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myths and legends of the celtic race
Chapter 5: Tales of the Ultonian Cycle
The Curse of Macha
THE centre of interest in Irish legend now shifts from Tara to
Ulster, and a multitude of heroic tales gather round the Ulster king
Conor mac Nessa, round Cuchulain, [pronounced "Koohoo´lin."] his
great vassal, and the Red Branch Order of chivalry, which had its
seat in Emain Macha.
The legend of the foundation of Emain Macha has already been told
[page 150]. But Macha, who was no mere woman, but a supernatural
being, appears again in connexion with the history of Ulster in a
very curious tale which was supposed to account for the strange
debility or helplessness that at critical moments sometimes fell, it
was believed, upon the warriors of the province.
The legend tells that a wealthy Ulster farmer named Crundchu, son
of Agnoman, dwelling in a solitary place among the hills, found one
day in his dūn a young woman of great beauty and in splendid array,
whom he had never seen before. Crundchu, we are told, was a widower,
his wife having died after bearing him four sons. The strange woman,
without a word, set herself to do the houshold tasks, prepared
dinner, milked the cow, and took on herself all the duties of the
mistress of the household. At night she lay down at Crundchu's side,
and thereafter dwelt with him as his wife; and they loved each other
dearly. Her name was Macha.
One day Crundchu prepared himself to go to a great fair or
assembly of the Ultonians, where there would be feasting and
horse-racing, tournaments and music, and merrymaking of all kinds.
Macha begged her husband
[178]
not to go. He persisted. " Then," she said, " at least do not
speak of me in the assembly, for I may dwell with you only so long
as I am not spoken of."
It has been observed that we have here the earliest appearance in
postclassical European literature of the well-known motive of the
fairy bride who can stay with her mortal lover only so long as
certain conditions are observed, such as that he shall not spy upon
her, ill-treat her, or ask of her origin.
Crundchu promised to obey the injunction, and went to the
festival. Here the two horses of the king carried off prize after
prize in the racing, and the people cried "There is not in Ireland a
swifter than the King's pair of horses."
"I have a wife at home," said Crundchu, in a moment of
forgetfulness, "who can run quicker than these horses."
"Seize that man," said the angry king, "and hold him till his
wife be brought to the contest."
So messengers went for Macha, and she was brought before the
assembly; and she was with child. The king bade her prepare for the
race. She pleaded her condition. "I am close upon my hour," she
said. "Then hew her man in pieces," said the king to his guards.
Macha turned to the bystanders. "Help me," she cried, " for a mother
hath borne each of you ! Give me but a short delay till I am
delivered." But the king and all the crowd in their savage lust for
sport would hear of no delay. "Then bring up the horses," said
Macha, "and because you have no pity a heavier infamy shall fall
upon you." So she raced against the horses, and outran them, but as
she came to the goal she gave a great cry, and her travail seized
her, and she gave birth to twin children. As she uttered that cry,
however, all the spectators felt
[179]
themselves seized with pangs like her own and had no more
strength than a woman in her travail. And Macha prophesied "From
this hour the shame you have wrought on me will fall upon each man
of Ulster. In the hours of your greatest need ye shall be weak and
helpless as women in childbirth, and this shall endure for five days
and four nights - to the ninth generation the curse shall be upon
you." And so it came to pass; and this is the cause of the Debility
of the Ultonians that was wont to afflict the warriors of the
province.
Conor mac Nessa
The chief occasion on which this Debility was manifested was when
Maev, Queen of Connacht, made the famous Cattle-raid of Quelgny
(Tam Bo Cuailgné), which forms the subject of the
greatest tale in Irish literature. We have now to relate the
preliminary history leading up to this epic tale and introducing its
chief characters.
Fachtna the Giant, King of Ulster, had to wife Nessa, daughter of
Echid Yellow-heel, and she bore him a son named Conor. But when
Fachtna died Fergus son of Roy, his half-brother, succeeded him,
Conor being then but a youth. Now Fergus loved Nessa, and would have
wedded her, but she made conditions. "Let my son Conor reign one
year," she said, "so that his posterity may be the descendants of a
king, and I consent." Fergus agreed, and young Conor took the
throne. But so wise and prosperous was his rule and so sagacious his
judgments that, at the year's end, the people, as Nessa foresaw,
would have him remain king; and Fergus, who loved the feast and the
chase better than the toils of kingship, was content to have it so,
and remained at Conor's court for a time, great, honoured, and
happy, but king no longer.
[180]
The Red Branch
In his time was the glory of the "Red Branch" in Ulster, who were
the offspring of Ross the Red, King of Ulster, with collateral
relatives and allies, forming ultimately a kind of warlike Order.
Most of the Red Branch heroes appear in the Ultonian Cycle of
legend, so that a statement of their names and relationships may be
usefully placed here before we proceed to speak of their doings. It
is noticeable that they have a partly supernatural ancestry. Ross
the Red, it is said, wedded a Danaan woman, Maga, daughter of Angus
Og [see page 121 - 123 for an account of this deity]. As a second
wife he wedded a maiden named Roy. His descendants are as
follows:
But Maga was also wedded to the Druid Cathbad, and by him
had three daughters, whose descendants played a notable part in the
Ultonian legendary cycle.
[Dectera also had a mortal husband, Sualtam, who passed as
Cuchulain's father.]
[181]
Birth of Cuchulain
It was during the reign of Conor mac Nessa that the birth of the
mightiest hero of the Celtic race, Cuchulain, came about, and this
was the manner of it. The maiden Dectera, daughter of Cathbad, with
fifty young girls, her companions at the court of Conor, one day
disappeared, and for three years no searching availed to discover
their dwelling-place or their fate. At last one summer day a flock
of birds descended on the fields about Emain Macha and began to
destroy the crops and fruit. The king, with Fergus and others of his
nobles, went out against them with slings, but the birds flew only a
little way off, luring the party on and on till at last they
found themselves near the Fairy Mound of Angus on the river Boyne.
Night fell, and the king sent Fergus with a party to discover some
habitation where they might sleep. A hut was found, where they
betook themselves to rest, but one of them, exploring further, came
to a noble mansion by the river, and on entering it was met by a
young man of splendid appearance. With the stranger was a lovely
woman, his wife, and fifty maidens, who saluted the Ulster warrior
with joy. And he recognised in them Dectera and her maidens, whom
they had missed for three years, and in the glorious youth Lugh of
the Long Arm, son of Ethlinn. He went back with his tale to the
king, who immediately sent for Dectera to come to him. She, alleging
that she was ill, requested a delay; and so the night passed ; but
in the morning there was found in the hut among the Ulster warriors
a new-born male infant. It was Dectera's gift to Ulster, and for
this purpose she had lured them to the fairy palace by the Boyne.
The child was taken home by the warriors and was given to Dectera's
sister, Finchoom, who was then
[182]
nursing her own child, Conall, and the boy's name was called
Setanta. And the part of Ulster from Dundalk southward to Usna in
Meath, which is called the Plain of Murthemney, was allotted for his
inheritance, and in later days his fortress and dwelling-place was
in Dundalk.
It is said that the Druid Morann prophesied over the infant :
"His praise will be in the mouths of all men charioteers and
warriors, kings and sages will recount his deeds; he will win the
love of many. This child will avenge all your wrongs; he will give
combat at your fords, he will decide all your quarrels."
The Hound of CuIlan
When he was old enough the boy Setanta went to the court of Conor
to be brought up and instructed along with the other sons of princes
and chieftains. It was now that the event occurred from which he got
the name of Cuchulain, by which he was hereafter to be known.
One afternoon King Conor and his nobles were going to a feast to
which they were bidden at the dun of a wealthy smith named Cullan,
in Quelgny, where they also meant to spend the night. Setanta was to
accompany them, but as the cavalcade set off he was in the midst of
a game of hurley with his companions and bade the king go forward,
saying he would follow later when his play was done. The royal
company arrived at their destination as night began to fall. Cullan
received them hospitably, and in the great hall they made merry over
meat and wine while the lord of the house barred the gates of his
fortress and let loose outside a huge and ferocious dog which every
night guarded the lonely mansion, and under whose protection, it was
said, Cullan feared nothing less than the onset of an army.
[183]
But they had forgotten Setanta ! In the middle of the laughter
and music of the feast a terrible sound was heard which brought
every man to his feet in an instant. It was the tremendous baying of
the hound of Cullan, giving tongue as it saw a stranger approach.
Soon the noise changed to the howls of a fierce combat, but, on
rushing to the gates, they saw in the glare of the lanterns a young
boy and the hound lying dead at his feet. When it flew at him he had
seized it by the throat and dashed its life out against the
side-posts of the gate. The warriors bore in the lad with rejoicing
and wonder, but soon the triumph ceased, for there stood their host,
silent and sorrowful over the body of his faithful friend, who had
died for the safety of his house and would never guard it more.
"Give me," then said the lad Setanta, "a whelp of that hound, O
Cullan, and I will train him to be all to you that his sire was. And
until then give me shield and spear and I will myself guard your
house; never hound guarded it better than I will."
And all the company shouted applause at the generous pledge, and
on the spot, as a commemoration of his first deed of valour, they
named the lad Cuchulain. [It is noticeable that among the characters
figuring in the Ultonian legendary cycle many names occur of which
the word Cn (hound) forms a part. Thus we have Curoi, Cucorb,
Beälcu, &c. The reference is no doubt to the Irish wolf-hound, a
fine type of valour and beauty.] the Hound of Cullan, and by that
name he was known until he died.
Cuchulain Assumes Arms
When he was older, and near the time when he might assume the
weapons of manhood, it chanced one day that he passed close by where
Cathbad the Druid
[184]
was teaching to certain of his pupils the art of divination and
augury. One of them asked of Cathbad for what kind of enterprise
that same day might be favourable ; and Cathbad, having worked a
spell of divination, said : "The youth who should take up arms on
this day would become of all men in Erin most famous for great
deeds, yet will his life be short and fleeting." Cuchulain passed on
as though he marked it not, and he came before the king. "What wilt
thou ?" asked Conor. "To take the arms of manhood," said Cuchulain.
