever young, and gifted with unfading
+beauty and strength. All these delights you shall enjoy, and many others
+that I do not mention; and I myself will be your wife if you come with
+me to Tirnanoge."
+
+I replied that she was my choice above all the maidens in the world, and
+that I would willingly go with her to the Land of Youth.
+
+When my father, Finn, and the Fena heard me say this, and knew that I
+was going from them, they raised three shouts of grief and lamentation.
+And Finn came up to me and took my hand in his, saying sadly--
+
+"Woe is me, my son, that you are going away from me, for I do not expect
+that you will ever return to me!"
+
+The manly beauty of his countenance became quite dimmed with sorrow; and
+though I promised to return after a little time, and fully believed that
+I should see him again, I could not check my tears, as I gently kissed
+my father's cheek.
+
+I then bade farewell to my dear companions, and mounted the white steed,
+while the lady kept her seat before me. She gave the signal, and the
+steed galloped swiftly and smoothly towards the west, till he reached
+the strand; and when his gold-shod hoofs touched the waves, he shook
+himself and neighed three times. He made no delay, but plunged forward
+at once, moving over the face of the sea with the speed of a
+cloud-shadow on a March day. The wind overtook the waves and we overtook
+the wind, so that we straightway lost sight of land; and we saw nothing
+but billows tumbling before us and billows tumbling behind us.
+
+Other shores came into view, and we saw many wonderful things on our
+journey--islands and cities, lime-white mansions, bright greenans[CLII.]
+and lofty palaces. A hornless fawn once crossed our course, bounding
+nimbly along from the crest of one wave to the crest of another; and
+close after, in full chase, a white hound with red ears. We saw also a
+lovely young maiden on a brown steed, with a golden apple in her hand;
+and as she passed swiftly by, a young warrior on a white steed plunged
+after her, wearing a long, flowing mantle of yellow silk, and holding a
+gold-hilted sword in his hand.
+
+I knew naught of these things, and, marvelling much, I asked the
+princess what they meant; but she answered--
+
+"Heed not what you see here, Oisin; for all these wonders are as
+nothing compared with what you shall see in Tirnanoge."
+
+At last we saw at a great distance, rising over the waves on the very
+verge of the sea, a palace more splendid than all the others; and, as we
+drew near, its front glittered like the morning sun. I asked the lady
+what royal house this was, and who was the prince that ruled over it.
+
+"This country is the Land of Virtues," she replied. "Its king is the
+giant, Fomor of the Blows, and its queen the daughter of the king of the
+Land of Life.[19] This Fomor brought the lady away by force from her own
+country, and keeps her in his palace; but she has put him under gesa[12]
+that he cannot break through, never to ask her to marry him till she can
+find a champion to fight him in single combat. But she still remains in
+bondage; for no hero has yet come hither who has the courage to meet the
+giant."
+
+"A blessing on you, golden-haired Niam," I replied; "I have never heard
+music sweeter than your voice; and although I feel pity for this
+princess, yet your story is pleasant to me to hear; for of a certainty I
+will go to the palace, and try whether I cannot kill this Fomor, and
+free the lady."
+
+So we came to land; and as we drew nigh to the palace, the lovely young
+queen met us and bade us welcome. She led us in and placed us on chairs
+of gold; after which choice food was placed before us, and
+drinking-horns filled with mead, and golden goblets of sweet wine.
+
+When we had eaten and drunk, the mild young princess told us her story,
+while tears streamed from her soft, blue eyes; and she ended by saying--
+
+"I shall never return to my own country and to my father's house, so
+long as this great and cruel giant is alive!"
+
+When I heard her sad words, and saw her tears falling, I was moved with
+pity; and telling her to cease from her grief, I gave her my hand as a
+pledge that I would meet the giant, and either slay him or fall myself
+in her defence.
+
+While we were yet speaking, we saw the giant coming towards the palace,
+large of body, and ugly and hateful in appearance, carrying a load of
+deerskins on his back, and holding a great iron club in his hand. He
+threw down his load when he saw us, turned a surly look on the princess,
+and, without greeting us or showing the least mark of courtesy, he
+forthwith challenged me to battle in a loud, rough voice.
+
+It was not my wont to be dismayed by a call to battle, or to be
+terrified at the sight of an enemy; and I went forth at once without the
+least fear in my heart. But though I had fought many battles in Erin
+against wild boars and enchanters and foreign invaders, never before did
+I find it so hard to preserve my life. We fought for three days and
+three nights without food or drink or sleep; for the giant did not give
+me a moment for rest, and neither did I give him. At length, when I
+looked at the two princesses weeping in great fear, and when I called to
+mind my father's deeds in battle, the fury of my valour arose; and with
+a sudden onset I felled the giant to the earth; and instantly, before he
+could recover himself, I cut off his head.
+
+When the maidens saw the monster lying on the ground dead, they uttered
+three cries of joy; and they came to me, and led me into the palace. For
+I was indeed bruised all over, and covered with gory wounds; and a
+sudden dizziness of brain and feebleness of body seized me. But the
+daughter of the king of the Land of Life applied precious balsam and
+healing herbs to my wounds; and in a short time I was healed, and my
+cheerfulness of mind returned.
+
+Then I buried the giant in a deep and wide grave; and I raised a great
+carn over him, and placed on it a stone with his name graved in Ogam.
+
+We rested that night, and at the dawn of next morning Niam said to me
+that it was time for us to resume our journey to Tirnanoge. So we took
+leave of the daughter of the king of the Land of Life; and though her
+heart was joyful after her release, she wept at our departure, and we
+were not less sorry at parting from her. When we had mounted the white
+steed, he galloped towards the strand; and as soon as his hoofs touched
+the wave, he shook himself and neighed three times. We plunged forward
+over the clear, green sea with the speed of a March wind on a hill-side;
+and soon we saw nothing but billows tumbling before us and billows
+tumbling behind us. We saw again the fawn chased by the white hound with
+red ears; and the maiden with the golden apple passed swiftly by,
+followed by the young warrior in yellow silk on his white steed. And
+again we passed many strange islands and cities and white palaces.
+
+The sky now darkened, so that the sun was hidden from our view. A storm
+arose, and the sea was lighted up with constant flashes. But though the
+wind blew from every point of the heavens, and the waves rose up and
+roared around us, the white steed kept his course straight on, moving as
+calmly and swiftly as before, through the foam and blinding spray,
+without being delayed or disturbed in the least, and without turning
+either to the right or to the left.
+
+At length the storm abated, and after a time the sun again shone
+brightly; and when I looked up, I saw a country near at hand, all green
+and full of flowers, with beautiful smooth plains, blue hills, and
+bright lakes and waterfalls. Not far from the shore stood a palace of
+surpassing beauty and splendour. It was covered all over with gold and
+with gems of every colour--blue, green, crimson, and yellow; and on each
+side were greenans shining with precious stones, built by artists the
+most skilful that could be found. I asked Niam the name of that
+delightful country, and she replied--
+
+"This is my native country, Tirnanoge; and there is nothing I have
+promised you that you will not find in it."
+
+As soon as we reached the shore, we dismounted; and now we saw advancing
+from the palace a troop of noble-looking warriors, all clad in bright
+garments, who came forward to meet and welcome us. Following these we
+saw a stately glittering host, with the king at their head wearing a
+robe of bright yellow satin covered with gems, and a crown that sparkled
+with gold and diamonds. The queen came after, attended by a hundred
+lovely young maidens; and as they advanced towards us, it seemed to me
+that this king and queen exceeded all the kings and queens of the world
+in beauty and gracefulness and majesty.
+
+After they had kissed their daughter, the king took my hand, and said
+aloud in the hearing of the host--
+
+"This is Oisin, the son of Finn, for whom my daughter, Niam, travelled
+over the sea to Erin. This is Oisin, who is to be the husband of Niam of
+the Golden Hair. We give you a hundred thousand welcomes, brave Oisin.
+You will be for ever young in this land. All kinds of delights and
+innocent pleasures are awaiting you, and my daughter, the gentle,
+golden-haired Niam, shall be your wife; for I am the king of Tirnanoge."
+
+I gave thanks to the king, and I bowed low to the queen; after which we
+went into the palace, where we found a banquet prepared. The feasting
+and rejoicing lasted for ten days, and on the last day, I was wedded to
+the gentle Niam of the Golden Hair.
+
+I lived in the Land of Youth more than three hundred years; but it
+appeared to me that only three years had passed since the day I parted
+from my friends. At the end of that time, I began to have a longing
+desire to see my father, Finn, and all my old companions, and I asked
+leave of Niam and of the king to visit Erin. The king gave permission,
+and Niam said--
+
+"I will give consent, though I feel sorrow in my heart, for I fear much
+you will never return to me."
+
+I replied that I would surely return, and that she need not feel any
+doubt or dread, for that the white steed knew the way, and would bring
+me back in safety. Then she addressed me in these words, which seemed
+very strange to me--
+
+"I will not refuse this request, though your journey afflicts me with
+great grief and fear. Erin is not now as it was when you left it. The
+great king Finn and his Fena are all gone; and you will find, instead of
+them, a holy father and hosts of priests and saints. Now, think well on
+what I say to you, and keep my words in your mind. If once you alight
+from the white steed, you will never come back to me. Again I warn you,
+if you place your feet on the green sod in Erin, you will never return
+to this lovely land. A third time, O Oisin, my beloved husband, a third
+time I say to you, if you alight from the white steed, you will never
+see me again."
+
+I promised that I would faithfully attend to her words, and that I would
+not alight from the white steed. Then, as I looked into her gentle face
+and marked her grief, my heart was weighed down with sadness, and my
+tears flowed plentifully; but even so, my mind was bent on coming back
+to Erin.
+
+When I had mounted the white steed, he galloped straight towards the
+shore. We moved as swiftly as before over the clear sea. The wind
+overtook the waves and we overtook the wind, so that we straightway left
+the Land of Youth behind; and we passed by many islands and cities, till
+at length we landed on the green shores of Erin.
+
+As I travelled on through the country, I looked closely around me; but I
+scarcely knew the old places, for everything seemed strangely altered. I
+saw no sign of Finn and his host, and I began to dread that Niam's
+saying was coming true. At length, I espied at a distance a company of
+little men and women,[CLIII.] all mounted on horses as small as
+themselves; and when I came near, they greeted me kindly and
+courteously. They looked at me with wonder and curiosity, and they
+marvelled much at my great size, and at the beauty and majesty of my
+person.
+
+I asked them about Finn and the Fena; whether they were still living, or
+if any sudden disaster had swept them away. And one replied--
+
+"We have heard of the hero Finn, who ruled the Fena of Erin in times of
+old, and who never had an equal for bravery and wisdom. The poets of the
+Gaels have written many books concerning his deeds and the deeds of the
+Fena, which we cannot now relate; but they are all gone long since, for
+they lived many ages ago. We have heard also, and we have seen it
+written in very old books, that Finn had a son named Oisin. Now this
+Oisin went with a young fairy maiden to Tirnanoge, and his father and
+his friends sorrowed greatly after him, and sought him long; but he was
+never seen again."
+
+When I heard all this, I was filled with amazement, and my heart grew
+heavy with great sorrow. I silently turned my steed away from the
+wondering people, and set forward straightway for Allen of the mighty
+deeds, on the broad, green plains of Leinster. It was a miserable
+journey to me; and though my mind, being full of sadness at all I saw
+and heard, forecasted further sorrows, I was grieved more than ever when
+I reached Allen. For there, indeed, I found the hill deserted and
+lonely, and my father's palace all in ruins and overgrown with grass and
+weeds.
+
+I turned slowly away, and afterwards fared through the land in every
+direction in search of my friends. But I met only crowds of little
+people, all strangers, who gazed on me with wonder; and none knew me. I
+visited every place throughout the country where I knew the Fena had
+lived; but I found their houses all like Allen, solitary and in ruins.
+
+At length I came to Glenasmole,[CLIV.] where many a time I had hunted
+in days of old with the Fena, and there I saw a crowd of people in the
+glen. As soon as they saw me, one of them came forward and said--
+
+"Come to us, thou mighty hero, and help us out of our strait; for thou
+art a man of vast strength."
+
+I went to them, and found a number of men trying in vain to raise a
+large, flat stone. It was half lifted from the ground; but those who
+were under it were not strong enough either to raise it further or to
+free themselves from its weight. And they were in great distress, and on
+the point of being crushed to death.
+
+I thought it a shameful thing that so many men should be unable to lift
+this stone, which Oscar, if he were alive, would take in his right hand
+and fling over the heads of the feeble crowd. After I had looked a
+little while, I stooped forward and seized the flag with one hand; and,
+putting forth my strength, I flung it seven perches from its place, and
+relieved the little men. But with the great strain the golden
+saddle-girth broke, and, bounding forward to keep myself from falling, I
+suddenly came to the ground on my two feet.
+
+The moment the white steed felt himself free, he shook himself and
+neighed. Then, starting off with the speed of a cloud-shadow on a March
+day, he left me standing helpless and sorrowful. Instantly a woeful
+change came over me: the sight of my eyes began to fade, the ruddy
+beauty of my face fled, I lost all my strength, and I fell to the earth,
+a poor, withered old man, blind and wrinkled and feeble.
+
+The white steed was never seen again. I never recovered my sight, my
+youth, or my strength; and I have lived in this manner, sorrowing
+without ceasing for my gentle, golden-haired wife, Niam, and thinking
+ever of my father, Finn, and of the lost companions of my youth.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CXLIX.] Tirnanoge, the Land of Youth. (See note 19 at the end.)
+
+[CL.] Gavra, now Garristown, in the north-west of the county Dublin.
+(For an account of this battle, see note 28 at the end.)
+
+[CLI.] Lough Lein, the Lakes of Killarney.
+
+[CLII.] Greenan, a summer-house; a house in a bright, sunny spot.
+
+[CLIII.] The gigantic race of the Fena had all passed away, and Erin was
+now inhabited by people who looked very small in Oisin's eyes.
+
+[CLIV.] Glenasmole, a fine valley about seven miles south of Dublin,
+through which the river Dodder flows.
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+VOYAGE OF THE SONS OF O'CORRA.[CLV.]
+
+
+A princely upright hundred-herd brugaid[CLVI.] was born one time in the
+lovely province of Connaught, namely, Conall Derg O'Corra the
+fair-haired. And thus was this brugaid (circumstanced):--he was a
+fortunate, rich, prosperous man; and his house was never found without
+three shouts in it--the shout of the brewers brewing ale, and the shout
+of the servants over the caldrons distributing (meat) to the hosts, and
+the shout of the youths over the chessboards[CLVII.] winning games from
+one another.
+
+The same house was never without three measures:--a measure of malt for
+making yeast, a measure of wheat for providing bread for the guests, and
+a measure of salt for savouring each kind of food.
+
+His wife was Cairderga[CLVIII.] the daughter of the Erenach[CLIX.] of
+Clogher.[CLX.] They felt no want of any kind except being without
+children; and it was not that they were without children (being born to
+them), but that the infants always died the moment after birth.
+
+Then this brugaid said (one day) to his wife as she reclined near him on
+the couch:--"It is a sad thing for us," said he, "that we have no
+children who would take our place and fill it worthily when we are
+gone."
+
+"What desire is in your mind in regard to that?" says the wife.
+
+"It is my desire," says the brugaid, "to make a bond with the demon to
+try if he would give us a son or a daughter who would take our place
+after us (since God has not done so)."
+
+"Let us do that," said the woman.
+
+They accordingly fasted (and prayed) to the demon; (and the demon
+hearkened unto them. And in due time) the pains and struggles, of
+childbirth came upon the lady; and she bore three sons at that great
+birth, namely, a son at the beginning of the night, and a son at the
+middle of the night, and a son at the end of the night.
