A long, long time ago there lived
in a little hut in the midst of a bare, brown, lonely
moor an old woman and a young girl. The old woman
was withered, sour-tempered, and dumb. The young
girl was as sweet and as fresh as an opening rosebud,
and her voice was as musical as the whisper of a stream
in the woods in the hot days of summer. The little
hut, made of branches woven closely together, was shaped
like a beehive. In the centre of the hut a fire
burned night and day from year’s end to year’s
end, though it was never touched or tended by human
hand. In the cold days and nights of winter it
gave out light and heat that made the hut cosy and
warm, but in the summer nights and days it gave out
light only. With their heads to the wall of the
hut and their feet towards the fire were two sleeping-couches one
of plain woodwork, in which slept the old woman; the
other was Finola’s. It was of bog-oak,
polished as a looking-glass, and on it were carved
flowers and birds of all kinds, that gleamed and shone
in the light of the fire. This couch was fit
for a princess, and a princess Finola was, though
she did not know it herself.
Outside the hut the bare, brown, lonely
moor stretched for miles on every side, but towards
the east it was bounded by a range of mountains that
looked to Finola blue in the daytime, but which put
on a hundred changing colours as the sun went down.
Nowhere was a house to be seen, nor a tree, nor a
flower, nor sign of any living thing. From morning
till night, nor hum of bee, nor song of bird, nor voice
of man, nor any sound fell on Finola’s ear.
When the storm was in the air the great waves thundered
on the shore beyond the mountains, and the wind shouted
in the glens; but when it sped across the moor it
lost its voice, and passed as silently as the dead.
At first the silence frightened Finola, but she got
used to it after a time, and often broke it by talking
to herself and singing.
The only other person beside the old
woman Finola ever saw was a dumb dwarf who, mounted
on a broken-down horse, came once a month to the hut,
bringing with him a sack of corn for the old woman
and Finola. Although he couldn’t speak
to her, Finola was always glad to see the dwarf and
his old horse, and she used to give them cake made
with her own white hands. As for the dwarf he
would have died for the little princess, he was so
much in love with her, and often and often his heart
was heavy and sad as he thought of her pining away
in the lonely moor.
It chanced that he came one day, and
she did not, as usual, come out to greet him.
He made signs to the old woman, but she took up a stick
and struck him, and beat his horse and drove him away;
but as he was leaving he caught a glimpse of Finola
at the door of the hut, and saw that she was crying.
This sight made him so very miserable that he could
think of nothing else but her sad face that he had
always seen so bright, and he allowed the old horse
to go on without minding where he was going.
Suddenly he heard a voice saying: “It is
time for you to come.”
The dwarf looked, and right before
him, at the foot of a green hill, was a little man
not half as big as himself, dressed in a green jacket
with brass buttons, and a red cap and tassel.
“It is time for you to come,”
he said the second time; “but you are welcome,
anyhow. Get off your horse and come in with me,
that I may touch your lips with the wand of speech,
that we may have a talk together.”
The dwarf got off his horse and followed
the little man through a hole in the side of a green
hill. The hole was so small that he had to go
on his hands and knees to pass through it, and when
he was able to stand he was only the same height as
the little fairyman. After walking three or four
steps they were in a splendid room, as bright as day.
Diamonds sparkled in the roof as stars sparkle in the
sky when the night is without a cloud. The roof
rested on golden pillars, and between the pillars
were silver lamps, but their light was dimmed by that
of the diamonds. In the middle of the room was
a table, on which were two golden plates and two silver
knives and forks, and a brass bell as big as a hazelnut,
and beside the table were two little chairs covered
with blue silk and satin.
“Take a chair,” said the
fairy, “and I will ring for the wand of speech.”
The dwarf sat down, and the fairyman
rang the little brass bell, and in came a little weeny
dwarf no bigger than your hand.
“Bring me the wand of speech,”
said the fairy, and the weeny dwarf bowed three times
and walked out backwards, and in a minute he returned,
carrying a little black wand with a red berry at the
top of it, and, giving it to the fairy, he bowed three
times and walked out backwards as he had done before.
The little man waved the rod three
times over the dwarf, and struck him once on the right
shoulder and once on the left shoulder, and then touched
his lips with the red berry, and said: “Speak!”
The dwarf spoke, and he was so rejoiced
at hearing the sound of his own voice that he danced
about the room.
“Who are you at all, at all?” said he
to the fairy.
“Who is yourself?” said
the fairy. “But come, before we have any
talk let us have something to eat, for I am sure you
are hungry.”