"So he it," said the king, and he gave the lad two great spears. But
Cuchulain shook them in his hand, and the staves splintered and
broke. And so he did with many others ; and the chariots in which
they set him to drive he broke to pieces with stamping of his foot,
until at last the king's own chariot of war and his two spears and
sword were brought to the lad, and these he could not break, do what
he would ; so this equipment he retained.
His Courtship of Emer
The young Cuchulain was by this grown so fair and noble a youth
that every maid or matron on whom he looked was bewitched by him,
and the men of Ulster bade him take a wife of his own. But none were
pleasing to him, till at last he saw the lovely maiden Emer,
daughter of Forgall, the lord of Lusca, [Now Lusk, a village on the
coast a few miles north of Dublin.] and he resolved to woo her for
his bride. So he bade harness his chariot, and with Laeg, his friend
and charioteer, he journeyed to Dūn Forgall.
As he drew near, the maiden was with her companions, daughters of
the vassals of Forgall, and she was teaching them embroidery, for in
that art she excelled all women. She had "the six gifts of
[185]
womanhood - the gift of beauty, the gift of voice, the gift of
sweet speech, the gift of needlework) the gift of wisdom, and the
gift of chastity."
Hearing the thunder of horse-hoofs and the clangour of the
chariot from afar, she bade one of the maidens go to the rampart of
the Dun and tell her what she saw. "A chariot is coming on," said
the maiden, "drawn by two steeds with tossing heads, fierce and
powerful; one is grey, the other black. They breathe fire from their
jaws, and the clods of turf they throw up behind them as they race
are like a flock of birds that follow in their track. In the chariot
is a dark, sad man, comeliest of the men of Erin. He is clad in a
crimson cloak, with a brooch of gold, and on his back is a crimson
shield with a silver rim wrought with figures of beasts. With him as
his charioteer is a tall, slender, freckled man with curling red
hair held by a fillet of bronze, with plates of gold at either side
of his face. With a goad of red gold he urges the horses."
When the chariot drew up Emer went to meet Cuchulain and saluted
him. But when he urged his love upon her she told him of the might
and the wiliness of her father Forgall, and of the strength of the
champions that guarded her lest she should wed against his will. And
when he pressed her more she said "I may not marry before my sister
Fial, who is older than I. She is with me here - she is excellent in
handiwork." "It is not Fial whom I love," said Cuchulain. Then as
they were conversing he saw the breast of the maiden over the bosom
of her smock, and said to her "Fair is this plain, the plain of the
noble yoke." "None comes to this plain," said she, "who has not
slain his hundreds, and thy deeds are still to do."
So Cuchulain then left her, and drove back to Emain Macha.
[186]
Cuchulain in the Land of Skatha
Next day Cuchulain bethought himself how he could prepare himself
for war and for the deeds of heroism which Emer had demanded of him.
Now he had heard of a mighty woman-warrior named Skatha, who dwelt
in the Land of Shadows, [owing to the similarity of the name the
supernatural country of Skath:, "the Shadowy," was early identified
with the islands of Skye, where the Cuchulain Peaks still bear
witness to the legend.] and who could teach to young heroes who came
to her wonderful feats of arms. So Cuchulain went overseas to find
her, and many dangers he had to meet, black forests and desert
plains to traverse, before he could get tidings of Skatha and her
land. At last he came to the Plain of Ill-luck, where he could not
cross without being mired in its bottomless bogs or sticky clay, and
while he was debating what he should do he saw coming towards him a
young man with a face that shone like the sun, [this of course, was
Cuchulain's father, Lugh] and whose very look put cheerfulness and
hope into his heart. The young man gave him a wheel and told him to
roll it before him on the plain, and to follow it whithersoever it
went. So Cuchulain set the wheel rolling, and as it went it blazed
with light that shot like rays from its rim, and the heat of it made
a firm path across the quagmire, where Cuchulain followed
safely.
When he had passed the Plain of Ill-luck, and escaped the beasts
of the Perilous Glen, he came to the Bridge of the Leaps, beyond
which was the country of Skatha. Here he found on the hither side
many sons of the princes of Ireland who were come to learn feats of
war from Skatha, and they were playing at hurley on the green. And
among them was his friend Ferdia, son of the Firbolg, Daman; and
they all asked him of
[187]
the news from Ireland. When he had told them all he asked Ferdia
how he should pass to the dun of Skatha. Now the Bridge of Leaps was
very narrow and very high, and it crossed a gorge where far below
swung the tides of a boiling sea, in which ravenous monsters could
be seen swimming.
"Not one of us has crossed that bridge," said Ferdia, "for there
are two feats that Skatha teaches last, and one is the leap across
the bridge, and the other the thrust of the Gae Bolg. [this means
probably "the belly spear." With this terrible weapon Cuchulain was
fated in the end to slay his friend Ferdia.] For if a man step upon
one end of that bridge, the middle straightway rises up and flings
him back, and if he leap upon it he may chance to miss his footing
and fall into the gulf, where the sea-monsters are waiting for
him."
But Cuchulain waited till evening, when he had recovered his
strength from his long journey, and then essayed the crossing of the
bridge. Three times he ran towards it from a distance, gathering all
his powers together, and strove to leap upon the middle, but three
times it rose against him and flung him back, while his companions
jeered at him because he would not wait for the help of Skatha. But
at the fourth leap he lit fairly on the centre of the bridge, and
with one leap more he was across it, and stood before the strong
fortress of Skatha; and she wondered at his courage and vigour, and
admitted him to be her pupil.
For a year and a day Cuchulain abode with Skatha, and all the
feats she had to teach he learned easily, and last of all she taught
him the use of the Gae Bolg, and gave him that dreadful weapon,
which she had deemed no champion before him good enough to have. And
the manner of using the Gae Boig was that it was thrown with the
foot, and if it entered an enemy's
[188]
body it filled every limb and crevice of him with its barbs.
While Cuchulain dwelt with Skatha his friend above all friends and
his rival in skill and valour was Ferdia, and ere they parted they
vowed to love and help one another as long as they should live.
Cuchulain and Aifa
Now whilst Cuchulain was in the Land of the Shadows it chanced
that Skatha made war on the people of the Princess Aifa, who was the
fiercest and strongest of the woman-warriors of the world, so that
even Skatha feared to meet her in arms. On going forth to the war,
therefore, Skatha mixed with Cuchulain's drink a sleepy herb so that
he should not wake for four-and-twenty hours, by which time the host
would be far on its way, for she feared lest evil should come to him
ere he had got his full strength. But the potion that would have
served another man for a day and a night only held Cuchulain for one
hour; and when he waked up he seized his arms and followed the host
by its chariot-tracks till he came up with them. Then it is said
that Skatha uttered a sigh, for she knew that he would not be
restrained from the war.
When the armies met, Cuchulain and the two sons of Skatha wrought
great deeds on the foe, and slew six of the mightiest of Aifa's
warriors. Then Aifa sent word to Skatha and challenged her to single
combat. But Cuchulain declared that he would meet the fair Fury in
place of Skatha, and he asked first of all what were the things she
most valued. "What Aifa loves most," said Skatha, "are her two
horses, her chariot and her charioteer." Then the pair met in single
combat, and every champion's feat which they knew they tried on each
other in vain, till at last a blow of Aifa's shattered the sword of
Cuchulain to the hilt.
[189]
At this Cuchulain cried out: "Ah me ! behold the chariot and
horses of Aifa fallen into the glen !" Aifa glanced round, and
Cuchulain, rushing in, seized her round the waist and slung her over
his shoulder and bore her back to the camp of Skatha. There he flung
her on the ground and put his knife to her throat. She begged for
her life, and Cuchulain granted it on condition that she made a
lasting peace with Skatha, and gave hostages for her fulfilment of
the pledge. To this she agreed, and Cuchulain and she became not
only friends but lovers.
The Tragedy of Cuchulain and Connla
Before Cuchulain left the Land of Shadows he gave Aifa a golden
ring, saying that if she should bear him a son he was to be sent to
seek his father in Erin so soon as he should have grown so that his
finger would fit the ring. And Cuchulain said, "Charge him under
geise that he shall not make himself known, that he never
turn out of the way for any man, nor ever refuse a combat. And be
his name called Connla."
In later years it is narrated that one day when King Conor of
Ulster and the lords of Ulster were at a festal gathering on the
Strand of the Footprints they saw coming towards them across the sea
a little boat of bronze, and in it a young lad with gilded oars in
his hands. In the boat was a heap of stones, and ever and anon the
lad would put one of these stones into a sling and cast it at a
flying sea-bird in such fashion that it would bring down the bird
alive to his feet. And many other wonderful feats of skill he did.
Then Conor said, as the boat drew nearer: "If the grown men of that
lad's country came here they would surely grind us to powder. Woe to
the land into which that boy shall come !"
[190]
When the boy came to land, a messenger, Condery, was sent to bid
him be off. "I will not turn back for thee," said the lad, and
Condery repeated what he had said to the king. Then Conall of the
Victories was sent against him, but the lad slung a great stone at
him, and the whizz and wind of it knocked him down, and the lad
sprang upon him, and bound his arms with the strap of his shield.
And so man after man was served; some were bound, and some were
slain, but the lad defied the whole power of Ulster to turn him
back, nor would he tell his name or lineage.
"Send for Cuchulain," then said King Conor. And they sent a
messenger to Dundalk, where Cuchulain was with Emer his wife, and
bade him come to do battle against a stranger boy whom Conall of the
Victories could not overcome. Emer threw her arm round Cuchulain's
neck. "Do not go," she entreated. "Surely this is the son of Aifa.