+
+And they were baptised according to the baptism of the pagans (by which
+they were dedicated not to God but to the demon); and their names were
+Lochan, Enna, and Silvester. And after that, they were reared and
+carefully trained up till they were swift and active on sea and land; so
+that they were an overmatch for all the young people of their own age in
+every game and in every accomplishment. And they were in the mouths and
+on the tongues of all who saw or heard of them in their day.
+
+One day when they were resting at the railings of the house of their
+father and mother, wearied after their hurling and their martial games,
+the housefolk said that they saw no fault or defect in these handsome
+much-renowned youths, except only their being baptised in the service of
+the devil. (And the youths hearing this said):--"If it be so," said
+they, "that the devil is our lord and master, it is very wrong of us not
+to bring ruin and wrath and woe on his enemies, that is to say, (we
+ought) to slaughter the clergy, and burn and spoil their churches."
+
+Then did these three youths arise, (and collecting a band), and taking
+unto them their arms, they came to Tuam-da-Gualann,[CLXI.] and spoiled
+and burned the town. And (after that) they plundered and made dreadful
+havoc on the churches and clergy throughout the province of Connaught,
+until their wicked and bloodthirsty ravages were noised over the four
+quarters of Erin. Thus did they run their evil course without ceasing
+for a whole year, during which time they destroyed more than half the
+churches of Connaught.
+
+At the end of the year Lochan said to his brothers: "We have made one
+great mistake through forgetfulness," says he, "and our lord the devil
+will not be thankful to us on account of it." "What is that?" said the
+other two youths. "Our grandfather," says he, "that is our mother's
+father--not to have killed him and burned his church."
+
+So they set out straightway, journeying without sparing or respite (to
+Clogher), and this was how they found the erenach, namely, on the green
+of the church with a great company of his folk around him, (waiting for
+the O'Corras), in order to attend on them and to deal out to them the
+choice of every food and the best of every ale. And the intention that
+the elder had towards them, that indeed was not the intention they had
+towards him, but to murder him and to burn and spoil his church.
+
+Then the O'Corras came to the spot where the elder was standing, and
+they made up their minds not to kill him or burn the houses till night,
+when the cows and the (other) cattle of the homestead would be housed,
+all in their own proper places.
+
+The elder welcomed them and led them to the homestead; and he now became
+aware of their intention. Nevertheless he put them in a goodly pleasant
+_Greenan_,[CLXII.] and they were served with food and ale till they
+became exhilarated and cheerful: after which couches were made ready for
+them on lofty bedsteads.
+
+And now deep slumber and heavy sleep fell on them, and a wonderful
+vision was revealed in a dream to Lochan, the eldest of the sons of
+O'Corra, in which he was carried to see heaven and hell. And after this
+he awoke. The other two awoke at the same time, and they said:--"Let us
+now arise, for it is time to plunder and destroy the homestead."
+
+"Seems to me," said Lochan, "that this is not the right thing for us to
+do: for evil is the lord we have served until now, and good is the Lord
+we have plundered and outraged.
+
+"And last night I had," said he, "a fearful dream, in which I saw a
+vision of heaven and hell. And first I was taken to see hell, where were
+countless souls of men and vast crowds of demons suffering divers
+tortures, and plagues unexampled. And I saw the four rivers of hell,
+that is to say, a river of toads, a river of serpents, a river of fire,
+and a river of snow. I saw also a monstrous serpent with many heads and
+legs, at sight whereof, even though it were only a single glance, all
+the men in the world would drop dead with loathing and horror.
+
+"After this methought I was taken to see heaven; where I beheld the Lord
+Himself seated on His kingly throne, and angels in the shapes of white
+birds singing for Him. And among them was one great snow-white bird of
+dazzling brightness that excelled all the others in size and beauty and
+voice, chanting strains of surpassing sweetness. Women in travail and
+men sore wounded and sick people racked with pain would fall asleep if
+they heard the delightful harmony of his voice. And it was made known to
+me that this great bird who chanted such heavenly music to his mild Lord
+was Michael the Archangel.
+
+"And now my brothers," said Lochan, "it is my counsel to you that you
+follow God henceforward."
+
+"But," said the others, "will the Lord accept repentance from us for the
+dreadful evils we have already done?"
+
+They go to the father of their mother, namely, the erenach, and they ask
+this thing of him. "He will accept your repentance without doubt," says
+the erenach.
+
+"Well then," said Lochan, "let Mass be celebrated for us, and put us
+under instruction, and let us offer our confession to God. After that we
+will make staffs of the handles of our spears; and we will go to Finnen
+of Clonard,[CLXIII.] the tutor of the saints and of the just men of all
+Erin. He is a very holy man, and he will advise us in regard to what we
+ought to do."
+
+To this counsel they agreed; and on the morrow they set out for the
+place where Finnen was; whom they found on the green of Clonard with a
+number of his clerics.
+
+"Who are these coming towards us?" said the clerics. And one said, "They
+are the O'Corras the robbers." Hearing this they fled, like lightning,
+in a body from their master, for they felt quite sure that the O'Corras
+were coming to slay them; so that Finnen was left quite alone before the
+three brothers.
+
+"It is from us the clerics are fleeing:" says Lochan.
+
+"Of a certainty it is," said his brothers. "Let us," said Lochan, "cast
+from us our staffs, the only little remnant of our arms left with us;
+and let us throw ourselves on our knees before the cleric."
+
+And this they did. "What is your desire?" says the cleric (Finnen). "Our
+desire," said they, "is faith and piety, and to serve God, and to
+abandon the lord whom we have hitherto served, namely, the devil."
+
+"That is a good resolution," says the cleric; "and let us go now to the
+homestead yonder, the place where live our brotherhood."
+
+They go accordingly with him to the brotherhood; and after the matter
+had been considered, it was arranged to set apart a young cleric to
+teach them; and it was decreed that they should not speak to any one
+except their own master till the end of a year.
+
+So they continued for a whole year till they had read the Canons
+through, and by the time they had come to be able to read them, the
+whole brotherhood felt grateful (to God) for their piety and their
+gentleness.
+
+At the end of the year they came to Finnen; and they knelt before him,
+and said to him:--"It is time now that we should be judged and sentence
+passed on us for the great crimes we have committed.
+
+"What," said Finnen, "do ye not think it enough--the penance you have
+done already for a whole year among the brotherhood?" "It is not
+enough," said they. "What then are the greatest crimes ye have
+committed?" says Finnen. "We have burned more than half the churches of
+Connaught; and neither priest nor bishop got quarter or protection from
+us."
+
+"You cannot" replied Finnen, "give back life to the people you have
+killed; but do ye that which will be in your power, namely, to build up
+the churches ye have burned, and to repair every other damage ye have
+committed in them. And I will give to each man of you," says he, "the
+swiftness and strength of a hundred; and I will take from you all
+weariness of feet, of hands, and of body; and I will give you light and
+understanding which will have neither decay nor end."
+
+So the O'Corras departed, and went first to Tuam-da-Gualann; and after
+that, they fared through the province, obedient to rule and working hard
+each day, until it came to pass that they had restored everything they
+had previously destroyed.
+
+After that they came at the end of the year to speak with Finnen. "Have
+you been able," asks Finnen, "to repair everything ye destroyed
+belonging to the Church?" "We have," said they, "except one place alone,
+namely Kenn-Mara."[CLXIV.] "Alas for that," says Finnen; "that is the
+very first place you should have repaired; for it is the homestead of
+the oldest of all the saints of Ireland, namely, the aged Camann of
+Kenn-Mara. And now go and carefully restore everything ye have destroyed
+in that homestead. And the sentence that holy man passes on you, fulfil
+it patiently."
+
+So they went gladly to Kenn-Mara; and they repaired everything they had
+ruined there.
+
+One day when they had come forth from the homestead, they sat on the
+margin of the little bay, watching the sun as it went westward. And as
+they gazed and reflected on the course of the sun, they began to marvel
+greatly, pondering whither it went after it had gone down beneath the
+verge of the sea. "What more wonderful thing is there in the whole
+world," said they, "than that the sea does not freeze into ice, while
+ice is formed in every other water!"
+
+Thereupon they formed the resolution on the spot to bring unto them a
+certain artificer who was a fast friend of theirs, and to (get him) to
+make a three-hide curragh[CLXV.] for them. Accordingly the curragh was
+made, and a strong-sided one it was. And the reward the artificer asked
+for building it was to be let go with them.
+
+When the time had come, and they were about to embark, they saw a large
+crowd passing close by; and this crowd was a company of
+_crossans_.[CLXVI.] When the _crossans_ saw the curragh putting forth on
+the sea, they inquired:--"Who are yonder people that are launching this
+curragh on the sea?" said they.
+
+The _furshore_ (juggler) of the crossans said:--"I know them well; they
+are the sons of Conall derg O'Corra the fair-haired of Connaught, the
+destroyers and robbers, going on their pilgrimage on the sea and on the
+great ocean, to make search for their Lord." "And indeed," added the
+_furshore_, "my word for it, they do not stand more in need of seeking
+for heaven than we do."
+
+"It is a long day I fancy till you go on your pilgrimage," said the
+leader of the band. "Say not so," answered the _furshore_: "for I will
+certainly go with these people on my pilgrimage now without delay."
+
+"Upon our word," said the _crossans_, "you will not take away our
+clothes with you; for not a single article of the garments you wear
+belongs to you." "It is not so small a matter that would keep me with
+you," says he.
+
+So they stripped off all his clothes, and sent him away mother naked to
+the curragh.
+
+"Who and what in the world are you, good man?" asked the crew. "A poor
+wretch who wishes to go with you on pilgrimage," said he. "Indeed," said
+they, "you shall not by any means come with us, seeing that you are
+stark naked." "Say not so, young men," said he, "for the sake of God do
+not refuse me; for I will amuse you and keep your hearts cheerful (with
+my music and singing); and your piety will not be a whit the worse for
+it."
+
+And (inasmuch as he had asked) for the sake of God they consented to let
+him go.
+
+Now this is how it was with the crew:--each man of them had built a
+church and raised an altar to the Lord in his own district. Their number
+was nine; among whom was a bishop, and a priest, and a deacon; and they
+had one _gilla_ (attendant) who was the ninth man.
+
+"Let us go aboard our curragh now," says Lochan, "as we have finished
+our task of restoring the churches, and as we have, besides, each of us
+built a church to the Lord in our own district."
+
+It was then they put up their prayers fervently to God in the hope that
+they might have fine weather; and that the Lord would quell the fury of
+the billows, and the might of the ocean, and the rage of the terrible
+sea monsters. So they embarked in their curragh, bringing their oars;
+and they began to question among themselves what direction they should
+take. "The direction in which this wind will bring us," says the bishop.
+And having commended themselves to God, one and all, they betook them to
+their oars. A great wind now arose, which drove them out on the waste
+of waters straight to the west; and they were forty days and forty
+nights on the ocean. And God revealed to them great and unheard of
+wonders.
+
+They had not been long rowing when the _crossan_ died; and sad and
+sorrowful were they for his loss, and wept much. While they were still
+mourning, they saw a little bird alight on the deck of the curragh. And
+the little bird spoke and said to them:--"Good people, tell me now in
+God's name what is the cause of your sorrow."
+
+"A _crossan_ that we had playing music for us; and he died a little
+while ago in this curragh; and that is the cause of our sorrow."
+
+And the bird said:--"Lo, I am your little _crossan_: and now be not
+sorrowful any longer, for I am going straightway to heaven." So saying
+he bade them farewell and flew away.
+
+
+I.
+
+They row forward for a long time till there was shown to them a
+wonderful island, and in it a great grove of marvellous beauty, laden
+with apples, golden coloured and sweet scented. A sparkling rivulet of
+wine flowed through the midst of the grove; and when the wind blew
+through the trees, sweeter than any music was the rustling it made. The
+O'Corras ate some of the apples and drank from the rivulet of wine, and
+were immediately satisfied. And from that time forth they were never
+troubled by either wounds or sickness.
+
+
+II.
+
+Then they took to their oars; and after a time they came in view of
+another island, and four companies of people in it, such as had never
+been seen before. Now these people had divided the island into four
+parts: old greyheaded people were in the first division; princes in the
+second; warriors in the third; and servants in the fourth. They were all
+beautiful and glorious to behold; and they diverted themselves
+continually with games and pastimes. One of the crew went to them to ask
+news: (he was a comely, well-favoured youth, but) he seemed ugly and
+dark-visaged in presence of these glorious people. When he had got among
+them, he became in a moment beautiful like the others; and he joined in
+their games, and laughed, and made merry. Moreover he remembered nothing
+more of his companions; and he sojourned in the island after that for
+evermore. And the O'Corras were at length forced to depart, though much
+grieved for the loss of their companion.
+
+
+III.
+
+Then they set out and rowed for some time till they sighted another
+marvellous island. It stood up in the air high over the great sea; and
+it was propped up by a pillar like a single foot standing under it in
+the middle. And the crew heard great shouting and the loud conversation
+of people on the top of the island overhead; but though the O'Corras
+sailed round and round, they could not get a sight of them.
+
+
+IV.
+
+They row forward after that till they come to an island in which lived
+one lone cleric. Very lovely was that island, and glorious its history.
+Beautiful purple flowers covered all the plains, dropping honey in
+abundance; and on the trees were perched flocks of bright-coloured birds
+singing slow sweet fairy-music. The O'Corras went to ask the cleric
+about himself and about the island. And he spoke as follows:--
+
+"I am a disciple of St. Andrew the Apostle, and Dega is my name. On a
+certain night I neglected to read my Matins; and it is for this that I
+was sent on a pilgrimage on the ocean; and here I am awaiting the
+Judgment day. And yonder birds that are singing those incomparable
+strains on the trees, these are the souls of holy men."
+
+
+V.
+
+They took leave of the old man and plied their oars, till they reached
+another island, with dead people on one side of it, and living people on
+the other side: and many of the living people had feet of iron. All
+round was a burning sea, which broke over the island continually in
+mighty waves. And the living people uttered fearful cries when the fiery
+waves flowed over them, for their torments thereby were great and
+terrible.
+
+
+VI.
+
+After leaving this they rowed on till they saw an island formed of great
+flat stones for ever burning red hot. And thereon they saw whole hosts
+of people burning in great torment; and many had red fiery spits thrust
+through their bodies. And they uttered great cries of pain without
+ceasing. The crew called out from a distance to ask who they were:
+whereupon one answered:--
+
+"This is one of the flagstones of hell. We are souls who in life did not
+fulfil the penance imposed on us; and warn all men to avoid this place;
+for whosoever cometh hither shall never go hence till the Day of
+Judgment."
+
+
+VII.
+
+The next island they saw was very beautiful and glorious to look upon.
+It had a wall of copper all round it, with a network of copper hanging
+out from each corner; and in the centre stood a palace. The crew left
+their curragh on the strand and went towards the palace. And when they
+had come nigh unto the wall, the wind, as it rustled and murmured
+through the copper network, made music so soft and sweet that they fell
+into a gentle slumber, and slept for three days and three nights. When
+they awoke they saw a beautiful maiden coming towards them from the
+palace. She had sandals of _findrina_ (a sort of white metal) on her
+feet, and an inner garment of fine silk next her snow-white skin. She
+wore a beautiful gold-coloured vest, and over all a bright-tinted
+mantle, plaited fivefold on its upper border, and fastened at the neck
+with a brooch of burnished gold. In one hand she held a pitcher of
+copper, and in the other a silver goblet.