Then they sat down to table, and the
fairy rang the little brass bell twice, and the weeny
dwarf brought in two boiled snails in their shells,
and when they had eaten the snails he brought in a
dormouse, and when they had eaten the dormouse he
brought in two wrens, and when they had eaten the
wrens he brought in two nuts full of wine, and they
became very merry, and the fairyman sang “Cooleen
dhas,” and the dwarf sang “The little
blackbird of the glen.”
“Did you ever hear the ‘Foggy Dew?’”
said the fairy.
“No,” said the dwarf.
“Well, then, I’ll give it to you; but
we must have some more wine.”
And the wine was brought, and he sang
the “Foggy Dew,” and the dwarf said it
was the sweetest song he had ever heard, and that the
fairyman’s voice would coax the birds off the
bushes.
“You asked me who I am?” said the fairy.
“I did,” said the dwarf.
“And I asked you who is yourself?”
“You did,” said the dwarf.
“And who are you, then?”
“Well, to tell the truth, I
don’t know,” said the dwarf, and he blushed
like a rose.
“Well, tell me what you know about yourself.”
“I remember nothing at all,”
said the dwarf, “before the day I found myself
going along with a crowd of all sorts of people to
the great fair of the Liffey. We had to pass
by the king’s palace on our way, and as we were
passing the king sent for a band of jugglers to come
and show their tricks before him. I followed the
jugglers to look on, and when the play was over the
king called me to him, and asked me who I was and
where I came from. I was dumb then, and couldn’t
answer; but even if I could speak I could not tell
him what he wanted to know, for I remember nothing
of myself before that day. Then the king asked
the jugglers, but they knew nothing about me, and
no one knew anything, and then the king said he would
take me into his service; and the only work I have
to do is to go once a month with a bag of corn to the
hut in the lonely moor.”
“And there you fell in love
with the little princess,” said the fairy, winking
at the dwarf.
The poor dwarf blushed twice as much as he had done
before.
“You need not blush,”
said the fairy; “it is a good man’s case.
And now tell me, truly, do you love the princess,
and what would you give to free her from the spell
of enchantment that is over her?”
“I would give my life,” said the dwarf.
“Well, then, listen to me,”
said the fairy. “The Princess Finola was
banished to the lonely moor by the king, your master.
He killed her father, who was the rightful king, and
would have killed Finola, only he was told by an old
sorceress that if he killed her he would die himself
on the same day, and she advised him to banish her
to the lonely moor, and she said she would fling a
spell of enchantment over it, and that until the spell
was broken Finola could not leave the moor. And
the sorceress also promised that she would send an
old woman to watch over the princess by night and
by day, so that no harm should come to her; but she
told the king that he himself should select a messenger
to take food to the hut, and that he should look out
for some one who had never seen or heard of the princess,
and whom he could trust never to tell anyone anything
about her; and that is the reason he selected you.”
“Since you know so much,”
said the dwarf, “can you tell me who I am, and
where I came from?”
“You will know that time enough,”
said the fairy. “I have given you back
your speech. It will depend solely on yourself
whether you will get back your memory of who and what
you were before the day you entered the king’s
service. But are you really willing to try and
break the spell of enchantment and free the princess?”
“I am,” said the dwarf.
“Whatever it will cost you?”
“Yes, if it cost me my life,”
said the dwarf; “but tell me, how can the spell
be broken?”
“Oh, it is easy enough to break
the spell if you have the weapons,” said the
fairy.
“And what are they, and where
are they?” said the dwarf.
“The spear of the shining haft
and the dark blue blade and the silver shield,”
said the fairy. “They are on the farther
bank of the Mystic Lake in the Island of the Western
Seas. They are there for the man who is bold
enough to seek them. If you are the man who will
bring them back to the lonely moor you will only have
to strike the shield three times with the haft, and
three times with the blade of the spear, and the silence
of the moor will be broken for ever, the spell of
enchantment will be removed, and the princess will
be free.”
“I will set out at once,”
said the dwarf, jumping from his chair.
“And whatever it cost you,”
said the fairy, “will you pay the price?”
“I will,” said the dwarf.
“Well, then, mount your horse,
give him his head, and he will take you to the shore
opposite the Island of the Mystic Lake. You must
cross to the island on his back, and make your way
through the water-steeds that swim around the island
night and day to guard it; but woe betide you if you
attempt to cross without paying the price, for if you
do the angry water-steeds will rend you and your horse
to pieces. And when you come to the Mystic Lake
you must wait until the waters are as red as wine,
and then swim your horse across it, and on the farther
side you will find the spear and shield; but woe betide
you if you attempt to cross the lake before you pay
the price, for if you do, the black Cormorants of
the Western Seas will pick the flesh from your bones.”