Slay not thine only son." But Cuchulain said: "Forbear, woman ! Were
it Connla himself I would slay him for the honour of Ulster," and he
bade yoke his chariot and went to the Strand. Here he found the boy
tossing up his weapons and doing marvellous feats with them.
"Delightful is thy play, boy," said Cuchulain; "who art thou and
whence dost thou come ?" "I may not reveal that," said the lad.
"Then thou shalt die," said Cuchulain. "So be it," said the lad, and
then they fought with swords for a while, till the lad delicately
shore off a lock of Cuchulain's hair. "Enough of trifling," said
Cuchulain, and they closed with each other, but the lad planted
himself on 'a rock and stood so firm that Cuchulain could not move
him, and in the stubborn wrestling they had the lad's two feet sank
deep into the stone and made the footprints whence the Strand of the
Footprints has its name. At last they both fell
[191]
into the sea, and Cuchulain was near being drowned, till he
bethought himself of the Gae Bolg, and he drove that weapon against
the lad and it ripped up his belly. "That is what Skatha never
taught me," cried the lad. "Woe is me, for I am hurt." Cuchulain
looked at him and saw the ring on his finger. " It is true," he
said; and he took up the boy and bore him on shore and laid him down
before Conor and the lords of Ulster. "Here is my son for you, men
of Ulster," he said. And the boy said: "it is true. And if I had
five years to grow among you, you would conquer the world on every
side of you and rule as far as Rome. But since it is as it is, point
out to me the famous warriors that are here, that I may know them
and take leave of them before I die." Then one after another they
were brought to him, and he kissed them and took leave of his
father, and he died; and the men of Ulster made his grave and set up
his pillar-stone with great mourning. This was the only son
Cuchulain ever had, and this son he slew.
This tale, as I have given it here, dates from the ninth century,
and is found in the "Yellow Book of Lecan." There are many other
Gaelic versions of it in poetry and prose. It is one of the earliest
extant appearances in literature of the since well-known theme of
the slaying of a heroic son by his father. The Persian rendering of
it in the tale of Sohrab and Rustum has been made familiar by
Matthew Arnold's fine poem. In the Irish version it will be noted
that the father is not without a suspicion of the identity of his
antagonist, but he does battle with him under the stimulus of that
passionate sense of loyalty to his prince and province which was
Cuchulain's most signal characteristic.
To complete the story of Aifa and her son we have anticipated
events, and now turn back to take up the thread again.
[192]
Cuchulain's First Foray
After a year and a day of training in warfare under Skatha,
Cuchulain returned to Erin, eager to test his prowess and to win
Emer for his wife. So he bade harness his chariot and drove out to
make a foray upon the fords and marches of Connacht, for between
Connacht and Ulster there was always an angry surf of fighting along
the borders.
And first he drove to the White Cairn, which is on the highest of
the Mountains of Mourne, and surveyed the land of Ulster spread out
smiling in the sunshine far below and bade his charioteer tell him
the name of every hill and plain and dūn that he saw. Then turning
southwards he looked over the plains of Bregia, and the charioteer
pointed out to him Tara and Teltin, and Brugh na Boyna and the great
dūn of the sons of Nechtan. "Are they," asked Cuchulain, "those sons
of Nechtan of whom it is said that more of the men of Ulster have
fallen by their hands than are yet living on the earth ?" "The
same," said the charioteer. Then let us drive thither," said
Cuchulain. So, much unwilling, the charioteer drove to the fortress
of the sons of Nechtan, and there on the green before it they found
a pillar-stone, and round it a collar of bronze having on it writing
in Ogham. This Cuchulain read, and it declared that any man of age
to bear arms who should come to that green should hold it geis
for him to depart without having challenged one of the dwellers
in the dūn to single combat. Then Cuchulain flung his arms round the
stone, and, swaying it backwards and forwards, heaved it at last out
of the earth and flung it, collar and all, into the river that ran
hard by. "Surely," said the charioteer, " thou art seeking for a
violent death, and now thou wilt find it without delay."
[193]
Then Foill son of Nechtan came forth from the dūn, and seeing
Cuchulain, whom he deemed but a lad, he was annoyed. But Cuchulain
bade him fetch his arms, "for I slay not drivers nor messengers nor
unarmed men," and Foill went back into the dūn.
"Thou canst not slay him," then said the charioteer, "for he is
invulnerable by magic power to the point or edge of any blade." But
Cuchulain put in his sling a ball of tempered iron, and when Foill
appeared he slung at him so that it struck his forehead, and went
clean through brain and skull; and Cuchulain took his head and bound
it to his chariot-rim. And other sons of Nechtan, issuing forth, he
fought with and slew by sword or spear; and then he fired the dūn
and left it in a blaze and drove on exultant. And on the way he saw
a flock of wild swans, and sixteen of them he brought down alive
with his sling, and tied them to the chariot; and seeing a herd of
wild deer which his horses could not overtake he lighted down and
chased them on foot till he caught two great stags, and with thongs
and ropes he made them fast to the chariot.
But at Emain Macha a scout of King Conor came running in to give
him news. "Behold, a solitary chariot is approaching swiftly over
the plain; wild white birds flutter round it and wild stags are
tethered to it; it is decked all round with the bleeding heads ot
enemies." And Conor looked to see who was approaching, and he saw
that Cuchulain was in his battle-fury, and would deal death around
him whomsoever he met; so he hastily gave order that a troop of the
women of Emania should go forth to meet him, and, having stripped
off their clothing, should stand naked in the way. This they did,
and when the lad saw them, smitten with shame, he bowed his head
upon the chariot-rim. Then Conor's men instantly seized him
[194]
and plunged him into a vat of cold water which had been made
ready, but the water boiled around him and the staves and hoops of
the vat were burst asunder. This they did again and yet again, and
at last his fury left him, and his natural form and aspect were
restored. Then they clad him in fresh raiment and bade him in to the
feast in the king's banqueting-hall.
The Winning of Emer
Next day he went to the dūn of Forgall the Wily, father of Emer,
and he leaped "the hero's salmon leap," that he had learned of
Skatha, over the high ramparts of the dūn. Then the mighty men of
Forgall set on him, and he dealt but three blows, and each blow slew
eight men, and Forgall himself fell lifeless in leaping from the
rampart of the dūn to escape Cuchulain. So he carried off Emer and
her foster-sister and two loads of gold and silver. But outside the
dun the sister of Forgall raised a host against him, and his
battle-fury came on him, and furious were the blows he dealt, so
that the ford of Glondath ran blood and the turf on Crofot was
trampled into bloody mire. A hundred he slew at every ford from
Olbiny to the Boyne ; and so was Emer won as she desired, and he
brought her to Emain Macha and made her his wife, and they were not
parted again until he died.
Cuchulain Champion of Erin
A lord of Ulster named Briccriu of the Poisoned Tongue once made
a feast to which he bade King Conor and all the heroes of the Red
Branch, and because it was always his delight to stir up strife
among men or women he set the heroes contending among themselves as
to who was the champion of the land of Erin. At last it was agreed
that the championship
[195]
must lie among three of them, namely, Cuchulain, and Conall of
the Victories and Laery the Triumphant. To decide between these
three a demon named The Terrible was summoned from a lake in the
depth of which he dwelt. He proposed to the heroes a test of
courage. Any one of them, he said, might cut off his head to-day
provided that he, the claimant of the championship, would lay down
his own head for the axe to-morrow. Conall and Laery shrank from the
test, but Cuchulain accepted it, and after reciting a charm over his
sword, he cut off the head of the demon, who immediately rose, and
taking the bleeding head in one hand and his axe in the other,
plunged into the lake.
Next day he reappeared, whole and sound, to claim the fulfilment
of the bargain. Cuchulain, quailing but resolute, laid his head on
the block. "Stretch out your neck, wretch," cried the demon ; "tis
too short for me to strike at." Cuchulain does as he is bidden. The
demon swings his axe thrice over his victim, brings down the butt
with a crash on the block, and then bids Cuchulain rise unhurt,
Champion of Ireland and her boldest man.
Deirdre and the Sons of Usna
We have now to turn to a story in which Cuchulain takes no part.
It is the chief of the preliminary tales to the Cattle-spoil of
Quelgny.
There was among the lords of Ulster, it is said, one named Felim
son of Dall, who on a certain day made a great feast for the king.
And the king came with his Druid Cathbad, and Fergus mac Roy, and
many heroes of the Red Branch, and while they were making merry over
the roasted flesh and wheaten cakes and Greek wine a messenger from
the women's apartments
[196]
came to tell Felim that his wife had just borne him a daughter.
So all the lords and warriors drank health to the new-born infant,
and the king bade Cathbade perform divination in the manner of the
Druids and foretell what the future would have in store for Felim's
base. Cathbad gazed upon the stars and drew the horoscope of the
child, and he was much troubled; and at length he said: "The infant
shall he fairest among the women of Erin, and shall wed a king, but
because of her shall death and ruin come upon the Province of
Ulster." Then the warriors would have put her to death upon the
spot, but Conor forbade them. "I will avert the doom," he said, "for
she shall wed no foreign king, but she shall he my own mate when she
is of age." So he took away the child, and committed it to his nurse
Levarcam, and the name they gave it was Deirdre. And Conor charged
Levarcam that the child should be brought up in a strong dūn in the
solitude of a great wood, and that no young man should see her or
she him until she was of marriageable age for the king to wed. And
there she dwelt, seeing none but her nurse and Cathbad, and
sometime: the king, now growing an aged man, who would visit the dūn
from time to time to see that all was well with the folk there, and
that his commands were observed.