+
+When she had come near she greeted them and bade them welcome. And she
+gave them food from the copper pitcher which seemed to them like cheese;
+and she brought them water in the silver goblet from a well on the
+strand. And there was no delicious flavour that was ever tasted by man
+that they did not find in this food and drink. Then the maiden said to
+them:--"Although we are all--you and I--of one race, yet shall ye go
+hence without delay, for your resurrection is not to be here."
+
+So they bade her farewell and took to their oars once more.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+After rowing for some time they saw flocks of large birds of divers
+colours flying over the sea; and their number was great beyond counting.
+One of them alighted on the deck of the curragh.
+
+"It would be a delightful thing," said one of the clerics, "if this bird
+were a messenger from the Lord, sent to give us news."
+
+"That would be quite possible with God," said the eldest; and as he
+spoke he raised his eyes and looked at the bird. Whereupon the bird
+spoke and said:--
+
+"It is indeed to converse with you that I have come; for I am of the
+land of Erin."
+
+Now this bird was crimson red all over, except three beautiful streaks
+on her breast, which shone as bright as the sun. And after a time she
+said to the same cleric:--
+
+"I am the soul of a woman; and I am your friend. And come ye now," says
+she, "to hear yonder birds; for these are the souls that are permitted
+to come out of hell every Sunday."
+
+"It is better that we leave this place at once," said the same old
+cleric. And his companions said to him:--
+
+"We will go with thee whithersoever thou goest." So they departed from
+that place; (and the crimson red bird went with them).
+
+
+IX.
+
+And as they went, they saw three wonderful streams, namely, a stream of
+otters, a stream of eels, and a stream of black swans. Great flocks of
+birds arose from these three streams and flew past the voyagers; and the
+black swans followed close after, tearing and tormenting the birds. And
+the crimson red bird said:--
+
+"Marvel not, neither be ye sad of heart; for these bird-shapes that ye
+see are the souls of people suffering the punishment of their crimes.
+And the black swans that follow them, these are devils who are for ever
+tormenting them; and the birds scream fearfully, and are for ever trying
+to fly from the demons and to free themselves from their torment.
+
+"And now as to me," continued the bird, "I am about to depart from you.
+It is not permitted me to make known to you what is to befall you; but
+in a little time another will tell you all that you need to know."
+
+And the cleric said:--"Tell us, I beseech thee, what are those three
+beautiful streaks on thy breast."
+
+"I will tell you that," answered the bird. "When I was in the world I
+was married; but I did not yield obedience to my husband, neither did I
+fulfil my lawful homely duties as a wife. And when a grievous sickness
+came upon him I left him to die. But thrice I went in pity to him:--once
+to see him and ask after his illness; once to bring him such food as
+befitted his state; and the third time when he was dead, to watch by the
+body and see it buried. These three good deeds are the three beautiful
+streaks that you see on my breast; and I should have been bright all
+over like these streaks if I had not violated my lawful marriage
+duties."
+
+And having so spoken, the bird bade them farewell and flew away.
+
+
+X.
+
+They next discovered a very beautiful island. The grass was bright
+green, and it was all over intermingled with pretty purple-coloured
+flowers. Flocks of lovely little birds of many bright colours, and
+myriads of bees, flew among the trees and flowers, humming and singing
+harmonious music. The voyagers saw a venerable grey-headed old man with
+a harp in his hand. He played this harp on the island continually; and
+the music thereof was sweeter than any music they had ever heard. They
+saluted the old man, who saluted them in return, with a blessing. But
+immediately he bade them to depart.
+
+
+XI.
+
+So they rowed away till they came to another island, on which they saw a
+man digging in a field; and his spade was all fiery, and the handle
+thereof, which he held in his hand, was red hot. From the sea at one
+side arose at times a mighty wave all flaming red with fire, which
+flowed quite over the island and over the man. And ever when he saw the
+wave coming he cried out with fear; and when the burning torrent covered
+him, he strove to raise his head above the flames, and roared with his
+great torment. Now when one of the waves had retired they spoke to him
+and asked:--
+
+"Who art thou, O wretched man?"
+
+And he answered:--"Lo, this is my punishment for my misdeeds. For when I
+lived on earth I always worked on Sundays, digging in my garden; for
+which I am condemned to dig with this fiery spade, and to suffer the
+torments of these fiery waves. And now, for the sake of God, offer up
+your prayers for me, that my pains may be lightened."
+
+And they prayed fervently; after which they departed from the island.
+
+
+XII.
+
+Soon after leaving this they saw a horseman of vast size riding on the
+sea; and the horse he rode was made of fire flaming red. And as he rode,
+great waves of fire came after him along the sea; and when a wave began
+to roll over him, he yelled aloud with fear and pain. Then they asked
+him why he was thus tormented; and he answered:--
+
+"I am he who stole my brother's horse; and after I had gotten him I rode
+him every Sunday. For this I am now undergoing my punishment, riding on
+this horse of fire, and tormented with these great waves of fire."
+
+
+XIII.
+
+After leaving this they came in sight of another island, full of people,
+all weeping and lamenting grievously. Great numbers of jet-black birds
+with beaks of fire and red-hot fiery talons followed and fluttered round
+about them, tearing and burning them with their talons, and rending away
+pieces of flesh, the full of their fiery beaks. Then the crew said
+aloud:--
+
+"Who are ye, O miserable people?"
+
+"We are dishonest smiths and artisans; and because we cheated while we
+lived, we are punished by these hateful fiery birds. Moreover, our
+tongues are burning, being all afire in our heads; for that we reviled
+people with bitter words and foul taunts."
+
+
+XIV.
+
+Coming now to another place, they saw a giant huge in size, and of a
+sooty black colour all over. His mouth was all on fire; and from his
+throat he belched forth great flakes of fire, each flake as it came from
+his mouth larger than the skin of a three-year-old wether. He held in
+his hand an iron club larger than the shaft of a mill wheel; and on his
+back he bore an immense faggot of firewood, a good load for a team of
+horses. Now this faggot often blazed up and burned him; and he tried to
+free himself from his torment by lying down so that the sea might flow
+over him. But ever as he did so, the sea around him turned to fire, and
+rose up in mighty burning billows, covering him all over, so that he
+made the place resound with his bellowings.
+
+"Miserable wretch, who art thou?" asked the crew.
+
+And he answered:--"I will tell you truly. When I lived I used to cut
+faggots and bring them home on my back every Sunday: and lo, here is my
+punishment."
+
+
+XV.
+
+They came after that to a sea of fire full of men's heads, all black,
+and continually fighting with each other. And many great serpents rose
+up among the heads and came with fury to attack the curragh, so that at
+one time they pierced through the outer hide. And one of the crew who
+looked on cried out in great horror, and said:--
+
+"It is enough to strike one dead to behold the fearful things I see!"
+
+And the whole crew when they saw the heads and the serpents fell flat
+with fear. But the elder (the bishop) comforted them, saying:--
+
+"Be ye not afraid or troubled on account of these things; for God is
+able to protect us, even though we were in a curragh of only one hide;
+and if He wishes to save us, these monsters cannot hurt us, however
+furious they may be to slay us."
+
+And they took courage after this, and rowed out into the open sea.
+
+
+XVI.
+
+There was shown to them next another beautiful island, having in one
+place an open wood. The trees were laden with fruit, and the leaves
+dropped honey to the ground. The sides of the hills were clothed with
+purple blossomed heather, mixed with soft, green grass to its very
+centre. In the midst of the island was a pretty lake, whose waters
+tasted like sweet wine. They rested for a week on the shore of this
+lake, and cast off their weariness. And now, being about to leave the
+island, as they turned to go to the curragh, a monstrous
+reptile[CLXVII.] rose up from the lake and looked at them. And they
+trembled with fear at the sight of this terrible beast; for each man
+thought that he himself would be the first to be attacked. But after a
+little time the reptile dived again into the water, and they saw no more
+of him.
+
+
+XVII.
+
+From this they rowed away; and after a long time they came at midnight
+to an island wherein was a community of Ailbe of Emly.[CLXVIII.] On the
+beach they found two spring wells; one foul, the other bright and clear.
+The gilla wished to drink of the clear well; but the elder (the bishop)
+told him it was better to ask leave, if there was anyone living on the
+island.
+
+Then they saw a great light; and coming closer, they found the twelve
+men of the community at their prayers; and now they perceived that the
+bright light they saw came from the radiant faces of the twelve; so that
+these holy men needed no other light. One of them, an old man, comes
+towards the voyagers; and he bids them welcome and asks news of them.
+They tell him all their adventures, and ask his leave to drink from the
+well; whereupon he said to them:--"Ye may fill your pitchers from the
+clear well, if your elder (_i.e._ the bishop) gives you leave."
+
+"Who are ye?" asks the gilla.
+
+"A community of Ailbe of Emly," says he: "and we are the crew of one of
+Ailbe's curraghs. God has permitted that we live here till the Day of
+Judgment, praying for everyone who is drowned at sea. And now leave this
+land before morning," he added, "for your resurrection is not to be
+here. And if ye have not left by the dawn, so much the worse for
+yourselves; for if once ye get a view of this island in the light of
+day, bitter will be your anguish of mind for leaving it (on account of
+its surpassing loveliness). So it is better for you to go away during
+the night."
+
+And they did exactly all he told them to do.
+
+"Shall we take away some of the pebbles of the strand?" said they
+(talking among themselves).
+
+"It is better to ask leave," answered the cleric. So the gilla asked
+leave of the same old man.
+
+"Yes, if you have the permission (of your bishop)," answered he.
+"Nevertheless," he added, "those who take them will be sorry; and those
+who do not take them will be sorry also."
+
+They pick up pebbles, some bringing away one, some two, some three.
+(After which they row away in the dark night from the island.) In the
+morning they drank some of the spring water of the island from their
+pitchers; which threw them into a deep sleep from that time till next
+day. On wakening up, they examined their pebbles in the light; and some
+were found to be crystal, some silver, and some gold. Then those who
+brought some away were in sorrow that they had not brought more; and
+much greater was the sorrow of those who had brought away none. So the
+words of the old man came true.
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+After leaving this they came to a lovely island on which was a church
+standing all alone: and when they drew nigh they heard the voice of a
+cleric singing the psalms with a sweet voice. They came to the door and
+struck it with the hand-wood; and straightway a beautiful
+bright-coloured bird came to speak with them. When they had told him
+who they were and what they wanted, he flew back to the cleric, who bade
+him have the door opened for the pilgrims. And when they had come in,
+they found the cleric--a very old man with white hair--who sang his
+hymns continually. And they saluted each other; and the pilgrims stayed
+there that night. And an angel came and brought them supper, and
+ministered unto them. On the morrow the old priest bade them depart,
+since that was not to be the place of their resurrection on the Judgment
+Day. But before they went he foretold all that should happen to them
+during the rest of their voyage.
+
+
+XIX.
+
+From that they came to an island in which was a disciple of Christ.
+Glorious and beautiful was that island; and on it stood a church and a
+kingly shrine. As they came near they heard some one singing the Pater
+to God in the door of the church: whereupon one of the clerics said:--
+
+"Welcome the prayer of our father and teacher, Jesus."
+
+And the priest who stood praying at the door said:--
+
+"Why say you so? Who are ye; and where have ye seen Him?"
+
+And when they had told him that they were servants of Jesus, he spoke
+again:--
+
+"I too am one of His disciples. And when I first took Him for my Lord I
+was faithful and steady; but after a time I left Him and came to sea in
+my curragh, and rowed till I came to this island. For a long time I
+lived on fruit and herbs; till at length an angel came from heaven to
+visit me. And he said to me:--
+
+"'Thou hast not done well: nevertheless thou shalt abide on this island,
+eating the same food without either decay or death till the Judgment
+Day.' And so I have lived here to this hour: and no daily meal is sent
+to me, but I eat of the herbs and fruit that grow on the island."
+
+Then they all went together into one house; and being very hungry, they
+prayed fervently for food. And presently an angel came down from heaven;
+and while they looked on he placed a supper for them on a flagstone hard
+by the strand, namely, a cake with a slice of fish for each. And while
+they ate, whatsoever taste each man separately wished for, that taste he
+found on the food. In the morning, when they were about to bid the
+cleric farewell, he foretold all that should happen to them, saying:--
+
+"Ye shall go from me now on sea till ye reach the western point of
+Spain. And as ye near the land, ye shall meet a boat with a crew of men
+fishing, who will bring you with them to land."
+
+Then turning to the bishop, he said:--"Immediately after leaving the
+curragh, as soon as thou hast reached the land, prostrate thyself three
+times to God. And the place on which thou shalt first set thy foot,
+there a great crowd shall gather round thee from every quarter. And they
+will treat thee kindly, and will give thee land on which they will
+build a church for thee; and after this thy fame shall spread over the
+whole world. And the successor of Peter (the Pope) shall bring thee
+eastwards to Rome. Yonder priest thou shalt leave as thy successor in
+the church, and the deacon thou shalt leave to be his sacristan. That
+place and that church shall be revered, and shall be preserved for ever.
+And thou shalt leave the Gilla in Britain, where he will live for the
+rest of his life."
+
+After this they bade the old man farewell and left the island. And all
+fell out just as he had foretold. And the bishop went to Rome; and he
+afterwards related these adventures to Saerbrethach bishop of West
+Munster, and to Mocolmoc, one of the holy men of Aran, as we have set
+them down here.
+
+
+Thus far the Voyage of the Sons of O'Corra.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLV.] I translated this tale fifteen years ago (as mentioned in
+Preface, page xiii) from two Royal Irish Academy MSS., 23. N. 15 and 23.
+M. 50; and I subsequently made some modifications after I had an
+opportunity of consulting the more correct text of the Book of Fermoy.
+This last text has since been published, with literal translation, by
+Dr. Whitley Stokes, in the _Revue Celtique_ (Jan. 1893). After comparing
+my somewhat free version with Dr. Stokes's close translation, I have not
+thought it necessary to make any changes.
+
+A few of the adventures in this tale are identical with those described
+in the Voyage of Maildun: the description of these I have omitted here.
+Lochan, Enna, and Silvester, the chief characters in this extraordinary
+fiction, are historical: they were saints of the primitive Irish church,
+and lived in the sixth century.
+
+[CLVI.] _Brugaid_, a sort of local officer who maintained a large
+establishment as keeper of a house of public hospitality. See my "Short
+History of Ireland," p. 57.
+
+[CLVII.] Chess-playing was a favourite amusement among the ancient
+Irish.
+
+[CLVIII.] Cairderga: original _Caer-derg_, red berry.
+
+[CLIX.] _Erenach_, the holder or _impropriator_ of a church and its
+lands: usually a layman.
+
+[CLX.] Clogher in Tyrone where there was a monastery.
+
+[CLXI.] Tuam-da-Gualann, where was formerly a celebrated ecclesiastical
+establishment: now Tuam in Galway.
+
+[CLXII.] Greenan: original _grianan_, literally a sunny place: a
+summer-house: the most lightsome, airy, and pleasant apartment of a
+house. See this word discussed in my "Irish Names of Places," vol. i. p.
+291.
+
+[CLXIII.] For St. Finnen of Clonard in the County Meath, see my "Short
+History of Ireland," p. 175
+
+[CLXIV.] _Kenn-Mara_, now Kinvarra on Galway bay.
+
+[CLXV.] _Curragh_, see note 17 at end. Some curraghs were made with
+two--some with three--hides, one outside another, for the better
+security.
+
+[CLXVI.] _Crossans_: travelling gleemen: the clothes, musical
+instruments, &c., were the property of the company. This word is the
+origin of the Scotch and Irish family name MacCrossan, now often changed
+to Crosbie. A company of crossans had always among them a _fuirseoir_,
+i.e. a juggler or buffoon.
+
+[CLXVII.] According to very ancient legends, which are still vividly
+remembered and recounted all over the country, almost every lake in
+Ireland has a tremendous hairy reptile in its waters. Some say they are
+demons, sent by St. Patrick to reside at the bottom of the lakes to the
+Day of Judgment.
+
+[CLXVIII.] St. Ailbe, the patron of Munster, was a contemporary of St.
+Patrick. He founded his great monastery and school at Emly in the County
+Limerick.
+
+
+
+
+THE FATE OF THE SONS OF USNA.[CLXIX.]
+
+ Avenging and bright fall the swift sword of Erin
+ On him who the brave sons of Usna betrayed.
+
+ MOORE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXIX.] The translation that follows is my own, and is of course
+copyright, like all the other translations in this book. On this fine
+story is founded the epic poem of "Deirdre," by Robert Dwyer Joyce, M.D.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE FLIGHT TO ALBAN.
+
+
+Concobar mac Nessa, king of Ulaid,[CLXX.] ruled in Emain. And his chief
+story-teller, Felimid, made a feast for the king and for the knights of
+the Red Branch,[CLXXI.] who all came to partake of it in his house.
+While they were feasting right joyously, listening to the sweet music of
+the harps and the mellow voices of the bards, a messenger brought word
+that Felimid's wife had given birth to a little daughter, an infant of
+wondrous beauty. And when Caffa, the king's druid and seer, who was of
+the company, was ware of the birth of the child, he went forth to view
+the stars and the clouds, if he might thereby glean knowledge of what
+was in store for that little babe.[CLXXII.] And when he had returned to
+his place, he sat deep pondering for a time: and then standing up and
+obtaining silence, he said:--
+
+"This child shall be called Deir-dr[)e][CLXXIII.]; and fittingly is she
+so named: for much of woe will befall Ulaid and Erin in general on her
+account. There shall be jealousies, and strifes, and wars: evil deeds
+will be done: many heroes will be exiled: many will fall."
+
+When the heroes heard this, they were sorely troubled, and some said
+that the child should be killed. But the king said:--"Not so, ye Knights
+of the Red Branch; it is not meet to commit a base deed in order to
+escape evils that may never come to pass. This little maid shall be
+reared out of the reach of mischief, and when she is old enough she
+shall be my wife: thus shall I be the better able to guard against those
+evils that Caffa forecasts for us."
+
+And the Ultonians did not dare to gainsay the word of the king.
+
+Then king Concobar caused the child to be placed in a strong fortress on
+a lonely spot nigh the palace, with no opening in front, but with door
+and windows looking out at the back on a lovely garden watered by a
+clear rippling stream: and house and garden were surrounded by a wall
+that no man could surmount. And those who were put in charge of her
+were, her tutor, and her nurse, and Concobar's poetess, whose name was
+Lavarcam: and save these three, none were permitted to see her. And so
+she grew up in this solitude, year by year, till she was of marriageable
+age, when she excelled all the maidens of her time for beauty.
+
+One snowy day as she and Lavarcam looked forth from the window, they saw
+some blood on the snow, where her tutor had killed a calf for dinner;
+and a raven alighted and began to drink of it. "I should like," said
+Deirdre, "that he who is to be my husband should have these three
+colours: his hair as black as the raven: his cheeks red as the blood:
+his skin like the snow. And I saw such a youth in a dream last night;
+but I know not where he is, or whether he is living on the ridge of the
+world."
+
+"Truly," said Lavarcam, "the young hero that answers to thy words is not
+far from thee; for he is among Concobar's knights: namely, Naisi the son
+of Usna."
+
+Now Naisi and his brothers, Ainnli and Ardan, the three sons of Usna,
+were the best beloved of all the Red Branch Knights, so gracious and
+gentle were they in time of peace, so skilful and swift-footed in the
+chase, so strong and valiant in battle.
+
+And when Deirdre heard Lavarcam's words, she said:--"If it be as thou
+sayest, that this young knight is near us, I shall not be happy till I
+see him: and I beseech thee to bring him to speak to me."
+
+"Alas, child," replied Lavarcam, "thou knowest not the peril of what
+thou askest me to do: for if thy tutor come to know of it, he will
+surely tell the king; and the king's anger none can bear."
+
+Deirdre answered not: but she remained for many days sad and silent: and
+her eyes often filled with tears through memory of her dream: so that
+Lavarcam was grieved: and she pondered on the thing if it could be done,
+for she loved Deirdre very much, and had compassion on her. At last she
+contrived that these two should meet without the tutor's knowledge: and
+the end of the matter was that they loved each other: and Deirdre said
+she would never wed the king, but she would wed Naisi.
+
+Knowing well the doom that awaited them when Concobar came to hear of
+this, Naisi and his young wife and his two brothers, with thrice fifty
+fighting men, thrice fifty women, thrice fifty attendants, and thrice
+fifty hounds, fled over sea to Alban. And the king of the western part
+of Alban received them kindly, and took them into military service. Here
+they remained for a space, gaining daily in favour: but they kept
+Deirdre apart, fearing evil if the king should see her.
+
+And so matters went on, till it chanced that the king's steward, coming
+one day by Naisi's house, saw the couple as they sat on their couch: and
+going directly to his master, he said:--
+
+"O king, we have long sought in vain for a woman worthy to be thy wife,
+and now at last we have found her: for the woman, Deirdre, who is with
+Naisi, is worthy to be the wife of the king of the western world. And
+now I give thee this counsel:--Let Naisi be killed, and then take thou
+Deirdre for thy wife."
+
+The king basely agreed to do so; and forthwith he laid a plot to slay
+the sons of Usna; which matter coming betimes to the ears of the
+brothers, they fled by night with all their people. And when they had
+got to a safe distance, they took up their abode in a wild place, where
+with much ado they obtained food by hunting and fishing. And the
+brothers built them three hunting booths in the forest, a little
+distance from that part of the seashore looking towards Erin: and the
+booth in which their food was prepared, in that they did not eat; and
+the one in which they ate, in that they did not sleep. And their people
+in like manner built themselves booths and huts, which gave them but
+scant shelter from wind and weather.
+
+Now when it came to the ears of the Ultonians, that the sons of Usna and
+their people were in discomfort and danger, they were sorely grieved:
+but they kept their thoughts to themselves, for they dared not speak
+their mind to the king.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXX.] Ulaid (pronounced _Ulla_), Ulster.
+
+[CLXXI.] For Concobar and the Red Branch Knights, see note 15 farther
+on: and for much fuller information, see my "Social History of Ancient
+Ireland," vol. i, page 83; or the Smaller Soc. Hist., page 38.
+
+[CLXXII.] The druids professed to be able to foretell by observing the
+stars and clouds. See Smaller Social History, p. 98.
+
+[CLXXIII.] "Deirdre" is said to mean "alarm."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+CONCOBAR'S GUILEFUL MESSAGE.
+
+
+AT this same time a right joyous and very splendid feast was given by
+Concobar in Emain Macha to the nobles and the knights of his household.
+And the number of the king's household that sat them down in the great
+hall of Emain on that occasion was five and three score above six
+hundred and one thousand.[CLXXIV.] Then arose, in turn, their musicians
+to sound their melodious harpstrings, and their poets and their
+story-tellers to sing their sweet poetic strains, and to recount the
+deeds of the mighty heroes of the olden time. And the feasting and the
+enjoyment went on, and the entire assembly were gay and cheerful. At
+length Concobar arose from where he sat high up on his royal seat;
+whereupon the noise of mirth was instantly hushed. And he raised his
+kingly voice and said:--
+
+"I desire to know from you, ye Nobles and Knights of the Red Branch,
+have you ever seen in any quarter of Erin a house better than this house
+of Emain, which is my mansion: and whether you see any want in it."
+
+And they answered that they saw no better house, and that they knew of
+no want in it.
+
+And the king said: "I know of a great want: namely, that we have not
+present among us the three noble sons of Usna. And why now should they
+be in banishment on account of any woman in the world?"
+
+And the nobles replied:--"Truly it is a sad thing that the sons of Usna,
+our dear comrades, should be in exile and distress. They were a shield
+of defence to Ulaid: and now, O king, it will please us well that thou
+send for them and bring them back, lest they and their people perish by
+famine or fall by their enemies."
+
+"Let them come," replied Concobar, "and make submission to me: and their
+homes, and their lands and their places among the Knights of the Red
+Branch shall be restored to them."
+
+Now Concobar was mightily enraged at the marriage and flight of Naisi
+and Deirdre, though he hid his mind from all men; and he spoke these
+words pretending forgiveness and friendship. But there was guile in his
+heart, and he planned to allure them back to Ulaid that he might kill
+them.
+
+When the feast was ended, and the company had departed, the king called
+unto him Fergus mac Roy, and said:--"Go thou, Fergus, and bring back the
+sons of Usna and their people. I promise thee that I will receive them
+as friends should be received, and that what awaits them here is not
+enmity or injury, but welcome and friendship. Take my message of peace
+and good will, and give thyself as pledge and surety for their safety.
+But these two things I charge thee to do:--That the moment you land in
+Ulaid on your way back, you proceed straight to Barach's house which
+stands on the sea cliff high over the landing place fronting Alban: and
+that whether the time of your arrival be by day or by night, thou see
+that the sons of Usna tarry not, but let them come hither direct to
+Emain, that they may not eat food in Erin till they eat of mine."
+
+And Fergus, suspecting no evil design, promised to do as the king
+directed: for he was glad to be sent on this errand, being a fast friend
+to the sons of Usna.
+
+Fergus set out straightway, bringing with him only his two sons, Illan
+the Fair and Buinni the Red, and his shield-bearer to carry his shield.
+And as soon as he had departed, Concobar sent for Barach and said to
+him:--
+
+"Prepare a feast in thy house for Fergus: and when he visits thee
+returning with the sons of Usna, invite him to partake of it." And
+Barach thereupon departed for his home to do the bidding of the king and
+prepare the feast.
+
+Now those heroes of old, on the day they received knighthood, were wont
+to make certain pledges which were to bind them for life, some binding
+themselves to one thing, some to another. And as they made the promises
+on the faith of their knighthood, with great vows, in presence of kings
+and nobles, they dared not violate them; no, not even if it was to save
+the lives of themselves and all their friends: for whosoever broke
+through his knighthood pledge was foully dishonoured for evermore. And
+one of Fergus's obligations was never to refuse an invitation to a
+banquet: a thing which was well known to King Concobar and to Barach.
+
+As to Fergus mac Roy and his sons: they went on board their galley and
+put to sea, and made no delay till they reached the harbour nigh the
+campment of the sons of Usna. And coming ashore, Fergus gave the loud
+shout of a mighty man of chase. The sons of Usna were at that same hour
+in their booth; and Naisi and Deirdre were sitting with a polished
+chessboard between them playing a game.
+
+And when they heard the shout, Naisi said:--"That is the call of a man
+from Erin."
+
+"Not so," replied Deirdre, "it is the call of a man of Alban."
+
+And after a little time when a second shout came, Naisi said:--"That of
+a certainty is the call of a man of Erin!"
+
+But Deirdre again replied:--"No, indeed: it concerns us not: let us play
+our game."
+
+But when a third shout came sounding louder than those before, Naisi
+arose and said:--"Now I know the voice: that is the shout of Fergus!"
+And straightway he sent Ardan to the shore to meet him.
+
+Now Deirdre knew the voice of Fergus from the first: but she kept her
+thoughts to herself: for her heart misgave her that the visit boded
+evil. And when she told Naisi that she knew the first shout, he
+said:--"Why, my queen, didst thou conceal it then?"
+
+And she replied:--"Lo, I saw a vision in my sleep last night: three
+birds came to us from Emain Macha, with three drops of honey in their
+beaks, and they left us the honey and took away three drops of our
+blood."
+
+"What dost thou read from that vision, O princess?" said Naisi.
+
+"It denotes the message from Concobar to us," said Deirdre; "for sweet
+as honey is the message of peace from a false man, while he has thoughts
+of blood hidden deep in his heart."
+
+When Ardan arrived at the shore, the sight of Fergus and his two sons
+was to him like rain on the parched grass; for it was long since he had
+seen any of his dear comrades from Erin. And he cried out as he came
+near, "An affectionate welcome to you, my dear companions": and he fell
+on Fergus's neck and kissed his cheeks, and did the like to his sons.
+Then he brought them to the hunting-booth; and Naisi, Ainnli, and
+Deirdre gave them a like kind welcome; after which they asked the news
+from Erin.
+
+"The best news I have," said Fergus, "is that Concobar has sent me to
+you with kindly greetings, to bring you back to Emain and restore you to
+your lands and homes, and to your places in the Red Branch; and I am
+myself a pledge for your safety."
+
+"It is not meet for them to go," said Deirdre: "for here they are under
+no man's rule; and their sway in Alban is even as great as the sway of
+Concobar in Erin."
+
+But Fergus said: "One's mother country is better than all else, and
+gloomy is life when a man sees not his home each morning."
+
+"Far dearer to me is Erin than Alban," said Naisi, "even though my sway
+should be greater here."
+
+It was not with Deirdre's consent he spoke these words: and she still
+earnestly opposed their return to Erin.
+
+But Fergus tried to re-assure her:--"If all the men of Erin were against
+you," said he, "it would avail nought once I have passed my word for
+your safety."
+
+"We trust in thee," said Naisi, "and we will go with thee to Erin."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXIV.] That is 1665. This inverted method of enumeration was often
+used in Ireland. But they also used direct enumeration like ours.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE RETURN TO EMAIN.
+
+
+Going next morning on board their galleys, Fergus and his companions put
+out on the wide sea: and oar and wind bore them on swiftly till they
+landed on the shore of Erin near the house of Barach.
+
+And Deirdre, seating herself on a cliff, looked sadly over the waters at
+the blue headlands of Alban: and she uttered this farewell:--
+
+
+I.
+
+"Dear to me is yon eastern land: Alban with its wonders. Beloved is
+Alban with its bright harbours and its pleasant hills of the green
+slopes. From that land I would never depart except to be with Naisi.
+
+
+II.
+
+"Kil-Cuan, O Kil-Cuan,[CLXXV.] whither Ainnli was wont to resort: short
+seemed the time to me while I sojourned there with Naisi on the margins
+of its streams and waterfalls.
+
+
+III.
+
+"Glen-Lee, O Glen-Lee, where I slept happy under soft coverlets: fish
+and fowl, and the flesh of red deer and badgers; these were our fare in
+Glen-Lee.
+
+
+IV.
+
+"Glen-Masan, O Glen-Masan: tall its cresses of white stalks: often were
+we rocked to sleep in our curragh in the grassy harbour of Glen-Masan.
+
+
+V.
+
+"Glen-Orchy, O Glen-Orchy: over thy straight glen rises the smooth ridge
+that oft echoed to the voices of our hounds. No man of the clan was more
+light-hearted than my Naisi when following the chase in Glen-Orchy.
+
+
+VI.
+
+"Glen-Ettive, O Glen-Ettive: there it was that my first house was raised
+for me: lovely its woods in the smile of the early morn: the sun loves
+to shine on Glen-Ettive.
+
+
+VII.
+
+"Glen-da-Roy, O Glen-da-Roy: the memory of its people is dear to me:
+sweet is the cuckoo's note from the bending bough on the peak over
+Glen-da-Roy.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+"Dear to me is Dreenagh over the resounding shore: dear to me its
+crystal waters over the speckled sand. From those sweet places I would
+never depart, but only to be with my beloved Naisi."