One day, when the time for the marriage of Deirdre and Conor was
drawing near, Deirdre and Levarcam looked over the rampart of their
dun. It was winter, a heavy snow had fallen in the night, and in the
still, frosty air the trees stood up as if wrought in silver, and
the green before the dun was a sheet of unbroken white, save that in
one place a scullion had killed a calf for their dinner, and the
blood of the calf lay on the snow. And as Deirdre looked, a raven
lit down from
[197]
a tree hard by and began to sip the blood. "O nurse,"
cried Deirdre suddenly, "such, and not like Conor, would be the man
that I would love-his hair like the raven's wing, and in his cheek
the hue of blood, and his skin as white as snow. "Thou hast pictured
a man of Conor's household," said the nurse. "Who is he ?" asked
Deirdre. "He is Naisi, son of Usna. [see genealogical table, p. 181]
a champion of the Red Branch," said the nurse. Thereupon Deirdre
entreated Levarcam to bring her to speak with Naisi; and because the
old woman loved the girl and would not have her wedded to the aged
king, she at last agreed. Deirdre implored Naisi to save her from
Conor, but he would not, till at last her entreaties and her beauty
won him, and he vowed to be hers. Then secretly one night he came
with his two brethren, Ardan and Ainlé, and bore away Deirdre with
Levarcam, and they escaped the king's pursuit and took ship for
Scotland, where Naisi took service with the King of the Picts. Yet
here they could not rest, for the king got sight of Deirdre, and
would have taken her from Naisi, but Naisi with his brothers
escaped, and in the solitude of Glen Etive they made their dwelling
by the lake, and there lived in the wild wood by hunting and
fishing, seeing no man but themselves and their servants.
And the years went by and Conor made no sign, but he did not
forget, and his spies told him of all that befell Naisi and Deirdre.
At last, judging that Naisi and his brothers would have tired of
solitude, he sent the bosom friend of Naisi, Fergus son of Roy, to
bid them return, and to promise them that all would be forgiven.
Fergus went joyfully, and joyfully did Naisi and his brothers hear
the message, but Deirdre foresaw evil, and would fain have sent
Fergus home alone.
[198]
But Naisi blamed her for her doubt and suspicion, and bade her
mark that they were under the protection of Fergus, whose safeguard
no king in Ireland would dare to violate; and they at last made
ready to go.
On landing in Ireland they were met by Baruch, a lord of the Red
Branch, who had his dūn close by, and he bade Fergus to a feast he
had prepared for him that night. " I may not stay," said Fergus,
"for I must first convey Deirdre and the sons of Usna safely to
Emain Macha" "Nevertheless," said Baruch, "thou must stay with me
to-night, for it is a geis for thee to refuse a feast."
Deirdre implored him not to leave them, but Fergus was tempted by
the feast, and feared to break his geis, and he bade his two
sons Illan the Fair and Buino the Red take charge of the party in
his place, and he himself abode with Baruch.
And so the party came to Emain Macha, and they were lodged in the
House of the Red Branch, but Conor did not receive them. After the
evening meal, as he sat, drinking heavily and silently, he sent a
messenger to bid Levarcam come before him. "How is it with the sons
of Usna ? " he said to her. "It is well," she said. "Thou hast got
the three most valorous champions in Ulster in thy court. Truly the
king who has those three need fear no enemy." "Is it well with
Deirdre ?" he asked. "She is well," said the nurse, "but she has
lived many years in the wildwood, and toil and care have changed her
- little of her beauty of old now remains to her, O King." Then the
king dismissed her, and sat drinking again. But after a while he
called to him a servant named Trendorn, and bade him go to the Red
Branch House and mark who was there and what they did. But when
Trendorn came the place was bolted and barred for the night, and he
could not get an entrance, and at last he
[199]
mounted on a ladder and looked in at a high window. And there he
saw the brothers of Naisi and the sons of Fergus, as they talked or
cleaned their arms, or made them ready for slumber, and there sat
Naisi with a chess-board before him, and playing chess with him was
the fairest of women that he had ever seen. But as he looked in
wonder at the noble pair, suddenly one caught sight of him and rose
with a cry, pointing to the face at the window. And Naisi looked up
and saw it, and seizing a chessman from the board he hurled it at
the face of the spy, and it struck out his eye. Then Trendorn
hastily descended, and went back with his bloody face to the king.
"I have seen them," he cried, "I have seen the fairest woman of the
world, and but that Naisi had struck my eye out I had been looking
on her still."
Then Conor arose and called for his guards and bade them bring
the sons of Usna before him for maiming his messenger. And the
guards went; but first Buino,son of Fergus, with his retinue, met
them, and at the sword's point drove them back; but Naisi and
Deirdre continued quietly to play chess, "For," said Naisi, "it is
not seemly that we should seek to defend ourselves while we are
under the protection of the sons of Fergus." But Conor went to
Buino, and with a great gift of lands he bought him over to desert
his charge. Then Illan took up the defence of the Red Branch Hostel,
but the two sons of Conor slew him. And then at last Naisi and his
brothers seized their weapons and rushed amid the foe, and many were
they who fell before the onset. Then Conor entreated Cathbad the
Druid to cast spells upon them lest they should get away and become
the enemies of the province, and he vowed to do them no hurt if they
were taken alive. So Cathbad conjured up, as it were, a lake of
slime that seemed to be about
[200]
the feet of the sons of Usna, and they could not tear their feet
from it, and Naisi caught up Deirdre and put her on his shoulder,
for they seemed to be sinking in the slime. Then the guards and
servants of Conor seized and bound them and brought them before the
king. And the king called upon man after man to come forward and
slay the sons of Usna, but none would obey him, till at last Owen
son of Duracht and Prince of Ferney came and took the sword of
Naisi, and with one sweep he shore off the heads of all three, and
so they died.
Then Conor took Deirdre perforce, and for a year she abode with
him in the palace in Emain Macha, but during all that time she never
smiled. At length Conor said: "What is it that you hate most of all
on earth, Deirdre ?" And she said : "Thou thyself and Owen son of
Duracht," and Owen was standing by. "Then thou shalt go to Owen for
a year," said Conor. But when Deirdre mounted the chariot behind
Owen she kept her eyes on the ground, for she would not look on
those who thus tormented her; and Conor said, taunting her :
"Deirdre, the glance of thee between me and Owen is the glance of a
ewe between two rams." Then Deirdre started up, and, flinging
herself head foremost from the chariot, she dashed her head against
a rock and fell dead.
And when they buried her it is said there grew from her grave and
from Naisi's two yew-trees, whose tops, when they were full-grown,
met each other over the roof of the great church of Armagh, and
intertwined together, and none could part them.
The Rebellion of Fergus
When Fergus mac Roy came home to Emain Macha after the feast to
which Baruch bade him and found
[201]
the sons of Usna slain and one of his own sons dead and the other
a traitor, he broke out against Conor in a storm of wrath and
cursing, and vowed to be avenged on him with fire and sword. And he
went off straightway to Connacht to take service of arms with Ailell
and Maev, who were king and queen of that country.
Queen Maev
But though Ailell was king, Maev was the ruler in truth, and
ordered all things as she wished, and took what husbands she wished,
and dismissed them at pleasure; for she was as fierce and strong as
a goddess of war, and knew no law but her own wild will. She was
tall, it is said, with a long, pale face and masses of hair yellow
as ripe corn. When Fergus came to her in her palace at Rathcroghan
in Roscommon she gave him her love, as she had given it to many
before, and they plotted together how to attack and devastate the
Province of Ulster.
The Brown Bull of Quelgny
Now it happened that Maev possessed a famous red bull with white
front and horns named Finnbenach, and one day when she and Ailell
were counting up their respective possessions and matching them
against each other he taunted her because the Finnbenach would not
stay in the hands of a woman, but had attached himself to Ailell's
herd. So Maev in vexation went to her steward, mac Roth, and asked
of him if there were anywhere in Erin a bull as fine as the
Finnbenach. "Truly," said the steward, "there is - for the Brown
Bull of Quelgny, that belongs to Dara son of Fachtna, is the
mightiest beast that is in Ireland." And after that Maev felt as if
she had no flocks and
[202]
herds that were worth anything at all unless she possessed the
Brown Bull of Quelgny. But this was in Ulster, and the Ulstermen
knew the treasure they possessed, and Maev knew that they would not
give up the hull without fighting for it. So she and Fergus and
Ailell agreed to make a foray against Ulster for the Brown Bull, and
thus to enter into war with the province, for Fergus longed for
vengeance, and Maev for fighting, for glory, and for the bull, and
Audi to satisfy Maev.
Here let us note that this contest for the bull, which is the
ostensible theme of the greatest of Celtic legendary tales, the "Tam
Bo Cuailgné," has a deeper meaning than appears on the surface. An
ancient piece of Aryan mythology is embedded in it. The Brown Bull
is the Celtic counterpart of the Hindu sky-deity, Indra, represented
in Hindu myth as a mighty bull, whose roaring is the thunder and who
lets loose the rains "like cows streaming forth to pasture." The
advance of the Western (Connacht) host for the capture of this bull
is emblematic of the onset of Night. The bull is defended by the
solar hero Cuchulain, who, however, is ultimately overthrown and the
bull is captured for a season. The two animals in the Celtic legend
probably typify the sky in different aspects. They are described
with a pomp and circumstance which shows that they are no common
beasts. Once, we are told, they were swineherds of the people of
Dana. "They had been successively transformed into two ravens, two
sea-monsters, two warriors, two demons, two worms or animalculae,
and finally into two kine." [Miss Hull, "The Cuchullin Saga," p.
Ixxii, where the solar theory of the Brown Bull is dealt with at
length.] The Brown Bull is described as having a back broad enough
for fifty children to play on ; when he is angry with his keeper he
stamps the
[203]
man thirty feet into the ground; he is likened to a sea wave, to
a boar, to a dragon, a lion, the writer heaping up images of
strength and savagery. We are therefore concerned with no ordinary
cattle-raid, but with a myth, the features of which are discernible
under the dressing given it by the fervid imagination of the unknown
Celtic bard who composed the "Tain," although the exact meaning of
every detail may be difficult to ascertain.