+
+
+After this they entered the house of Barach; and when Barach had
+welcomed them, he said to Fergus: "Here I have a three-days banquet
+ready for thee, and I invite thee to come and partake of it."
+
+When Fergus heard this, his heart sank and his face waxed all over a
+crimson red: and he said fiercely to Barach:--"Thou hast done an evil
+thing to ask me to this banquet: for well thou knowest I cannot refuse
+thee. Thou knowest, too, that I am under solemn pledge to send the Sons
+of Usna this very hour to Emain: and if I remain feasting in thy house,
+how shall I see that my promise of safety is respected?"
+
+But none the less did Barach persist; for he was one of the partners in
+Concobar's treacherous design.
+
+Then Fergus turned to Naisi and said:--"I dare not violate my knighthood
+promise: what am I to do in this strait?" But Deirdre answered for her
+husband:--"The choice is before thee, Fergus; and it is more meet for
+thee to abandon thy feast than to abandon the sons of Usna, who have
+come over on thy pledge."
+
+Then Fergus was in sore perplexity; and pondering a little he said:--"I
+will not forsake the sons of Usna: for I will send with them to Emain
+Macha my two sons, Illan the Fair and Buinni the Red, who will be their
+pledge instead of me."
+
+But Naisi said: "We need not thy sons for guard or pledge: we have ever
+been accustomed to defend ourselves!" And he moved from the place in
+great wrath: and his two brothers, and Deirdre, and the two sons of
+Fergus followed him, with the rest of the clan; while Fergus remained
+behind silent and gloomy: for his heart misgave him that mischief was
+brewing for the sons of Usna.
+
+Then Deirdre tried to persuade the sons of Usna to go to Rathlin,
+between Erin and Alban, and tarry there till Barach's feast was ended:
+but they did not consent to do so, for they deemed it would be a mark of
+cowardice: and they sped on by the shortest ways towards Emain Macha.
+
+When now they had come to Fincarn of the Watch-tower on Slieve Fuad,
+Deirdre and her attendants stayed behind the others a little: and she
+fell asleep. And when Naisi missed her, he turned back and found her
+just awakening; and he said to her:--"Why didst thou tarry, my
+princess?"
+
+And she answered:--"I fell asleep and had a dream. And this is what I
+saw in my dream:--Illan the Fair took your part: Buinni the Red did not:
+and I saw Illan without his head: but Buinni had neither wound nor
+hurt."
+
+"Alas, O beauteous princess," said Naisi, "thou utterest nought but evil
+forebodings: but the king is true and will not break his plighted
+word."
+
+So they fared on till they had come to the Ridge of the
+Willows,[CLXXVI.] an hour's journey from the palace: and Deirdre,
+looking upwards in great fear, said to Naisi:--"O Naisi, see yonder
+cloud in the sky over Emain, a fearful chilling cloud of a blood-red
+tinge: a baleful red cloud that bodes disaster! Come ye now to Dundalgan
+and abide there with the mighty hero Cuculainn till Fergus returns from
+Barach's feast; for I fear Concobar's treachery."
+
+But Naisi answered:--"We cannot follow thy advice, beloved Deirdre, for
+it would be a mark of fear: and we have no fear."
+
+And as they came nigh the palace Deirdre said to them:--"I will now give
+you a sign if Concobar meditates good or evil. If you are brought into
+his own mansion where he sits surrounded by his nobles, to eat and drink
+with him, this is a token that he means no ill; for no man will injure a
+guest that has partaken of food at his table: but if you are sent to the
+house of the Red Branch, be sure he is bent on treachery."
+
+When at last they arrived at the palace, they knocked loudly with the
+handwood: and the door-keeper swang the great door wide open. And when
+he had spoken with them, he went and told Concobar that the sons of Usna
+and Fergus's two sons had come, with their people.
+
+And Concobar called to him his stewards and attendants and asked
+them:--"How is it in the house of the Red Branch as to food and drink?"
+And they replied that if the seven battalions of Ulaid were to come to
+it, they would find enough of all good things. "If that is so," said
+Concobar, "take the sons of Usna and their people to the Red Branch."
+
+Even then Deirdre besought them not to enter the Red Branch: for she
+deemed now that of a certainty there was mischief afoot. But Illan the
+Fair said:--"Never did we show cowardice or unmanliness, and we shall
+not do so now." Then she was silent and went with them into the house.
+
+And the company, when they had come in, sat them down so that they
+filled the great hall: and alluring viands and delicious drinks were set
+before them: and they ate and drank till they became satisfied and
+cheerful: all except Deirdre and the Sons of Usna, who did not partake
+much of food or drink. And Naisi asked for the king's chessboard and
+chessmen; which were brought: and he and Deirdre began to play.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXV.] This and the other places named in Deirdre's Farewell are all
+in the west of Scotland.
+
+[CLXXVI.] Irish name, _Drum-Sailech_; the ridge on which Armagh was
+afterwards built.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+TROUBLE LOOMING.
+
+
+Let us now speak of Concobar. As he sat among his nobles, the thought of
+Deirdre came into his mind, and he said:--"Who among you will go to the
+Red Branch and bring me tidings of Deirdre, whether her youthful shape
+and looks still live upon her: for if so there is not on the ridge of
+the world a woman more beautiful." And Lavarcam said she would go.
+
+Now the sons of Usna were very dear to Lavarcam: and Naisi was dearer
+than the others. And rising up she went to the Red Branch, where she
+found Naisi and Deirdre with the chessboard between them, playing. And
+she saluted them affectionately: and she embraced Deirdre, and wept over
+her, and kissed her many times with the eagerness of her love: and she
+kissed the cheeks of Naisi and of his brothers.
+
+And when her loving greeting was ended, she said:--"Beloved children,
+evil is the deed that is to be done this night in Emain: for the three
+torches of valour of the Gaels will be treacherously assailed, and
+Concobar is certainly resolved to put them to death. And now set your
+people on guard, and bolt and bar all doors, and close all windows; and
+be steadfast and valorous, and defend your dear charge manfully, if you
+may hold the assailants at bay till Fergus comes." And she departed
+weeping piteously.
+
+And when Lavarcam had returned to Concobar he asked what tidings she
+brought. "Good tidings have I," said she: "for the three sons of Usna
+have come, the three valiant champions of Ulaid: and now that they are
+with thee, O king, thou wilt hold sway in Erin without dispute. And bad
+tidings I bring also: Deirdre indeed is not as she was, for her youthful
+form and the splendour of her countenance have fled from her."
+
+And when Concobar heard this, his jealousy abated, and he joined in the
+feasting.
+
+But again the thought of Deirdre came to him, and he asked:--"Who now
+will go for me to the Red Branch, and bring me further tidings of
+Deirdre and of the sons of Usna?" for he distrusted Lavarcam. But the
+Knights of the Red Branch had misgivings of some evil design, and all
+remained silent.
+
+Then he called to him Trendorn, one of the lesser chiefs: and he
+said:--"Knowest thou, Trendorn, who slew thy father and thy three
+brothers in battle?" And Trendorn answered:--"Verily, it was Naisi, the
+son of Usna, that slew them." Then the king said:--"Go now to the Red
+Branch and bring me back tidings of Deirdre and of the sons of Usna."
+
+Trendorn went right willingly. But when he found the doors and windows
+of the Red Branch shut up, he was seized with fear, and he said:--"It is
+not safe to approach the sons of Usna, for they are surely in wrathful
+mood: nevertheless I must needs bring back tidings to the king."
+
+Whereupon, not daring to knock at the door, he climbed nimbly to a small
+window high up that had been unwittingly left open, through which he
+viewed the spacious banquet hall, and saw Naisi and Deirdre playing
+chess. Deirdre chanced to look up at that moment, and seeing the face of
+the spy with eyes intently gazing on her, she started with affright and
+grasped Naisi's arm, as he was making a move with the chessman. Naisi,
+following her gaze, and seeing the evil-looking face, flung the
+chessman with unerring aim, and broke the eye in Trendorn's head.
+
+Trendorn dropped down in pain and rage; and going straight to Concobar,
+he said:--"I have tidings for thee, O king: the three sons of Usna are
+sitting in the banquet hall, stately and proud like kings: and Deirdre
+is seated beside Naisi; and verily for beauty and queenly grace her peer
+cannot be found."
+
+When Concobar heard this, a flame of jealousy and fury blazed up in his
+heart, and he resolved that by no means should the sons of Usna escape
+the doom he planned for them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE ATTACK ON THE SONS OF USNA.
+
+
+Coming forth on the lawn of Emain, King Concobar now ordered a large
+body of hireling troops to beset the Red Branch: and he bade them force
+the doors and bring forth the sons of Usna. And they uttered three
+dreadful shouts of defiance, and assailed the house on every side; but
+the strong oak stood bravely, and they were not able to break through
+doors or walls. So they heaped up great piles of wood and brambles, and
+kindled them till the red flames blazed round the house.
+
+Buinni the Red now stood up and said to the sons of Usna:--"To me be
+entrusted the task to repel this first assault: for I am your pledge in
+place of my father." And marshalling his men, and causing the great door
+to be thrown wide open, he sallied forth and scattered the assailants,
+and put out the fires: slaying thrice fifty hirelings in that onslaught.
+
+But Buinni returned not to the Red Branch: for the king sent to him with
+a secret offer of great favours and bribes: namely, his own royal
+friendship, and a fruitful tract of land; which Buinni took and basely
+abandoned the sons of Usna. But none the better luck came to him of it:
+for at that same hour a blight fell on the land, so that it became a
+moor, waste and profitless, which is at this day called Slieve Fuad.
+
+When Illan the Fair became aware of his brother's treason, he was
+grieved to the heart, and he said:--"I am the second pledge in place of
+my father for the sons of Usna, and of a certainty I will not betray
+them: while this straight sword lives in my hand I will be faithful: and
+I will now repel this second attack." For at this time the king's
+hirelings were again thundering at the doors.
+
+Forth he issued with his band: and he made three quick furious circuits
+round the Red Branch, scattering the troops as he went: after which he
+returned to the mansion and found Naisi and Deirdre still
+playing.[CLXXVII.] But as the hireling hordes returned to the attack,
+he went forth a second time and fell on them, dealing death and havoc
+whithersoever he went.
+
+Then, while the fight was still raging, Concobar called to him his son
+Ficra, and said to him:--"Thou and Illan the Fair were born on the same
+night: and as he has his father's arms, so thou take mine, namely, my
+shield which is called the Ocean, and my two spears which are called
+Dart and Slaughter, and my great sword, the Blue-green blade. And bear
+thyself manfully against him, and vanquish him, else none of my troops
+will survive."
+
+Ficra did so and went against Illan the Fair; and they made a stout,
+warlike, red-wounding attack on each other, while the others looked on
+anxious: but none dared to interfere. And it came to pass that Illan
+prevailed, so that Ficra was fain to shelter himself behind his father's
+shield the Ocean, and he was like to be slain. Whereupon, the shield
+moaned, and the Three Waves of Erin uttered their hollow melancholy
+roar.[CLXXVIII.]
+
+The hero Conall Carnagh, sitting in his dun afar off, heard the moan of
+the shield and the roar of the Wave of Tuath: and springing up from
+where he sat, he said: "Verily, the king is in danger: I will go to his
+rescue."
+
+He ran with the swiftness of the wind, and arrived on the Green of
+Emain, where the two young heroes were fighting. Thinking it was
+Concobar that crouched beneath the shield, he attacked Illan, not
+knowing him, and wounded him even unto death. And Illan looking up said,
+"Is it thou, Conall? Alas, dreadful is the deed thou hast done, not
+knowing me, and not knowing that I am fighting in defence of the sons of
+Usna, who are now in deadly peril from the treachery of Concobar."
+
+And Conall, finding he had unwittingly wounded his dear young friend
+Illan, turned in his grief and rage on the other, and swept off his
+head. And he stalked fierce and silent out of the battlefield.
+
+Illan, still faithful to his charge, called aloud to Naisi to defend
+himself bravely: then putting forth his remaining strength, he flung his
+arms, namely, his sword and his spears and his shield, into the Red
+Branch; and falling prone on the green sward, the shades of death dimmed
+his eyes, and his life departed.
+
+And now when it was the dusk of evening, another great battalion of the
+hirelings assailed the Red Branch, and kindled fagots around it:
+whereupon Ardan sallied out with his valorous band and scattered them,
+and put out the fires, and held guard for the first third of the night.
+And during the second third Ainnli kept them at bay.
+
+Then Naisi took his turn, issuing forth, and fought with them till the
+morning's dawn: and until the sands of the seashore, or the leaves of
+the forest, or the dew-drops on the grass, or the stars of heaven are
+counted, it will not be possible to number the hirelings that were slain
+in that fight by Naisi and his band of heroes.
+
+And as he was returning breathless from the rout, all grimy and terrible
+with blood and sweat, he spied Lavarcam, as she stood watching the
+battle anxiously; and he said:--"Go, Lavarcam, go and stand on the outer
+rampart, and cast thine eyes eastwards, if perchance thou shouldst see
+Fergus and his men coming."
+
+For many of Naisi's brave followers had fallen in these encounters: and
+he doubted that he and the others could sustain much longer the
+continual assaults of superior numbers. And Lavarcam went, but returned
+downcast, saying she saw nought eastwards, but the open plain with the
+peaceful herds browsing over it.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXVII.] These champions, as well as their wives, took care never to
+show any signs of fear or alarm even in the time of greatest danger: so
+Naisi and Deirdre kept playing quietly as if nothing was going on
+outside, though they heard the din of battle resounding.
+
+[CLXXVIII.] The "Three _Tonns_ or Waves of Erin" were the Wave of Tuath
+outside the mouth of the river Bann, off the coast of Derry; the Wave of
+Rury in Dundrum Bay, off the county Down; and the Wave of Cleena in
+Glandore Harbour in the south of Cork. In stormy weather, when the wind
+blows from certain directions, the sea at those places, as it tumbles
+over the sandbanks, or among the caves and fissures of the rocks, utters
+a loud and solemn roar, which in old times was believed to forebode the
+death of some king.
+
+The legends also tell that the shield belonging to a king moaned when
+the person who wore it in battle--whether the king himself or a member
+of his family--was in danger of death: the moan was heard all over
+Ireland; and the "Three Waves of Erin" roared in response. See "Irish
+Names of Places," Vol. II., Chap. XVI.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DEATH OF THE SONS OF USNA.
+
+
+Believing now that they could no longer defend the Red Branch, Naisi
+took council with his brothers; and what they resolved on was this:--To
+sally forth with all their men and fight their way to a place of
+safety. Then making a close, firm fence of shields and spears round
+Deirdre, they marched out in solid ranks and attacked the hireling
+battalions and slew three hundred in that onslaught.
+
+Concobar, seeing the rout of his men, and being now sure that it was not
+possible to subdue the sons of Usna in open fight, cast about if he
+might take them by falsehood and craft. And sending for Caffa, the
+druid, who loved them, he said:--
+
+"These sons of Usna are brave men, and it is our pleasure to receive
+them back into our service. Go now unto them, for thou art their loved
+friend; and say to them that if they lay down their arms and submit to
+me, I will restore them to favour and give them their places among the
+Red Branch Knights. And I pledge thee my kingly word and my troth as a
+true knight, that no harm shall befall them."
+
+Caffa, by no means distrusting him, went to the sons of Usna, and told
+them all the king had said. And they, suspecting neither guile nor
+treachery, joyfully threw their swords and spears aside, and went
+towards the king to make submission. But now, while they stood
+defenceless, the king caused them to be seized and bound. Then, turning
+aside, he sought for some one to put them to death; but he found no man
+of the Ultonians willing to do so.
+
+Among his followers was a foreigner named Maini of the Rough Hand, whose
+father and two brothers had fallen in battle by Naisi: and this man
+undertook to kill the sons of Usna.
+
+When they were brought forth to their doom, Ardan said:--"I am the
+youngest: let me be slain first, that I may not see the death of my
+brothers." And Ainnli earnestly pleaded for the same thing for himself,
+saying that he was born before Ardan, and should die before him.
+
+But Naisi said:--"Lo, I have a sword, the gift of Mannanan mac Lir,
+which leaves no remnant unfinished after a blow: let us be struck with
+it, all three together, and we shall die at the same moment."
+
+This was agreed to: and the sword was brought forth, and they laid their
+heads close together, and Maini swept off all three with one blow of the
+mighty sword. And when it became known that the sons of Usna were dead,
+the men of Ulaid sent forth three great cries of grief and lamentation.
+
+As for Deirdre, she cried aloud, and tore her golden hair, and became
+like one distracted. And after a time, when her calmness had a little
+returned, she uttered a lament:--
+
+
+I.
+
+"Three lions of the hill are dead, and I am left alone to weep for them.
+The generous princes who made the stranger welcome have been guilefully
+lured to their doom.
+
+
+II.
+
+"The three strong hawks of Slieve Cullinn,[CLXXIX.] a king's three sons,
+strong and gentle: willing obedience was yielded to them by heroes who
+had conquered many lands.
+
+
+III.
+
+"Three generous heroes of the Red Branch, who loved to praise the valour
+of others: three props of the battalions of Quelna: their fall is the
+cause of bitter grief.
+
+
+IV.
+
+"Ainnli and Ardan, haughty and fierce in battle, to me were ever loving
+and gentle: Naisi, Naisi, beloved spouse of my choice, thou canst not
+hear thy Deirdre lamenting thee.
+
+
+V.
+
+"When they brought down the fleet red deer in the chase, when they
+speared the salmon skilfully in the clear water, joyful and proud were
+they if I looked on.
+
+
+VI.
+
+"Often when my feeble feet grew weary wandering along the valleys, and
+climbing the hills to view the chase, often would they bear me home
+lightly on their linked shields and spears.
+
+
+VII.
+
+"It was gladness of heart to be with the sons of Usna: long and weary is
+the day without their company: short will be my span of life since they
+have left me.
+
+
+VIII.
+
+"Sorrow and tears have dimmed my eyes, looking at the grave of Naisi: a
+dark deadly sickness has seized my heart: I cannot, I cannot live after
+Naisi.
+
+
+IX.
+
+"O thou who diggest the new grave, make it deep and wide: let it be a
+grave for four; for I will sleep for ever beside my beloved."
+
+
+When she had spoken these words, she fell beside the body of Naisi and
+died immediately. And a great cairn of stones was piled over their
+grave, and their names were inscribed in Ogham, and their funeral rites
+were performed.
+
+This is the sorrowful tale of The Fate of the Sons of Usna.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXIX.] Slieve Cullinn, now Slieve Gullion mountain in Armagh.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES.
+
+
+NOTE 1.--_The Dedannans._
+
+According to the old bardic legends, the first man who led a colony to
+Ireland after the Flood was Parthalon. Next came Nemed and his people;
+and after these the Firbolgs, who were conquered and succeeded by the
+Dedannans.
+
+The legend relates that the Dedannans, in the course of their
+wanderings, spent some time in Greece, where they learned magic and
+other curious arts. From this they migrated to Lochlann, in the north of
+Europe (see note 6), from which they came through Scotland to their
+final resting-place, Ireland.
+
+From the three queens of their three last kings, Ireland got the three
+names, Erin, F[=o]la, and Banba.
+
+After the Dedannans had held sway in Ireland for about two hundred
+years, they were in their turn conquered by the last and greatest colony
+of all, the people of Miled or Milesius, who are commonly known by the
+name of Milesians, and who are the ancestors of the leading Gaelic
+families of Ireland. The Milesians defeated the Dedannans in two great
+battles: one fought at _Tailltenn_, now Teltown, on the river
+Blackwater, between Navan and Kells, in Meath; and the other at
+_Druim-Lighean_, now Drumleene, about three miles from Lifford, in
+Donegal.
+
+In the legendary and romantic literature of Ireland, the Dedannans are
+celebrated as magicians. By the Milesians and their descendants they
+were regarded as gods, and ultimately, in the imagination of the people,
+they became what are now in Ireland called "fairies."
+
+After their defeat by the Milesians, they seem to have retired to remote
+and lonely places; and their reputation as magicians, as well as the
+obscure and mysterious manner in which they lived, gradually impressed
+the vulgar with the belief that they were supernatural beings.
+
+The notion was that they lived in splendid palaces in the interior of
+pleasant green hills. These hills were called _sidh_ (pronounced
+_shee_); and hence the Dedannans were called _Daoine-sidhe_
+(_Deena-shee_), or people of the fairy hills; _Marcra-sidhe_
+(_Markra-shee_), fairy cavalcade; and _Sluagh-sidhe_ (_Sloo-shee_),
+fairy host.
+
+Of this mysterious race, the following are the principal characters
+mentioned in these tales.
+
+Mannanan Mac Lir, the Gaelic sea-god. In "Cormac's Glossary" (written
+A.D. 900), we are told that he was a famous merchant who resided in, and
+gave name to, _Inis-Manann_, or the Isle of Man; that he was the best
+merchant in Western Europe; and that he used to know, by examining the
+heavens, the length of time the fair and the foul weather would last.
+
+The Dagda, whose name some interpret to mean "the great good fire," so
+called from his military ardour, who reigned as king of Ireland from
+A.M. 3370 to 3450.
+
+Angus or Angus Oge, the son of the Dagda, who lived at _Brugh_ or Bruga,
+on the north shore of the Boyne, a little below the village of Slane.
+Angus is spoken of as the wisest and the most skilled in magic of all
+the Dedannan race.
+
+Nuada of the Silver Hand. (See note 4.)
+
+Lir of Shee Finnaha, the father of the four "Children of Lir," and Bove
+Derg of Shee Bove, of whom we know little more than what is told of them
+in the "Fate of the Children of Lir." Shee Finnaha is supposed to have
+been situated near Newtown Hamilton, in Armagh; and Shee Bove was on the
+shore of Lough Derg, on the Shannon.
+
+Luga of the Long Arms, who imposed the eric-fine on the three sons of
+Turenn for slaying his father Kian. (See note 7 for a further account of
+this Luga.)
+
+Dianket, the great physician, of whose powers of cure extraordinary
+stories are told. He had a son Midac, and a daughter Armedda, more
+skilful than himself. The old legend relates that Midac took off the
+silver arm which his father Dianket had put on Nuada (see note 4), and,
+having procured the bones of the real arm, he clothed them with flesh
+and skin, and fixed the arm in its place as well as ever "in three
+moments." Dianket was so enraged at being outdone by his son that he
+slew him. After Midac had been buried for some time, three hundred and
+sixty-five healing herbs grew up from his grave, one from every joint
+and sinew of his body--each herb to cure disease in that part of the
+human body from which it grew--all which were gathered by his sister
+Armedda, and placed carefully in her cloak in their proper order. But
+before she had time to study their several virtues fully, her father
+Dianket mixed them all up in utter confusion. (O'Curry, _Atlantis_, vii.
+and viii. 158.) Were it not for this churlish proceeding, Armedda would
+have found out, and we should now know, the exact herb to cure each
+particular disease of the human frame.
+
+
+NOTE 2.--_The Feast of Age._
+
+This was also called the Feast of Gobnenn the Dedannan smith. It was
+instituted by Mannanan Mac Lir, and whoever was present at it, and
+partook of the food and drink, was free ever after from sickness, decay,
+and old age.
+
+
+NOTE 3.--_The Druids._
+
+The ancient Irish druids do not appear to have been _priests_ in any
+sense of the word. They were, in popular estimation, men of knowledge
+and power--"Men of science," as they were often designated; they knew
+the arts of healing and divination; and they were skilled above all in
+magic. In fact, the Irish druids were magicians, neither more nor less;
+and hence the Gaelic word for "druidical" is almost always applied where
+we should use the term "magical"--to spells, incantations,
+metamorphoses, etc. (See O'Curry, "Lectures on the Manners and Customs
+of the Ancient Irish," Lecture ix.)
+
+
+NOTE 4.--_Nuada of the Silver Hand._
+
+Nuada of the Silver Hand was king of Ireland, according to the
+chronology of the Four Masters, from A.M. 3311 to 3330. He commanded the
+Dedannans in the first battle of Moytura (see note 11), where his arm
+was cut off with a sword-blow by Sreng, the great Firbolg champion.
+Afterwards Credne the artificer made him a silver arm with a hand, which
+was fixed on by Dianket, the physician (see note 1). Nuada was slain in
+the second battle of Moytura, by Balor of the Mighty Blows (see note
+11).
+
+
+NOTE 5.--_The Fomorians._
+
+"Fomor," the simple form of this word, means, according to the old
+etymologists, a sea-robber, from _fo_, on or along, and _muir_, the sea.
+The word is also used to denote a giant, or a gigantic champion.
+
+The Fomorians of Irish history were sea-robbers, who infested the
+coasts, and indeed the interior, of Ireland, for a long series of years,
+and at one time fortified themselves in Tory Island. They are stated to
+have come to Ireland from Lochlann, in the north of Europe (for which
+see next note); but they were originally from Africa, being, according
+to the legend, the descendants of Ham the son of Noah.
+
+
+NOTE 6.--_Lochlann: The Lochlanns._
+
+Lochlann was the Gaelic designation of the country from which came the
+people who are known in European history as Danes, _i.e._ the country
+round the southern shores of the Baltic, including the south part of
+Sweden. The Lochlanns, or Lochlannachs, or Danes, it need hardly be
+said, make a very conspicuous figure in our early history, and in our
+mediaeval romantic literature.
+
+In the Gaelic tales, the chief city of Lochlann is always Berva; but
+whether this represents a real name, or is merely an invention of the
+old story-tellers, I cannot tell.
+
+
+NOTE 7.--_Luga of the Long Arms: The Ildana._
+
+Luga of the Long Arms was the son of Ethlenn, daughter of the Fomorian
+king, Balor of the Mighty Blows (see note 9). His father, Kian (who was
+slain by the three sons of Turenn), was a Dedannan; so that Luga was
+half Fomorian and half Dedannan. But he always took the side of the
+Dedannans against the Fomorians.
+
+Luga is often called The Ildana, the Man of many sciences, to signify
+his accomplishments as a warrior and a man of general knowledge.
+
+It had been foretold that Balor would be slain by his own grandson.
+Accordingly, when Luga was born, Balor sent him off to be drowned. But
+Luga escaped, and lived to revenge the unnatural conduct of his
+grandfather, whom he slew in the second battle of Moytura (see note 11),
+after Balor had slain the Dedannan king, Nuada of the Silver Hand. Luga
+succeeded Nuada as king of Ireland, and reigned, according to the
+chronology of the Four Masters, from A.M. 3330 to 3370.
+
+It was by Luga that the celebrated yearly assembly of Tailltenn was
+instituted, in honour of his foster mother _Taillte_, after whom the
+place was called. (See note page 93, _supra._)
+
+
+NOTE 8.--_The Land of Promise: Fairyland._
+
+In ancient Gaelic romantic tales, mention is often made of _Tir
+Tairrngire_, the Land of Promise, Fairyland, as being one of the chief
+dwelling-places of the Dedannans or fairy host. In many passages this
+Land of Promise is identified with _Inis-Manann_, or the Isle of Man,
+which was ruled over by Mannanan Mac Lir, the sea-god, and named from
+him.
+
+
+NOTE 9.--_Balor of the Mighty Blows._
+
+Balor was king of the Fomorians from Lochlann in the north; his wife was
+Kethlenda; and his son, Bres. Balor is often called Balor of the Mighty
+Blows; and also Balor of the Evil Eye, for he had one eye which would
+strike people dead or turn them into stone, so that he kept it covered,
+except when he wished to use it against his enemies. Balor is remembered
+very vividly in tradition by the peasantry of Ireland, especially in
+Donegal and in Tory Island, where a very high, tower-like rock is called
+to this day Balor's Castle.
+
+
+NOTE 10.--_Eric._
+
+The eric was a fine paid as compensation for murder or homicide. The
+friends of the murdered person might accept an eric, or they might
+refuse it and seek instead the death of the murderer. An eric was often
+paid for other crimes or injuries against the individual, as well as for
+homicide.
+
+
+NOTE 11.--_Battle of Moytura._
+
+There were two great battles, each called the battle of Moytura.
+
+_First Battle of Moytura._ When the Dedannans came to invade Erin, they
+found the country occupied by the Firbolgs, who were by no means
+inclined to give up quiet possession to the newcomers. After some
+parleying and manoeuvring, a great battle was fought between them,
+A.M. 3303, at Moytura, near Cong, in Mayo, lasting for four days, in
+which the Firbolgs were defeated with great slaughter, and their king
+slain; after which the Dedannans took possession of the country, leaving
+Connaught, however, to a powerful remnant of the Firbolgs who survived
+the battle. This is called the First Battle of Moytura, or the Battle of
+the Southern Moytura. On the plain where it was fought, there are still
+great numbers of mounds, cromlechs, and other sepulchral monuments. (See
+Sir William Wilde's "Lough Corrib," page 210.)
+
+_Second Battle of Moytura._ King Nuada, who led the Dedannans in the
+first battle of Moytura, had his arm cut off by Sreng, one of the
+Firbolg champions. He was under cure for seven years; during which time
+Bres, the son of Elatha, who was a Fomorian by his father and a Dedannan
+by his mother, ruled Ireland as regent. But at the end of the seven
+years, Bres had to retire in favour of Nuada. Whereupon he repaired in
+anger to his father in Lochlann; and at his instigation an army of
+Fomorians was raised, after some years, for the invasion of Ireland, and
+placed under the command of Balor of the Mighty Blows.
+
+Luga of the Long Arms seems to have foreseen this invasion. He knew that
+Bres would have to abdicate whenever Nuada's arm came to be healed, and
+he conjectured truly that he would not resign the sovereignty without a
+struggle. But the old tales would lead to the inference that Luga had
+some preternatural foreknowledge of the battle. Anyhow, the legend says
+that for many years he made preparations for the coming struggle; and it
+was with this intention that he imposed the celebrated eric-fine on the
+sons of Turenn.
+
+The Fomorians landed, and were met by the Dedannan army at the Northern
+Moytura, or, as it is often called, Moytura of the Fomorians, situated
+in the parish of Kilmactranny, barony of Tirerrill, county Sligo. The
+battle was fought on the eve of Samin, _i.e._ on the last day of
+October, A.M. 3330; and the Fomorians were defeated with the slaughter
+of their principal men and the best part of their army. In the course of
+the battle, Nuada of the Silver Hand, the Dedannan king, was slain by
+Balor; but soon after, Balor himself was killed by his grandson, Luga.
+Luga, we are told, flung a stone at him from a crann-tavall or sling
+(see note, page 240), and struck him in the evil eye with so much force
+that the stone went clean through his head and out at the back.
+
+The site of this battle, like that of the Southern Moytura, abounds to
+this day in sepulchral monuments.
+
+These two battles of Moytura form the subjects of two historic tales,
+which are still in existence, though they have never been published.