The first attempt of Maev to get possession of the bull was to
send an embassy to Dara to ask for the loan of him for a year, the
recompense offered being fifty heifers, besides the bull himself
back, and if Dara chose to settle in Connacht he should have as much
land there as he now possessed in Ulster, and a chariot worth thrice
seven cumals, [A cumal was the unit of value in Celtic
Ireland. It is mentioned as such by St. Patrick. It meant the price
of a woman-slave.] with the patronage and friendship of Maev.
Dara was at first delighted with the prospect, but tales were
borne to him of the chatter of Maev's messengers, and how they said
that if the bull was not yielded willingly it would be taken by
force; and he sent back a message of refusal and defiance. " 'Twas
known," said Maev, "the bull will not be yielded by fair means; he
shall now be won by foul." And so she sent messengers around on
every side to summon her hosts for the Raid.
The Hosting of Queen Maev
And there came all the mighty men of Connacht - first the seven
Mainés, sons of Ailell and Maev, each with his retinue; and Ket and
Anluan, sons of Maga, with thirty hundreds of armed men; and
yellow-haired Ferdia, with his company of Firbolgs, boisterous
giants
[204]
who delighted in war and in strong ale. And there came also the
allies of Maev - host of the men of Leinster, who so excelled the
rest in warlike skill that they were broken up and distributed among
the companies of Connacht, lest they should prove a danger to the
host; and Cormac son of Conor, with Fergus mac Roy and other exiles
from Ulster, who had revolted against Conor for his treachery to the
sons of Usna.
Ulster under the Curse
But before the host set forth towards Ulster Maev sent her
spies into the land to tell her of the preparations there being
made. And the spies brought back a wondrous tale, and one that
rejoiced the heart of Maev, for they said that the Debility of the
Ultonians [the curse laid on them by Macha. See p. 180] had
descended on the province. Conor the king lay in pangs at Emain
Macha, and his son Cuscrid in his island-fortress, and Owen Prince
of Ferney was helpless as a child; Celtchar, the huge grey warrior,
son of Uthecar Hornskin, and even Conall of the Victories, lay
moaning and writhing on their beds, and there was no hand in Ulster
that could lift a spear.
Prophetic Voices
Nevertheless Maev went to her chief Druid, and demanded of him
what her own lot in the war should be. And the Druid said only:
"Whoever comes back in safety, or comes not, thou thyself shalt
come." But on her journey back she saw suddenly standing before her
chariot-pole a young maiden with tresses of yellow hair that fell
below her knees, and clad in a mantle of green ; and with a shuttle
of gold she wove a fabric upon a loom. "Who art thou, girl ?" said
Maev,
[205]
"and what dost thou ?" "I am the prophetess, Fedelma, from the
Fairy Mound of Croghan," said the maid, "and I weave the four
provinces of Ireland together for the foray into Ulster." "How seest
thou our host ? " asked Maev. "I see them all be-crimsoned, red,"
replied the prophetess. "Yet the Ulster heroes are all in their
pangs - there is none that can lift a spear against us," said Maev.
"I see the host all be-crimsoned," said Fedelma. "I see a man of
small stature, but the hero's light is on his brow - a stripling
young and modest, but in battle a dragon; he is like unto Cuchulain
of Murthemney; he doth wondrous feats with his weapons ; by him your
slain shall lie thickly." [Cuchulain, as the son of the god Lugh,
was not subject to the curse of Macha which afflicted the other
Ultonians.]
At this the vision of the weaving maiden vanished, and Maev drove
homewards to Rathcroghan wondering at what she had seen and
heard.
Cuchulain Puts the Host under Geise
On the morrow the host set forth, Fergus mac Roy leading them,
and as they neared the confines of Ulster he bade them keep sharp
watch lest Cuchulain of Murthemney, who guarded the passes of Ulster
to the south, should fall upon them unawares. Now Cuchulain and his
father Sualtam [His reputed father, the mortal husband of Dectera]
were on the borders of the province, and Cuchulain, from a warning
Fergus had sent him, suspected the approach of a great host, and
bade Sualtam go northwards to Emania and warn the men of Ulster. But
Cuchulain himself would not stay there, for he said he had a tryst
to keep with a handmaid of the wife of Laery the bodach
(farmer), so he went into the forest, and there, standing on one
leg,
[206]
and using only one hand and one eye, he cut an oak sapling and
twisted it into a circular withe. On this he cut in Ogham characters
how the withe was made, and he put the host of Maev under geise
not to pass by that place till one of them had, under similar
conditions, made a similar withe ; "and I except my friend Fergus
mac Roy," he added, and wrote his name at the end. Then he placed
the withe round the pillar-stone of Ardcullin, and went his way to
keep his tryst with the handmaid. [In the Irish bardic literature,
as in the Homeric epics, chastity formed no part of the masculine
ideal either for gods or men.]
When the host of Maev came to Ardcullin, the withe upon the
pillar-stone was found and brought to Fergus to decipher it. There
was none amongst the host who could emulate the feat of Cuchulain,
and so they went into the wood and encamped for the night. A heavy
snowfall took place, and they were all in much distress, but next
day the sun rose gloriously, and over the white plain they marched
away into Ulster, counting the prohibition as extending only for one
night.
The Ford of the Forked Pole
Cuchulain now followed hard on their track, and as he went he
estimated by the tracks they had left the number of the host at
eighteen triucha cét (54,000 men). Circling round the
host, he now met them in front, and soon came upon two chariots
containing scouts sent ahead by Maev. These he slew, each man with
his driver, and having with one sweep of his sword cut a forked pole
of four prongs from the wood, he drove the pole deep into a
river-ford at the place called Athgowla, ["The Ford of the Forked
Pole"] and impaled on each prong a bloody head. When the host came
up they wondered and feared at
[207]
the sight, and Fergus declared that they were under geise
not to pass that ford till one of them had plucked out the pole
even as it was driven in, with the finger-tips of one hand. So
Fergus drove into the water to essay the feat, and seventeen
chariots were broken under him as he tugged it the pole, but at list
he tore it out; and as it was now late the host encamped upon the
spot. These devices of Cuchulain were intended to delay the invaders
until the Ulster men had recovered from their debility.
In the epic, as given in the Book of Leinster, and other ancient
sources, a long interlude now takes place in which Fergus explains
to Maev who it is - viz., "my little pupil Setanta " - who is thus
harrying the host, and his boyish deeds, some of which have been
already told in this narrative, are recounted.
The Charioteer of Orlam
The host proceeded on its way next day, and the next encounter
with Cuchulain showing. the hero in a kindlier mood. He hears a
noise of timber being cut, and going into a wood he finds there a
charioteer belonging to a son of Ailell and Maev cutting down
chariot-poles of holly. "For," says he, "we have damaged our
chariots sadly in chasing that furious deer, Cuchulain." Cuchulain -
who, it must be remembered, was at ordinary times a slight and
unimposing figure, though in battle he dilated in size and underwent
a fearful distortion, symbolic of Berserker fury - helps the driver
in his work. "Shall I," he asks, "cut the poles or trim them for
thee?" "Do thou the trimming," says the driver. Cuchulain takes the
poles by the tops and draws them against the set of the branches
through his toes, and then runs his fingers down them the same way,
and gives them over as smooth and
[208]
polished as if they were planed by a carpenter. The driver stares
at him. "I doubt this work I set thee to is not thy proper work," he
says. "Who art thou then at all?" "I am that Cuchulain of whom thou
spakest but now " "Surely I am but a dead man," says the driver. "
Nay," replies Cuchulain, "I slay not drivers nor messengers nor men
unarmed. But run, tell thy master Orlam that Cuchulain is about to
visit him." The driver runs off; but Cuchulain outstrips him, meets
Orlam first, and strikes off his head. For a moment the host of Maev
see him as he shakes this bloody trophy before them ; then he
disappears from sight - it is the first glimpse they have caught of
their persecutor.
The Battle-Frenzy of Cuchulain
A number of scattered episodes now follow. The host of Maev
spreads out and devastates the territories of Bregia and of
Murthemney, but they cannot advance further into Ulster. Cuchulain
hovers about them continually, slaying them by twos and threes, and
no man knows where he will swoop next. Maev herself is awed when, by
the bullets of an unseen slinger, a squirrel and a pet bird are
killed as they sit upon her shoulders. Afterwards, as Cuchulain's
wrath grows fiercer, he descends with supernatural might upon whole
companies of the Connacht host, and hundreds fall at his onset. The
characteristic distortion or riastradh which seized him in
his battle-frenzy is then described. He became a fearsome and
multiform creature such as never was known before. Every particle of
him quivered like a bulrush in a running stream. His calves and
heels and hams shifted to the front, and his feet and knees to the
back, and the muscles of his neck stood out like the head of a young
child. One
[209]
eye was engulfed deep in his head, the other protruded, his mouth
met his ears, foam poured from his jaws like the fleece of a
three-year-old wether. The beats of his heart sounded like the roars
of a lion as he rushes on his prey. A light blazed above his head,
and "his hair became tangled about as it had been the branches of a
red thorn-bush stuffed into the gap of a fence …
Taller, thicker, more rigid, longer than the mast of a great ship
was the perpendicular jet of dusky blood which out of his scalp's
very central point shot upwards and was there scattered to the four
cardinal points, whereby was formed a magic mist of gloom resembling
the smoky pall that drapes a regal dwelling, what time a king at
nightfall of a winter's day draws near to it." [I quote from
Standish Hayes O'Grady's translation, in Miss Hull's "Cuchullin
Saga."]
Such was the imagery by which Gaelic writers conveyed the idea of
superhuman frenzy. At the sight of Cuchulain in his paroxysm it is
said that once a hundred of Maev's warriors fell dead from
horror.