+
+
+NOTE 12.--_Gesa._
+
+"Gesa" (pronounced _gessa_, the _g_ hard, as in _get_) is plural:
+singular _geis_, plural _geasa_ or _gesa_. Gesa means solemn vows,
+conjurations, injunctions, prohibitions. "I put you under gesa" means, I
+adjure you solemnly, so solemnly that you dare not disobey. It would
+appear that individuals were often under gesa or solemn vows to observe,
+or to refrain from, certain lines of conduct--the vows being either
+taken on themselves voluntarily, or imposed on them, with their consent,
+by others. Thus Dermat O'Dyna was under gesa never to pass through a
+wicket gate when entering or leaving a palace (page 282); Finn was under
+gesa not to sleep at Allen more than nine nights in succession (page
+337); Dermat put Oisin under gesa not to loose any one whom he bound
+(page 312). It would appear, also, that if one person went through the
+form of putting another under gesa to grant any reasonable request, the
+abjured person could not refuse without loss of honour and reputation.
+Thus Midac places Finn under gesa to come to the banquet in the Fairy
+Palace of the Quicken Trees (page 189); and the witch-lady places gesa
+on Finn to search for the ring in the lake (page 354). And sometimes, on
+very solemn or urgent occasions, the gesa seem to have been imposed with
+spells, so as to draw down ill luck as well as loss of honour on the
+person who disregarded the injunction (page 281).
+
+Geis or gesa also means a charm or spell.
+
+
+NOTE 13.--_Tir-fa-tonn._
+
+The Gaelic tales abound in allusions to a beautiful country situated
+under the sea--an enchanted land sunk at some remote time, and still
+held under spell. In some romantic writings it is called _Tir-fa-tonn_,
+the land beneath the wave; and occasionally one or more of the heroes
+find their way to it, and meet with many strange adventures (page 253).
+Sometimes it is _O'Brasil_, that dim land which appears over the water
+once every seven years--"on the verge of the azure sea"--and which would
+be freed from the spell, and would remain permanently over water, if any
+one could succeed in throwing fire on it. (See Gerald Griffin's
+beautiful ballad, "O'Brasil, the Isle of the Blest.") The Island of
+Fincara (page 87), and the beautiful country seen beneath the waves by
+Maildun (page 147), are remnants of the same superstition.
+
+This very old Celtic tradition is obviously the same as the legend of
+the continent of Atlantis, mentioned by Plato, which at some remote time
+was overwhelmed and sunk under the Atlantic Ocean. And it would seem
+that they have the same shadowy tradition in the East; for in "Lalla
+Rookh" Moore makes the Peri say, in her soliloquy:
+
+ "I know where the Isles of Perfume are,
+ Many a fathom down in the sea,
+ To the south of sun-bright Araby."
+
+
+NOTE 14.--_The Enchanted Well._
+
+Res autem sic revera evenit. Cum Angus magus equum giganteum Eochaidio
+et popularibus traderet, monebat homines nec stabulandi neque omnino
+requiescendi copiam equo faciendam; ne forte quiescendo urinam
+demitteret, quod si fieret exitio omnibus fore. Postea vero quam at
+Planitiem Silvulae Cinereae pervenissent, intenti adeo sarcinis ingentis
+equi dorso detrahendis incumbebant, ut monitorum Angi obliviscerentur;
+restitit autem equus, et subinde urinam demisit. Extemplo hinc fons
+ortus; qui cum scaturiisset, submersit omnes, sicuti in historia
+narratur.
+
+
+NOTE 15.--_Conal Carna of the Red Branch._
+
+The Red Branch Knights of Ulster, a sort of militia in the service of
+the monarch, much like the Fena of later date (see note 23), flourished
+in the first century of the Christian era. Their home was the palace of
+Emania, near the city of Armagh; and they received their name from one
+of the houses of the palace in which they resided, which was called
+_Craebh-ruadh_, or Red Branch. They attained their greatest glory in the
+reign of Conor Mac Nessa, king of Ulster in the first century; and Conal
+Carna, mentioned in the story of "Liban the Mermaid," was one of their
+most illustrious champions.
+
+
+NOTE 16.--_Ecca the Son of Marid: Comgall of Bangor._
+
+This Marid was king of Munster about the beginning of the second century
+of the Christian era. St. Comgall, one of the greatest saints of the
+early Irish Church, flourished in the sixth century, and was the founder
+of the celebrated monastery of Bangor in the county of Down.
+
+
+NOTE 17.--_Curragh._
+
+It would appear that in Ireland, and indeed in England and Scotland as
+well, navigation was carried on in ancient times chiefly by means of
+curraghs. The curragh was a boat or canoe, consisting of a light
+framework of wood, covered over with the skins of animals. Curraghs are
+still used on many parts of the western coast of Ireland; but they are
+now covered with tarred canvas instead of skins.
+
+
+NOTE 18.--_Conn the Hundred-fighter._
+
+Conn Ced-cathach or Conn the Fighter of a Hundred (not Conn of the
+Hundred Battles, as the name is generally translated), was king of
+Ireland from A.D. 123 to 158.
+
+
+NOTE 19.--_Land of the Living: Land of Life, etc._
+
+The ancient Irish had a sort of dim, vague belief that there was a land
+where people were always youthful, and free from care and trouble,
+suffered no disease, and lived for ever. This country they called by
+various names:--_Tir-na-mbeo_, the land of the [ever-]living;
+_Tir-na-nog_, the land of the [ever-]youthful; _Moy-Mell_, the plain of
+pleasure, etc. It had its own inhabitants--fairies; but mortals were
+sometimes brought there; and while they lived in it, were gifted with
+the everlasting youth and beauty of the fairy people themselves, and
+partook of their pleasures. As to the exact place where Tirnanoge was
+situated, the references are shadowy and variable, but they often place
+it far out in the Atlantic Ocean, as far as the eye can reach from the
+high cliffs of the western coast. And here it is identical with
+O'Brasil, of which mention has been made in note 13.
+
+I have already remarked (see note 1) that the fairies were also supposed
+to live in palaces in the interior of pleasant green hills, and that
+they were hence called Aes-shee or Deena-shee, i.e. people of the _shee_
+or fairy hills; and hence also the word "banshee" _i.e._ a woman
+(_bean_) of the fairy hills. Tirnanoge was often regarded as identical
+with these bright, subterranean palaces. In my boyhood days, the
+peasantry believed that the great limestone cavern near Mitchelstown, in
+the county Cork, was one of the entrances to Tirnanoge.
+
+
+NOTE 20.--_St. Brendan of Birra._
+
+I have already, in the preface (page xiii.), spoken of the celebrated
+voyage of St. Brendan of Birra (Birr, in King's County), undertaken in
+the sixth century. He set out from near Brandon Mountain, in Kerry,
+sailing westwards into the Atlantic Ocean, and, according to the belief
+of some, landed on the shore of America. He had many imitators, who
+ventured out on the great ocean in their curraghs as pilgrims; but none
+were so enterprising as himself, or met with such a variety of strange
+lands, if we except Maildun and the three sons of O'Corra, whose
+adventures are quite as surprising as those of Brendan.
+
+
+NOTE 21.--_Brendan's Satchel._
+
+The ancient Irish saints, when on their missionary journeys through the
+country, kept their precious books, as well as the portable sacred
+utensils, in leather satchels, which they brought with them from place
+to place. These satchels were often highly ornamented, and, like other
+relics, were held in extraordinary veneration after the death of the
+owners. The Gaelic term for this kind of satchel is _polaire_. (See
+Petrie, "Round Towers," page 336.)
+
+
+NOTE 22.--_Cormac Mac Art._
+
+Cormac Mac Art, the most illustrious of the Irish kings, who began his
+reign A.D. 254, was the son of Art the Lonely, who was son of Conn the
+Hundred-fighter. During his reign flourished the Fena or militia, spoken
+of in the next note; and the old chroniclers never tire of dwelling on
+the magnificence of his court at Tara, and the prosperity of the country
+during his reign. He was renowned for learning and wisdom, and he wrote
+a book called _Tegusc-righ_, or instruction for kings, copies of which
+are extant in the Books of Leinster and Ballymote. He also caused the
+records of the kingdom to be collected and written down in one great
+book called the Psalter of Tara, but no portion of this book is now
+known to exist; and he established three schools at Tara--one for
+military science, one for law, and one for history and chronology. He
+spent the last years of his life in retirement and study at Cletty on
+the Boyne, and died A.D. 277, forty years after he had ascended the
+throne.
+
+
+NOTE 23.--_Finn and the Fena._
+
+The Fena or "Fena of Erin" were a sort of militia or standing army,
+permanently maintained by the monarch for the support of the throne, and
+regularly trained to military service. They attained their greatest
+glory in the reign of Cormac Mac Art (see previous note). Each province
+had its own militia under its own captain, but all were under the
+command of one general-in-chief. Their most renowned commander was Finn
+the son of Cumal, who of all the heroes of ancient Ireland is most
+vividly remembered in popular tradition. Finn had his palace on the top
+of the Hill of Allen, a remarkable flat-topped hill, lying about four
+miles to the right of the railway as you pass Newbridge and approach
+Kildare, rendered more conspicuous of late years by a tall pillar
+erected on the top, on the very site of Finn's palace. Before the
+erection of the pillar, there were considerable remains of the old fort
+on the hill, but at present nearly every vestige is obliterated, cleared
+away partly to make room for the foundation of the pillar, and partly by
+cultivation; for the land has been tilled and cropped to the very
+summit. The whole neighbourhood, however, teems with living traditions
+of Finn and the Fena.
+
+The Fena were divided into distinct tribes or clanns, belonging to the
+several provinces, each under its own commander. Of these, the Clann
+Baskin of Leinster, under the immediate command of Finn; and the Clann
+Morna of Connaught, commanded by Gaul Mac Morna, were rival tribes, and,
+for reasons stated in note 27, regarded each other with hatred and
+distrust.
+
+The following are some of the principal characters celebrated in the
+romantic literature of the Fena.
+
+Finn the son of Cumal, commander-in-chief of the Fena under king Cormac
+Mac Art (see note 22); brave, wise, and far-seeing, a man of supreme
+military ability. His foresight seemed so extraordinary, that the people
+believed it was a preternatural gift of divination, and the shanachies
+invented a legend to account for it (see note 25). Like many great
+commanders, he had a little of the tyrant in his character, and was
+unforgiving to those who injured him. But in the story of Dermat and
+Grania, he is drawn in too unfavourable a light. In his old age he was
+killed by a fisherman at a place called Athbrea on the Boyne, A.D. 284,
+as recorded in the Annals of Tighernach, of the Four Masters, and of
+Innisfallen.
+
+Oisin or Ossian, Finn's son, the renowned hero-poet, to whom the bards
+attribute many poems still extant.
+
+Oscar, the son of Oisin, youthful and handsome, kind-hearted, and one of
+the most valiant of the Fena.
+
+Dermat O'Dyna, noble-minded, generous, of untarnished honour, and the
+bravest of the brave. He was as handsome as he was valiant, whence he is
+often styled Dermat of the Bright Face, Dermat of the White Teeth, etc.
+He was the idol of the ladies of Ireland, and hence he is often called
+Dermat-na-man, or Dermat of the Women (page 210). The Munster
+traditions represent him as a native of Kerry; but he was in reality a
+Leinsterman, though his descendants migrated to Munster at a very early
+period. Mr. O'Grady, in his edition of the story of Dermat and Grania
+(page 294), has given an ancient poetical genealogy of Dermat. This hero
+is equally celebrated in popular story in the Highlands of Scotland.
+According to Highland tradition, the great and illustrious Clann
+Campbell, represented by the Duke of Argyll, descend from him; and their
+crest is a boar's head, in memory of the manner of Dermat's
+death.[CLXXX.] Dermat O'Dyna is, on the whole, the finest type of hero
+among the Fena--as fine indeed as can be found in any literature; and
+his noble character is very well maintained throughout the Ossianic
+tales.
+
+Kylta Mac Ronan, Finn's nephew, renowned for his fleetness of foot.
+
+Dering, the son of Dobar O'Baskin, who was not only a brave warrior, but
+also "a man of knowledge," gifted with some insight into futurity.
+
+Ligan Lumina, also celebrated for swiftness of foot.
+
+Fergus Finnvel, poet, warrior, and frequent adviser of the Fena.
+
+Gaul Mac Morna, the leader of the Clann Morna or Connaught Fena, one of
+the mightiest of all the heroes. He served under Finn, but the two
+chiefs bore no love to each other, for Gaul had slain Finn's father,
+Cumal, in the battle of Knocka (see note 27).
+
+Conan Mail or Conan the Bald, the best-marked and best-sustained
+character in the Ossianic romances; large-bodied, a great boaster, a
+great coward, and a great glutton. He had a venomous tongue, and hardly
+ever spoke a good word of any one. He belonged to the Clann Morna, and
+was always reviling the Clann Baskin. He was the butt for the gibes and
+mockery of the Fena, but they dreaded his foul tongue. The story-tellers
+never lose an opportunity of having a fling at Conan, and of turning him
+into ridicule for his cowardice, his big talk, and his gluttony.
+
+
+NOTE 24.--_Cooking-Places._
+
+The Fena, as related in the beginning of the story of the Gilla Dacker,
+were quartered on the principal householders during the winter
+half-year; and maintained themselves chiefly by the chase during the
+summer months. When they were on their hunting expeditions, we are told
+that they ate only one meal a day; and for this meal they cooked the
+flesh of the animals brought down in the chase, in the following manner.
+They first dug a deep pit in the earth near their camping-place, and,
+having lighted a great fire beside it, they heated a number of round
+stones. They next covered the bottom of the pit with the hot stones, on
+which they placed the meat, bound up with sedge and grass ropes, and on
+this again they put another layer of heated stones; and, having closely
+covered up the whole with branches, they let it stand till the meat was
+sufficiently cooked. The remains of these old earth-ovens are still to
+be seen, and are called by the peasantry _fulachta-na-bhfiann_, the
+cooking-places of the Fena.
+
+
+NOTE 25.--_Finn's Tooth of Knowledge._
+
+It had been prophesied of old that a man named Finn would be the first
+to eat of the salmon of knowledge, which swam in the pool of Linn-Fec,
+in the Boyne (near the present village of Slane); and that he would
+thereby obtain the gifts of knowledge and of divination. A certain old
+poet named Finn, knowing this, hoped that he might be the lucky man; so
+he took up his abode on the shore of Linn-Fec; and he fished in the pool
+every day from morn till night, in the hope of catching the salmon of
+knowledge. At this time, Finn the son of Cumal was a boy, fleeing from
+place to place from his hereditary enemies, the Clann Morna, disguised,
+and bearing the assumed name of Demna; and, happening to come to
+Linn-Fec, the old poet took him as his servant.
+
+After long watching and waiting, Finn the poet hooked the salmon at
+last, and gave it to Demna to broil, warning him very strictly not to
+eat or even taste of it. Demna proceeded to broil the fish; and soon the
+heat of the fire raised a great blister from its side, which the boy
+pressed with his thumb to keep it down, thereby scalding himself so
+severely that he unthinkingly thrust his thumb into his mouth.
+
+When the salmon was cooked, the poet asked Demna had he eaten of it.
+"No," replied the boy; "but I scalded my thumb on the fish, and put it
+into my mouth." "Thy name is not Demna, but Finn," exclaimed the poet:
+"in thee has the prophecy been fulfilled; and thou art now a diviner and
+a man of knowledge!"
+
+In this manner Finn obtained the gift of divination, so that ever after,
+when he wished to look into futurity, he put his thumb under his tooth
+of knowledge, as he did when cooking the salmon of Linn-Fec, and the
+whole future was revealed to him. There appears to have been some sort
+of ceremony used, however (see page 339, _supra_); and it would seem
+that the process was attended with pain (page 194), so that it was only
+on very solemn and trying occasions he put his thumb under his tooth of
+knowledge.[CLXXXI.]
+
+
+NOTE 26.--_The Game of Chess._
+
+Chess-playing was one of the favourite amusements of the ancient Irish
+chiefs. The game is constantly mentioned in the very oldest Gaelic
+tales; as, for instance, in the "Cattle-Spoil of Cooley," in "The Book
+of the Dun Cow" (A.D. 1100). (See O'Donovan's "Introduction to the Book
+of Rights," page lxi.)
+
+
+NOTE 27.--_Battle of Knocka._
+
+The battle of Knocka or _Cnucha_ (now Castleknock, near Dublin) was
+fought in the reign of Conn the Hundred-fighter (see note 18). The
+contending parties were, on the one side, Conn with his royal forces,
+and the renowned hero, Gaul Mac Morna, with his Connaught Fena, the
+Clann Morna; and on the other side, Cumal, the father of Finn, with the
+Clann Baskin and the Leinster forces in general, aided by Owen More,
+heir to the throne of Munster, with a large army of Munstermen. The
+Leinster and Munster armies were defeated, chiefly through the valour of
+Gaul, who slew Cumal with his own hand. This was the cause of the
+irreconcilable enmity that existed ever after between the Clann Baskin
+and the Clann Morna.
+
+When Finn the son of Cumal grew up to man's estate, he succeeded to the
+position held by his father as leader of the Fena. But though he made
+peace with Gaul Mac Morna, and though Gaul submitted to his command,
+there was always a feeling of ill-concealed hatred and distrust between
+them.
+
+
+NOTE 28.--_Battle of Gavra._
+
+When Carbri of the Liffey, son of Cormac Mac Art, ascended the throne of
+Ireland, one of his first acts was to disband and outlaw the Clann
+Baskin; and he took into his service in their place their rivals and
+deadly enemies, the Clann Morna from Connaught. Whereupon the Clann
+Baskin marched southwards, and entered the service of Fercorb, king of
+Munster, Finn's grandson, in direct disobedience to king Carbri's
+commands. This led to the bloody battle of Gavra, celebrated in Ossianic
+literature, which was fought A.D. 284, at Garristown, in the north-west
+of the county Dublin, where the rival clanns slaughtered each other
+almost to annihilation. In the heat of the battle, Carbri and Oscar met
+in single combat; and, after a long and terrible fight, the heroic Oscar
+fell pierced by Carbri's spear, and died on the evening of the same day.
+But Carbri himself was dreadfully wounded; and, while retiring from the
+field, his own kinsman, Semeon, whom he had previously banished from
+Tara, fell on him, and despatched him with a single blow.
+
+This battle is the subject of a poem which the bards ascribe to Oisin,
+and which has been published, with translation, in the first volume of
+the Ossianic Transactions. In this poem there is an affecting
+description of the death of Oscar, surrounded by his few surviving
+companions, and in presence of his father Oisin.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[CLXXX.] For a full account of the Highland traditions regarding Dermat,
+and of the Highland monuments that commemorate his name, see "Loch Etive
+and the Sons of Uisnach" (p. 255), a very valuable and interesting book,
+recently published, which came into my hands after I had written the
+above.
+
+[CLXXXI.] The above legend is taken from "The Boyish Exploits of Finn
+Mac Cumal," published, with translation, by John O'Donovan, LL.D., in
+the fourth volume of the Ossianic Society's Transactions, from a MS.
+_transcribed_ in 1453, now lying in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. But
+the internal evidence of the language shows that the piece is far more
+ancient than the fifteenth century. The legend of Finn and the Salmon of
+Knowledge is still current among the peasantry; and a modern popular
+version of it may be seen in the _Dublin Penny Journal_, Vol. I. page
+110.
+
+As to the process of putting his thumb under his tooth of knowledge,
+even the English-speaking peasantry of the south still retain a
+tradition that it was painful; for they say that Finn "chewed his thumb
+from the skin to the flesh, from the flesh to the bone, from the bone to
+the marrow, and from the marrow to the _smoosagh_."
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF PROPER NAMES.
+
+ALPHABETICAL LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL PROPER NAMES OCCURRING IN THIS
+VOLUME, WITH THEIR ORIGINAL GAELIC FORMS, AND, IN MANY CASES, THEIR
+MEANINGS.
+
+
+Every writer who attempts to popularise the Gaelic literature of Ireland
+and Scotland, finds the proper names a serious difficulty. If they are
+given in their original Gaelic forms, they are not unfrequently
+unpronounceable and repulsive to the English reader; if they are written
+phonetically, they are often strange and barbarous looking. In this
+book, I have not followed any general principle in reducing the names to
+forms suitable to readers of English. I have dealt with each, as it
+were, on its own merits. Sometimes--very often, indeed--I have given the
+original spelling; sometimes I have given the names phonetically; and
+frequently I have mixed the two modes. But all through I have avoided
+any great departure from the original forms, as will be seen by a glance
+at the following list.
+
+In all cases the names occurring through the book may be pronounced just
+as the letters would indicate to the English reader.
+
+
+
+
+ Aed, _Aedh_, a flame of fire.
+
+ Ahaclee, _Ath-cliath_, hurdle-ford.
+
+ Ailna, _Ailne_, beauty, joy.
+
+ Aina, _Aine_.
+
+ Allil, _Ailioll_, _Ailell_, or _Oilioll_.
+
+ Allil Ocar Aga, _Ailell Ochair Aga_.
+
+ Alva, _Ailbhe_.
+
+
+ Balor, _Balar_.
+
+ Baskin, _Baoiscne_.
+
+ Begallta, _Beagalltach_, little fury.
+
+ Ben-Damis, _Beann-Damhuis_.
+
+ Beoc, _Beoc_, _Dabheoc_, and _Beoan_.
+
+ Berva, _Berbhe_.
+
+ Borba, _Borb_, proud.
+
+ Bran, _Bran_, a raven.
+
+ Bres, _Breas_.
+
+ Brian, _Brian_.
+
+ Brickna, _Briccne_.
+
+ Bruga of the _Brugh-na-Boinne_.
+ Boyne,
+
+
+ Canta, _Cainte_.
+
+ Carn-Arenn, _Carnn-Airenn_.
+
+ Carricknarone, _Carraic-na-ron_, the rock of the seals.
+
+ Clann Navin, _Clann-Neamhuinn_.
+
+ Cloghan Kincat, _Clochan-chinn-chait_, the stepping-stones of
+ the cat's head.
+
+ Coil Croda, _Cael-crodha_, the slender valiant [man].
+
+ Colga, _Colga_.
+
+ Colman, _Colman_, little dove.
+
+ Comgall, _Comhghall_.
+
+ Conal Carna, _Conall Cernach_.
+
+ Conan Mail, _Conan Mael_, Conan the Bald.
+
+ Conang, _Conaing_.
+
+ Conn, the Hundred-fighter (not Conn of the Hundred
+ Battles, as it is usually translated),
+ _Conn-Cedcathach_.
+
+ Connla, _Connla_.
+
+ Coran, _Coran_.
+
+ Cormac Mac Art, _Cormac Mac Airt_.
+
+ Corr the _Coir Cos-luath_.
+ Swift-footed,
+
+ Cuan, _Cuan_ or _Cuadhan_.
+
+ Culand, _Culand_.
+
+ Curnan the _Curnan Onmit_.
+ Simpleton,
+
+ Curoi Mac Dara, _Curoi Mac Daire_.
+
+
+ Dagda, _Dagda_.
+
+ Dara Donn, _Daire Donn_.
+
+ Darvra, Lake, _Loch Dairbhreach_, the lake of oaks.
+
+ Dathkeen, _Dathchaoin_, bright-complexioned.
+
+ Decca, _Deoch_.
+
+ Dedannans, _Tuatha De Danann_.
+
+ Derdri of the _Deirdre Duibhshleibhe_.
+ Black Mountain,
+
+ Dering, _Diorraing_.
+
+ Dermat O'Dyna, _Diarmait O'Duibhne_.
+
+ Dianket, _Diancecht_.
+
+ Diuran Lekerd, _Diuran Lecerd_.
+
+ Dobar O'Baskin, _Dobhar O'Baoiscne_.
+
+ Dooclone, _Dubhchluain_, dark-coloured meadow.
+
+ Dord-Fian, _Dord-Fiann_.
+
+ Dryantore, _Draoigheantoir_.
+
+ Ducoss, _Dubhchosach_, black-foot.
+
+
+ Eas-Dara, _Eas-Dara_.
+
+ Ebb, _Eab_.
+
+ Ebliu, _Ebliu_.
+
+ Ebric, _Aibhric_.
+
+ Ecca, _Eochaidh_, a horseman.
+
+ Enbarr, _Aenbharr_, splendid mane.
+
+ Encoss, _Aenchos_, one foot.
+
+ Ethnea, _Eithne_, sweet nut-kernel.
+
+ Etta, _Eitche_.
+
+ Eva, _Aeife_.
+
+ Eve, _Aebh_.
+
+
+ Failinis, _Failinis_.
+
+ Fatha Conan, _Fatha Chonain_.
+
+ Femin, _Feimeann_.
+
+ Fena, _Fianna_.
+
+ Ferdana, _Feardana_.
+
+ Fergor, _Fearghoir_, manly or strong voice.
+
+ Fergus, _Fearghus_, manly strength.
+
+ Fiaca Findamnas, _Fiacha Findamnais_.
+
+ Ficna, _Fiachna_, little raven.
+
+ Ficra, _Fiachra_.
+
+ Fincara, _Fianchaire_.
+
+ Fincoss, _Finnchosach_, white-foot.
+
+ Finn, _Finn_ or _Fionn_, fair-haired.
+
+ Finnin, _Finghin_, fair offspring.
+
+ Finola, _Fionnghuala_, white shoulder.
+
+ Flidas, _Flidas_.
+
+ Foltlebar, _Folt-leabhar_, long hair.
+
+ Frevan, _Freamhainn_.
+
+
+ Ga-boi, _Ga-buidhe_, yellow javelin.
+
+ Ga-derg, _Ga-dearg_, red javelin.
+
+ Gael Glas, _Gaodhal-Glas_.
+
+ Garva, _Garbh_, rough.
+
+ Gaul Mac Morna, _Goll Mac Morna_.
+
+ Germane, _Germane_.
+
+ Gilla Dacker, _Giolla Deacair_, lazy fellow.
+
+ Glanlua, _Glanluadh_, pure-spoken.
+
+ Glas Mac Encarda, _Glas Mac Aeinchearda_.
+
+ Glore, _Glor_, a voice.
+
+
+ Ilbrec, _Ilbhreach_.
+
+ Ildana, _Ioldhanach_.
+
+ Inis Glora, _Inis Gluaire_.
+
+ Innia, _Innia_.
+
+ Innsa, _Inse_.
+
+ Inver-tre-Kenand, _Inbher-Tre-Cenand_.
+
+ Iraun, _Irann_.
+
+ Iroda, _Ioruaidhe_.
+
+ Irros Domnann, _Iorrus Domnann_.
+
+ Island of the _Inis Tuile_.
+ Torrent,
+
+
+ Kemoc, _Caemhoc_ or _Mochoemhoc_.
+
+ Kenn-Avrat, _Ceann-Abhrat_.
+
+ Kenri, _Caenraighe_.
+
+ Kethen, _Cethen_.
+
+ Kethlenda, _Ceithleann_ or _Ceithleand_.
+
+ Kian, _Cian_.
+
+ Kylta Mac Ronan, _Caeilte Mac Ronain_.
+
+
+ Largnen, _Lairgnen_.
+
+ Lavaran, _Lobharan_.
+
+ Liban, _Liban_.
+
+ Lidas, _Liadhas_.
+
+ Ligan Lumina, _Liagan Luaimneach_, Ligan the Bounding.
+
+ Lir, _Lir_.
+
+ Lobas, _Lobais_.
+
+ Lochlann, _Lochlann_.
+
+ Loskenn of the _Loiscinn Lomghluineach_.
+ Bare Knees,
+
+ Luath, _Luaith_, swift.
+
+ Luga of the Long _Lugh Lamh-fada_.
+ Arms,
+
+
+ Mac-an-Lona, _Mac-an-Luin_.
+
+ Mac Luga, _Mac Luigheach_.
+
+ Mac-na-Corra, _Mac-na-Corra_.
+
+ Maildun, _Mail Duin_, chief of the fort.
+
+ Manissa, _Maighneis_.
+
+ Mannanan Mac Lir, _Manannan Mac Lir_.
+
+ Marid Mac Carido, _Mairid Mac Cairedo_.
+
+ Mergah, _Meargach_.
+
+ Micorta, _Miodhchuarta_.
+
+ Midac, _Miodhach_ or _Mioch_.
+
+ Midir, _Midhir_.
+
+ Midkena, _Miodhchaoin_.
+
+ Milucra, _Miluchradh_.
+
+ Modan, _Muadhan_.
+
+ Morallta, _Moralltach_, great fury.
+
+ Moyle, _Mael_, a bare hill.
+
+ Moy-Mell, _Magh-Mell_, plain of pleasures.
+
+ Moytura, _Magh-tuireadh_, plain of towers.
+
+ Muman, _Mumha_, gen. _Mumhan_.
+
+ Muridach, _Muridach_.
+
+ Murthemna, _Muirthemhne_.
+
+
+ Niam, _Niamh_, beauty.
+
+ Nuada of the _Nuadha Airgeatlaimh_.
+ Silver Hand,
+
+ Nuca, _Nuca_.
+
+
+ Oisin, _Oisin_ (pronounced _Isheen_ in Munster, and
+ _Osh'in_ in Ulster and in Scotland).
+
+ Oscar, _Oscar_.
+
+ Owenaght, _Eoghanacht_, descendants of Owen.
+
+
+ Pezar, _Pisear_.
+
+
+ Racad, _Rachadh_.
+
+ Rib, _Rib_.
+
+
+ Sencab, _Seanchab_, old mouth.
+
+ Sharvan, _Searbhan_, a surly person.
+
+ Shee Finnaha, _Sidh-Fionnachaidh_.
+
+ Skeabrac, _Sciath-bhreac_, speckled shield.
+
+ Skolan, _Sceolaing_.
+
+ Slana, _Slanach_, healthy.
+
+ Sorca, _Sorcha_.
+
+ Sotal of the Large _Sotal Salmhor_.
+ Heels,
+
+
+ Taillkenn, _Tailcenn_.
+
+ Tinna the Mighty, _Tinne Mor_.
+
+ Tir-fa-tonn, _Tir-fa-thuinn_, country beneath the wave.
+
+ Tirnanoge, _Tir na n-og_, land of youths.
+
+ Trencoss, _Treunchosach_, strongfoot.
+
+ Trenmore O'Baskin, _Treunmor O'Baoiscne_.
+
+ Triscadal, _Triscadal_.
+
+ Tuis, _Tuis_.
+
+ Turenn, _Tuireann_.
+
+
+ Ur, _Uar_.
+
+ Urcar, _Urchar_.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ Footnotes formatted in Roman.
+ Endnotes formatted in Arabic.
+ Italics shown as _Italics_.
+ Ligatures: [=o] o macron, [)e] e breve.
+ Inconsistent and archaic spelling retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Old Celtic Romances, by Unknown
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLD CELTIC ROMANCES ***
+
+***** This file should be named 38041.txt or 38041.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/4/38041/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/38041.zip b/38041.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e1521a6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/38041.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..14e0edf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #38041 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/38041)