The Compact of the Ford
Maev now tried to tempt him by great largesse to desert the cause
of Ulster, and had a colloquy with him, the two standing on opposite
sides of a glen across which they talked. She scanned him closely,
and was struck by his slight and boyish appearance. She failed to
move him from his loyalty to Ulster, and death descends more thickly
than ever upon the Connacht host ; the men are afraid to move out
for plunder save in twenties and thirties, and at night the stones
from Cuchulain's sling whistle continually through the camp,
braining or maiming. At last, through the mediation of Fergus, an
agreement was come to. Cuchulain undertook not to harry the host
provided they would
[210]
only send against him one champion at a time, whom Cuchulain
would meet in battle at the ford of the River Dee, which is now
called the Ford of Ferdia. [Ath Fherdia, which is pronounced
and now spelt "Ardee." It is in Co. Louth, at the southern border of
the Plain of Murthemney, which was Cuchulain's territory.] While
each right was in progress the host might move on, but when it was
ended they must encamp till the morrow morning. "Better to lose one
man a day than a hundred," said Maev, and the pact was made.
Fergus and Cuchulain
Several single combats are then narrated, in which Cuchulain is
always a victor. Maev even persuades Fergus to go against him, but
Fergus and Cuchulain will on no account right each other, and
Cuchulain, by agreement with Fergus, pretends to fly before him, on
Fergus's promise that he will do the same for Cuchulain when
required. How this pledge was kept we shall see later.
Capture of the Brown Bull
During one of Cuchulain's duels with a famous champion,
Natchrantal, Maev, with a third of her army, makes a sudden foray
into Ulster and penetrates as far as Dunseverick, on the northern
coast, plundering and ravaging as they go. The Brown Bull, who was
originally at Quelgny (Co. Down), has been warned at an earlier
stage by the Morrigan [see p. 126] to withdraw himself, and he has
taken refuge, with his herd of cows, in a glen of Slievegallion, Co.
Armagh. The raiders of Maev find him there, and drive him off with
the herd in triumph, passing Cuchulain as they return. Cuchulain
slays the leader of the escort - Buic son of Banblai - but
cannot
[211]
rescue the Bull, and "this," it is said, "was the greatest
affront put on Cuchulain during the course of the raid."
The Morrigan
The raid ought now to have ceased, for its object has been
attained, but by this time the hostings of the four southern
provinces [In ancient Ireland there were five provinces, Munster
being counted as two, or, as some ancient authorities explain
it, the High King's territory in Meath and Westmeath being reckoned
a separate province.] had gathered together under Maev for the
plunder of Ulster, and Cuchulain remained still the solitary warder
of the marches. Nor did Maev keep her agreement, for bands of twenty
warriors at a time were loosed against him and he had much ado to
defend himself. The curious episode of the fight with the Morrigan
now occurs. A young woman clad in a mantle of many colours appears
to Cuchulain, telling him that she is a king's daughter, attracted
by the tales of his great exploits, and she has come to offer him
her love. Cuchulain tells her rudely that he is worn and harassed
with war and has no mind to concern himself with women. " It shall
go hard with thee," then said the maid, "when thou hast to do with
men, and I shall be about thy feet as an eel in the bottom of the
Ford." Then she and her chariot vanished from his sight and he saw
but a crow sitting on a branch of a tree, and he knew that he had
spoken with the Morrigan.
The Fight with Loch
The next champion sent against him by Maev was Loch son of
Mofebis. To meet this hero it is said that Cuchulain had to stain
his chin with blackberry juice so as to simulate a beard, lest Loch
should disdain to do combat with a boy. So they fought in the Ford,
and the
[212]
Morrigan came against him in the guise of a white heifer with red
ears, but Cuchulain fractured her eye with a cast of his spear. Then
she came swimming up the river like a black eel and twisted herself
about his legs, and ere he could rid himself of her Loch wounded
him. Then she attacked him as a grey wolf, and again, before he
could subdue her, he was wounded by Loch. At this his battle-fury
took hold of him and he drove the Gae Bolg against Loch, splitting
his heart in two. "Suffer me to rise," said Loch, "that I may fall
on my face on thy side of the ford, and not backward toward the men
of Erin." "It is a warrior's boon thou askest," said Cuchulain, "and
it is granted." So Loch died; and a great despondency, it is said,
now fell upon Cuchulain, for he was outwearied with continued
fighting, and sorely wounded, and he had never slept since the
beginning of the raid, save leaning upon his spear; and he sent his
charioteer, Laeg, to see if he could rouse the men of Ulster to come
to his aid at last.
Lugh the Protector
But as he lay at evening by the grave-mound of Lerga in gloom and
dejection, watching the camp-fires of the vast army encamped over
against him and the glitter of their innumerable spears, he saw
coming through the host a tall and comely warrior who strode
impetuously forward, and none of the companies through which he
passed turned his head to look at him or seemed to see him. He wore
a tunic of silk embroidered with gold, and a green mantle fastened
with a silver brooch; in one hand was a black shield bordered with
silver and two spears in the other. The stranger came to Cuchulain
and spoke gently and sweetly to him of his long toil and waking, and
his sore wounds, and said in the end:
"Sleep now, Cuchulain, by the grave in Lerga; sleep
[213]
and slumber deeply for three days, and for that time I will take
thy place and defend the Ford against the host of Maev." Then
Cuchulain sank into a profound slumber and trance, and the stranger
laid healing balms of magical power to his wounds so that he awoke
whole and refreshed, and for the time that Cuchulain slept the
stranger held the Ford against the host. And Cuchulain knew that
this was Lugh his father, who had come from among the People of Dana
to help his son through his hour of gloom and despair.
The Sacrifice of the Boy Corps
But still the men of Ulster lay helpless. Now there was at Emain
Macha a band of thrice fifty boys, the sons of all the chieftains of
the provinces, who were there being bred up in arms and in noble
ways, and these suffered not from the curse of Macha, for it fell
only on grown men. But when they heard of the sore straits in which
Cuchulain, their playmate not long ago, was lying they put on their
light armour and took their weapons and went forth for the honour of
Ulster, under Conor's young son, Follaman, to aid him. And Follaman
vowed that he would never return to Emania without the diadem of
Ailell as a trophy. Three times they drove against the host of Maev,
and thrice their own number fell before them, but in the end they
were overwhelmed and slain, not one escaping alive.
The Carnage of Murthemney
This was done as Cuchulain lay in his trance, and when he awoke,
refreshed and well, and heard what had been done, his frenzy came
upon him and he leaped into his war-chariot and drove furiously
round and round the host of Maev. And the chariot ploughed the earth
till the ruts were like the ramparts of a
[214]
fortress, and the scythes upon its wheels caught and mangled the
bodies of the crowded host till they were piled like a wall around
the camp, and as Cuchulain shouted in his wrath the demons and
goblins and wild things in Erin yelled in answer, so that with the
terror and the uproar the host of men heaved and surged hither and
thither, and many perished from each other's weapons, and many from
horror and fear. And this was the great carnage, called the Carnage
of Murthemney, that Cuchulain did to avenge the boy-corps of Emania
; six score and ten princes were then slain of the host of Maev,
besides horses and women and wolf-dogs and common folk without
number. It is said that Lugh mac Ethlinn fought there by his
son.
The Clan Calatin
Next the men of Erin resolved to send against Cuchulain, in
single combat, the Clan Calatin. ["Clan" in Gaelic means children or
offspring. Clan Calatin = the sons of Calatin] Now Calatin was a
wizard, and he and his seven-and-twenty sons formed, as it were, but
one being, the sons being organs of their father, and what any one
of them did they all did alike. They were all poisonous, so that any
weapon which one of them used would kill in nine days the man who
was but grazed by it. When this multiform creature met Cuchulain
each hand of it hurled a spear at once, but Cuchulain caught the
twenty-eight spears on his shield and not one of them drew blood.
Then he drew his sword to lop off the spears that bristled from his
shield, but as he did so the Clan Calatin rushed upon him and flung
him down, thrusting his face into the gravel. At this Cuchulain gave
a great cry of distress at the unequal combat, and one of
[215]
the Ulster exile; Fiacha son of Firaba, who was with the host of
Maev, and was looking on at the fight, could not endure to see the
plight of the champion, and he drew his sword and with one stroke he
lopped off the eight-and-twenty hands that were grinding the face of
Cuchulain into the gravel of the Ford. Then Cuchulain arose and
hacked the Clan Calatin into fragments, so that none survived to
tell Maev what Fiacha had done, else had he and his thirty hundred
followers of Clan Rury heen given by Maev to the edge of the
sword.
Ferdia to the Fray
Cuchulain had now overcome all the mightiest of Maev's men, save
only the mightiest of them all after Fergus, Ferdia son of Daman.
And because Ferdia was the old friend and fellow pupil of Cuchulain
he had never gone out against him; but now Maev begged him to go,
and he would not. Then she offered him her daughter, Findabair of
the Fair Eyebrows, to wife, if he would face Cuchulain at the Ford,
but he would not. At last she bade him go, lest the poets and
satirists of Erin should make verses on him and put him to open
shame, and then in wrath and sorrow he consented to go, and bade his
charioteer make ready for to-morrow's fray. Then was gloom among all
his people when they heard of that, for they knew that if Cuchulain
and their master met, one of them would return alive no more.
Very early in the morning Ferdia drove to the Ford, and lay down
there on the cushions and skins of the chariot and slept till
Cuchulain should come. Not till it was full daylight did Ferdia's
charioteer hear the thunder of Cuchulain's war-car approaching, and
then he woke his master, and the two friends faced each
[216]
other across the Ford. And when they had greeted each other
Cuchulain said: "It is not thou, O Ferdia, who shouldst have come to
do battle with me. When we were with Skatha did we not go side by
side in every battle, through every wood and wilderness ? were we
not heart-companions, comrades, in the feast and the assembly ? did
we not share one bed and one deep slumber ?" But Ferdia replied : "O
Cuchulain, thou of the wondrous feats, though we have studied poetry
and science together, and though I have heard thee recite our deeds
of friendship, yet it is my hand that shall wound thee. I bid thee
remember not our comradeship, O Hound of Ulster; it shall not avail
thee, it shall not avail thee."
They then debated with what weapons they should begin the fight,
and Ferdia reminded Cuchulain of the art of casting small javelins
that they had learned from Skatha, and they agreed to begin with
these. Back-wards and forwards, then, across the Ford, hummed the
light javelins like bees on a summer's day, but when noonday had
come not one weapon had pierced the defence of either champion. Then
they took to the heavy missile spears, and now at last blood began
to flow, for each champion wounded the other time and again. At last
the day came to its close. "Let us cease now," said Ferdia, and
Cuchulain agreed. Each then threw his arms to his charioteer, and
the friends embraced and kissed each other three times, and went to
their rest. Their horses were in the same paddock, their drivers
warmed themselves over the same fire, and the heroes sent each other
food and drink and healing herbs for their wounds.
Next day they betook themselves again to the Ford, and this time,
because Ferdia had the choice of weapons the day before, he bade
Cuchulain take it
[217]
now. [Together with much that is wild and barbaric in this Irish
epic of the "Tain" the reader will be struck by the ideals of
courtesy and gentleness which not infrequently come to light in it.
It must be remembered that, as Mr. A. H. Leahy points out in his "
Heroic Romances of Ireland," the legend of the Raid of Quelgny is,
at the very latest, a century earlier than all other known romances
of chivalry Welsh or Continental. It is found in the "Book of
Leinster," a manuscript of the twelfth century, as well as in
other sources, and was doubtless considerably older than the date of
its transcription there. "The whole thing," says Mr. Leahy, "stands
at the very beginning of the literature of modern Europe."]
Cuchulain chose then the heavy, broad-bladed spears for close
fighting, and with them they fought from the chariots till the sun
went down, and drivers and horses were weary, and the body of each
hero was torn with wounds. Then at last they gave over, and threw
away their weapons. And they kissed each other as before, and as
before they shared all things at night, and slept peacefully till
the morning.
When the third day of the combat came Ferdia wore an evil and
lowering look, and Cuchulain reproached him for coming out in battle
against his comrade for the bribe of a fair maiden, even Findabair,
whom Maev had offered to every champion and to Cuchulain himself if
the Ford might be won thereby; but Ferdia said : "Noble Hound, had I
not faced thee when summoned, my troth would be broken, and there
would be shame on me in Rathcroghan." It is now the turn of Ferdia
to choose the weapons, and they betake themselves to their " heavy,
hard-smiting swords, and though they hew from each other's thighs
and shoulders great cantles of flesh, neither can prevail over the
other, and at last night ends the combat. This time they parted from
each other in heaviness and gloom, and there was no interchange of
friendly acts, and their drivers and horses slept apart. The
passions of the warriors had now risen to a grim sternness.
[218]
Death of Ferdia
On the fourth day Ferdia knew the contest would be decided, and
he armed himself with especial care. Next his skin was a tunic of
striped silk bordered with golden spangles, and over that hung an
apron of brown leather. Upon his belly he laid a flat stone, large
as a millstone, and over that a strong, deep apron of iron, for he
dreaded that Cuchulain would use the Gae Bolg that day. And he put
on his head his crested helmet studded with carbuncle and inlaid
with enamels, and girt on his golden-hilted sword, and on his left
arm hung his broad shield with its fifty bosses of bronze. Thus he
stood by the Ford, and as he waited he tossed up his weapons and
caught them again and did many wonderful feats, playing with his
mighty weapons as a juggler plays with apples; and Cuchulain,
watching him, said to Laeg, his driver "If I give ground to-day, do
thou reproach and mock me and spur me on to valour, and praise and
hearten me if I do well, for I shall have need of all my
courage.
"O Ferdia," said Cuchulain when they met, "what shall be our
weapons to-day ?" "It is thy choice today," said Ferdia. "Then let
it be all or any," said Cuchulain, and Ferdia was cast down at
hearing this, but he said, "So be it," and thereupon the fight
began. Till midday they fought with spears, and none could gain any
advantage over the other. Then Cuchulain drew his sword and sought
to smite Ferdia over the rim of his shield ; but the giant Firbolg
flung him off. Thrice Cuchulain leaped high into the air,
seeking to strike Ferdia over his shield, but each time as he
descended Ferdia caught him upon the shield and flung him off like a
little child into the Ford. And Laeg mocked him, crying : "He casts
thee off as a river flings
[219]
its foam, he grinds thee as a millstone grinds a corn of wheat ;
thou elf, never call thyself a warrior."
Then at last Cuchulain's frenzy came upon him, and he dilated
giant-like, till he overtopped Ferdia, and the hero-light blazed
about his head. In close contact the two were interlocked, whirling
and trampling, while the demons and goblins and unearthly things of
the glens screamed from the edges of their swords, and the waters of
the Ford recoiled in terror from them, so that for a while they
fought on dry land in the midst of the riverbed. And now Ferdia
found Cuchulain a moment oft his guard, and smote him with the edge
of the sword, and it sank deep into his flesh, and all the river ran
red with his blood. And he pressed Cuchulain sorely after that,
hewing and thrusting so that Cuchulain could endure it no longer,
and he shouted to Laeg to fling him the Gae BoIg. When Ferdia heard
that he lowered his shield to guard himself from below, and
Cuchulain drove his spear over the rim of the shield and through his
breastplate into his chest. And Ferdia raised his shield again, but
in that moment Cuchulain seized the Gae Bolg in his toes and drove
it upward against Ferdia, and it pierced through the iron apron and
burst in three the millstone that guarded him, and deep into his
body it passed, so that every crevice and cranny of him was filled
with its barbs. " 'Tis enough," cried Ferdia; " I have my death of
that. It is an ill deed that I fall by thy hand, O Cuchulain."
Cuchulain seized him as he fell, and carried him northward across
the Ford, that he might die on the further side of it, and not on
the side of the men of Erin. Then he laid him down, and a faintness
seized Cuchulain, and he was falling, when Laeg cried : "Rise up,
Cuchulain, for the host of Erin will be upon us. No single combat
will they give after Ferdia has fallen." But Cuchulain said: "Why
should
[220]
I rise again, O my servant, now he that lieth here has fallen by
my hand ?" and he fell in a swoon like death. And the host of Maev
with tumult and rejoicing, with tossing of spears and shouting of
war-songs, poured across the border into Ulster.
But before they left the Ford they took the body of Ferdia and
laid it in a grave, and built a mound over him and set up a
pillar-stone with his name and lineage in Ogham. And from
Ulster came certain of the friends of Cuchulain, and they bore him
away into Murthemney, where they washed him and bathed his wounds in
the streams, and his kin among the Danaan Folk cast magical herbs
into the rivers for his healing. But he lay there in weakness and in
stupor for many days.
The Rousing of Ulster
Now Sualtam, the father of Cuchulain, had taken his son's horse,
the Grey of Macha, and ridden off again to see if by any means he
might rouse the men of Ulster to defend the province. And he went
crying abroad "The men of Ulster are being slain, the women carried
captive, the kine driven ! " Yet they stared on him stupidly, as
though they knew not of what he spake. At last he came to Emania,
and there were Cathbad the Druid and Conor the King, and all their
nobles and lords, and Sualtam cried aloud to them : "The men of
Ulster are being slain, the women carried captive, the kine driven ;
and Cuchulain alone holds the gap of Ulster against the four
provinces of Erin. Arise and defend yourselves I" But Cathbad only
said "Death were the due of him who thus disturbs the King"; and
Conor said : " Yet it is true what the man says"; and the lords of
Ulster wagged their heads and murmured: "True indeed it is."
Then Sualtam wheeled round his horse in anger and
[221]
was about to depart when, with a start which the Grey made, his
neck fell against the sharp rim of the shield upon his back, and it
shore off his head, and the head fell on the ground. Yet still it
cried its message as it lay, and at last Conor bade put it on a
pillar that it might be at rest. But it still went on crying and
exhorting, and at length into the clouded mind of the king the truth
began to penetrate, and the glazed eyes of the warriors began to
glow, and slowly the spell of Macha's curse was lifted from their
minds and bodies. Then Conor arose and swore a mighty oath, saying
"The heavens are above us and the earth beneath us, and the sea is
round about us; and surely, unless the heavens fall on us and the
earth gape to swallow us up, and the sea overwhelm the earth, I will
restore every woman to her hearth, and every cow to its byre."
[Another instance of the survival of the oath formula recited by the
Celtic envoys to Alexander the Great. See p.23.] His Druid
proclaimed that the hour was propitious, and the king bade his
messengers go forth on every side and summon Ulster to arms, and he
named to them warriors long dead as well as the living, for the
cloud of the curse still lingered in his brain.
With the curse now departed from them the men of Ulster flocked
joyfully to the summons, and on every hand there was grinding of
spears and swords, and buckling on of armour and harnessing of
war-chariots for the rising-out of the province. ["Rising-out" is
the vivid expression wed by Irish writers for a clan or territory
going on the war-path. "Hosting" is also used in a similar sense.]
One host came under Conor the King and Keltchar, son of Uthecar
Hornskin, from Emania southwards, and another from the west along
the very track of the host of Maev. And Conor's host fell upon eight
score of
[222]
the men of Erin in Meath, who were carrying away a great booty of
women-captives, and they slew every man of the eight score and
rescued the women. Maev and her host then fell back toward
Connacht, but when they reached Slemon Midi, the Hill of Slane, in
Meath, the Ulster bands joined each other there and prepared to give
battle. Maev sent her messenger mac Roth to view the Ulster host on
the Plain of Garach and report upon it. Mac Roth came back with an
awe-striking description of what he beheld. When he first looked he
saw the plain covered with deer and other wild beasts. These,
explains Fergus, had been driven out of the forests by the advancing
host of the Ulster men. The second time mac Roth looked he saw a
mist that filled the valleys, the hill-tops standing above it like
islands. Out of the mist there came thunder and flashes of light,
and a wind that nearly threw him off his feet. "What is this ?" asks
Maev, and Fergus tells her that the mist is the deep breathing of
the warriors as they march, and the light is the flashing of their
eyes, and the thunder is the clangour of their war-cars and the dash
of their weapons as they go to the fight "They think they will never
reach it," says Fergus. "We have warriors to meet them," says Maev.
"You will need that," says Fergus, "for in all Ireland, nay, in all
the Western world, to Greece and Scythia and the Tower of Bregon
[see p. 130] and the Island of Gades, there live not who can face
the men of Ulster in their wrath."
A long passage then follows describing the appearance and
equipment of each of the Ulster chiefs.
The Battle of Garach
The battle was joined on the Plain of Garach, in Meath. Fergus,
wielding a two-handed sword, the
[223]
sword which, it was said, when swung in battle made circles like
the arch of a rainbow, swept down whole ranks of the Ulster men at
each blow, [the sword of Fergus was a fairy weapon called the
Caladcholg (hard dinter), a name of which Arthur's more
famous "Excalibur" is a Latinised corruption] and the fierce Maev
charged thrice into the heart of the enemy.
Fergus met Conor the King, and smote him on his golden-bordered
shield, but Cormac, the king's son, begged for his father's life.
Fergus then turned on Con all of the Victories.
"Too hot art thou," said Conall, "against thy people and thy race
for a wanton." [the reference is to Deirdre] Fergus then turned from
slaying the Ulstermen, but in his battle-fury he smote among the
hills with his rainbow-sword, and struck off the tops of the three
Maela of Meath, so that they are flat-topped (mael) to
this day.
Cuchulain in his stupor heard the crash of Fergus's blows, and
coming slowly to himself he asked of Laeg what it meant. "It is the
sword-play of Fergus," said Laeg. Then he sprang up, and his body
dilated so that the wrappings and swathings that had been bound on
him flew off, and he armed himself and rushed into the battle. Here
he met Fergus. "Turn hither, Fergus," he shouted; "I will wash thee
as foam in a pool, I will go over thee as the tail goes over a cat,
I will smite thee as a mother smites her infant." "Who speaks thus
to me ?" cried Fergus. "Cuchulain mac Sualtam; and now do thou avoid
me as thou art pledged." [see p. 211]
"I have promised even that," said Fergus, and then went out of
the battle, and with him the men of Leinster and the men of Munster,
leaving Maev with her seven sons and the hosting of Connacht
alone.
[224]
It was midday when Cuchulain came into the fight; when the
evening sun was shining through the leaves of the trees his
war-chariot was but two wheels and a handful of shattered ribs, and
the host of Connacht was in full flight towards the border.
Cuchulain overtook Maev, who crouched under her chariot and
entreated grace. "I am not wont to slay women," said Cuchulain, and
he protected her till she had crossed the Shannon at Athlone.
The Fight of the Bulls
But the Brown Bull of Quelgny, that Macv had sent into Connacht
by a circuitous way, met the white-horned Bull of Ailell on the
Plain of Aei, and the two beasts fought ; but the Brown Bull quickly
slew the other, and tossed his fragments about the land so that
pieces of him were strewn from Rathcroghan to Tara; and then
careered madly about till he fell dead, bellowing and vomiting black
gore, at the Ridge of the Bull, between Ulster and Iveagh. Ailell
and Maev made peace with Ulster for seven years, and the Ulster men
returned home to Emain Macha with great glory.
Thus ends the "Tain Bo Cuailgnè," or Cattle Raid of Quelgny; and
it was written out in the "Book of Leinster" in the year 1150 by the
hand of Finn mac Gorman, Bishop of Kildare, and at the end is
written "A blessing on all such as faithfully shall recite the
"Tain" as it stands here, and shall not give it in any other
form.
Cuchulain in Fairyland
One of the strangest tales in Celtic legend tells how Cuchulain,
as he lay asleep after hunting, against a pillar-stone, had a vision
of two Danaan women who came to him armed with rods and alternately
beat
[225]
him till he was all but dead, and he could not lift a hand to
defend himself. Next day, and for a year thereafter, he lay in sore
sickness, and none could heal him.
Then a man whom none knew came and told him to go to the
pillar-stone where he had seen the vision, and he would learn what
was to be done for his recovery. There he found a Danaan woman in a
green mantle, one of those who had chastised him, and she told him
that Fand, the Pearl of Beauty, wife of Mananan the Sea-god, had set
her love on him; and she was at enmity with her husband Mananan; and
her realm was besieged by three demon kings, against whom
Cuchulain's help was sought, and the price of his help would be the
love of Fand. Laeg, the charioteer, was then sent by Cuchulain to
report upon Fand and her message. He entered Fairyland, which lies
beyond a lake across which he passed in a magic boat of bronze, and
came home with a report of Fand's surpassing beauty and the wonders
of the kingdom; and Cuchulain then betook himself thither. Here he
had a battle in a dense mist with the demons, who are described as
resembling sea-waves - no doubt we are to understand that they are
the folk of the angry husband, Mananan. Then he abode with Fand,
enjoying all the delights of Fairyland for a month, after which he
bade her farewell, and appointed a trysting-place on earth, the
Strand of the Yew Tree, where she was to meet him.
Fand, Emer, and Cuchulain
But Emer heard of the tryst; and though not commonly disturbed at
Cuchulain's numerous infidelities, she came on this occasion with
fifty of her maidens armed with sharp knives to slay Fand. Cuchulain
and Fand perceive their chariots from afar, and
[226]
the armed angry women with golden clasps shining on their
breasts, and he prepares to protect his mistress. He addresses Emer
in a curious poem, describing the beauty and skill and magical
powers of Fand- " There is nothing the spirit can wish for that she
has not got." Emer replies : "In good sooth, the lady to whom thou
dost cling seems in no way better than I am, but the new is ever
sweet and the well-known is sour ; thou hast all the wisdom of the
time, Cuchulain Once we dwelled in honour together, and still might
dwell if I could find favour in thy sight." "By my word thou dost,"
said Cuchulain, "and shalt find it so long as I live."
"Give me up," then said Fand. But Emer said: "Nay, it is more
fitting that I be the deserted one. "Not so," said Fand; "it is I
who must go. "And an eagerness for lamentation seized upon Fand, and
her soul was great within her, for it was shame for her to be
deserted and straightway to return to her home; moreover, the mighty
love that she bore to Cuchulain was tumultuous in her." [S A. H.
Leahy's translation, " Heroic Romances of Ireland," vol.1.]
But Mananan, the Son of the Sea, knew of her sorrow and her
shame, and he came to her aid, none seeing him but she alone, and
she welcomed him in a mystic song. "Wilt thou return to me ?" said
Mananan, "or abide with Cuchulain ?" "In truth," said Fand, "neither
of ye is better or nobler than the other, but I will go with thee,
Mananan, for thou hast no other mate worthy of thee, but that
Cuchulain has in Emer."
So she went to Mananan, and Cuchulain, who did not see the god,
asked Laeg what was happening. "Fand," he replied, " is going away
with the Son of the Sea, since she hath not been pleasing in thy
sight."
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Then Cuchulain bounded into the air and fled from the place, and
lay a long time refusing meat and drink, until at last the Druids
gave him a draught of forgetfulness; and Mananan, it is said, shook
his cloak between Cuchulain and Fand, so that they might meet no
more throughout eternity. [the cloak of Mananan (see p. 125)
typifies the sea - here, in its dividing and estranging power.]
The Vengeance of Maev
Though Maev made peace with Ulster after the battle of Garech she
vowed the death of Cuchulain for all the shame and loss he had
brought upon her and on her province, and she sought how she might
take her vengeance upon him.
Now the wife of the wizard Calatin, whom Cuchulain slew at the
Ford, brought forth, after her husband's death, six children at a
birth, namely, three sons and three daughters. Misshapen, hideous,
poisonous, born for evil were they; and Maev, hearing of these, sent
them to learn the arts of magic, not in Ireland only, but in Alba;
and even as far as Babylon they went to seek for hidden knowledge,
and they came back mighty in their craft, and she loosed them
against Cuchulain.
Cuchulain and Blanid
Besides the Clan Calatin, Cuchulain had also other foes, namely
Erc, the King of Ireland, son to Cairpre, whom Cuchulain had slain
in battle, and Lewy son of Curoi, King of Munster.[this Curoi
appears in various tales of the Ultonian Cycle with attributes which
show that he was no mortal king, but a local deity.] For Curoi's
wife, Blanid, had set her love on Cuchulain, and she bade him come
and take her from Curoi's dūn, and watch his time to
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attack the dūn when he would see the stream that flowed from it
turn white. So Cuchulain and his men waited in a wood hard by till
Blanid judged that the time was fit, and she then poured into the
stream the milk of three cows. Then Cuchulain attacked the dūn, and
took it by surprise, and slew Curoi, and bore away the woman. But
Fercartna, the bard of Curoi, went with them and showed no sign,
till, finding him-self near Blanid as she stood near the cliff-edge
of Bear; he flung his arms round her, and leaped with her over the
cliff, and so they perished, and Curoi was avenged upon his
wife.
All these now did Maev by secret messages and by taunts and
exhortations arouse against Cuchulain, and they waited till they
heard that the curse of Macha was again heavy on the men of UIster,
and then they assembled a host and marched to the Plain of
Murthemney.
The Madness of Cuchulain
And first the Children of Calatin caused a horror and a
despondency to fall upon the mind of Cuchulain, and out of the
hooded thistles and puff-balls and fluttering leaves of the forest
they made the semblance of armed battalions marching against
Murthemney, and Cuchulain seemed to see on every side the smoke of
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