“What is the price?” said the dwarf.
“You will know that time enough,”
said the fairy; “but now go, and good luck go
with you.”
The dwarf thanked the fairy, and said
good-bye! He then threw the reins on his horse’s
neck, and started up the hill, that seemed to grow
bigger and bigger as he ascended, and the dwarf soon
found that what he took for a hill was a great mountain.
After travelling all the day, toiling up by steep
crags and heathery passes, he reached the top as the
sun was setting in the ocean, and he saw far below
him out in the waters the island of the Mystic Lake.
He began his descent to the shore,
but long before he reached it the sun had set, and
darkness, unpierced by a single star, dropped upon
the sea. The old horse, worn out by his long and
painful journey, sank beneath him, and the dwarf was
so tired that he rolled off his back and fell asleep
by his side.
He awoke at the breaking of the morning,
and saw that he was almost at the water’s edge.
He looked out to sea, and saw the island, but nowhere
could he see the water-steeds, and he began to fear
he must have taken a wrong course in the night, and
that the island before him was not the one he was
in search of. But even while he was so thinking
he heard fierce and angry snortings, and, coming swiftly
from the island to the shore, he saw the swimming
and prancing steeds. Sometimes their heads and
manes only were visible, and sometimes, rearing, they
rose half out of the water, and, striking it with their
hoofs, churned it into foam, and tossed the white spray
to the skies. As they approached nearer and nearer
their snortings became more terrible, and their nostrils
shot forth clouds of vapour. The dwarf trembled
at the sight and sound, and his old horse, quivering
in every limb, moaned piteously, as if in pain.
On came the steeds, until they almost touched the
shore, then rearing, they seemed about to spring on
to it. The frightened dwarf turned his head to
fly, and as he did so he heard the twang of a golden
harp, and right before him who should he see but the
little man of the hills, holding a harp in one hand
and striking the strings with the other.
“Are you ready to pay the price?”
said he, nodding gaily to the dwarf.
As he asked the question, the listening
water-steeds snorted more furiously than ever.
“Are you ready to pay the price?”
said the little man a second time.
A shower of spray, tossed on shore
by the angry steeds, drenched the dwarf to the skin,
and sent a cold shiver to his bones, and he was so
terrified that he could not answer.
“For the third and last time,
are you ready to pay the price?” asked the fairy,
as he flung the harp behind him and turned to depart.
When the dwarf saw him going he thought
of the little princess in the lonely moor, and his
courage came back, and he answered bravely:
“Yes, I am ready.”
The water-steeds, hearing his answer,
and snorting with rage, struck the shore with their
pounding hoofs.
“Back to your waves!”
cried the little harper; and as he ran his fingers
across his lyre, the frightened steeds drew back into
the waters.
“What is the price?” asked the dwarf.
“Your right eye,” said
the fairy; and before the dwarf could say a word,
the fairy scooped out the eye with his finger, and
put it into his pocket.
The dwarf suffered most terrible agony;
but he resolved to bear it for the sake of the little
princess. Then the fairy sat down on a rock at
the edge of the sea, and, after striking a few notes,
he began to play the “Strains of Slumber.”
The sound crept along the waters,
and the steeds, so ferocious a moment before, became
perfectly still. They had no longer any motion
of their own, and they floated on the top of the tide
like foam before a breeze.
“Now,” said the fairy,
as he led the dwarf’s horse to the edge of the
tide.
The dwarf urged the horse into the
water, and once out of his depth, the old horse struck
out boldly for the island. The sleeping water-steeds
drifted helplessly against him, and in a short time
he reached the island safely, and he neighed joyously
as his hoofs touched solid ground.
The dwarf rode on and on, until he
came to a bridle-path, and following this, it led
him up through winding lanes, bordered with golden
furze that filled the air with fragrance, and brought
him to the summit of the green hills that girdled
and looked down on the Mystic Lake. Here the
horse stopped of his own accord, and the dwarf’s
heart beat quickly as his eye rested on the lake, that,
clipped round by the ring of hills, seemed in the
breezeless and sunlit air
“As
still as death,
And
as bright as life can be.”
After gazing at it for a long time,
he dismounted, and lay at his ease in the pleasant
grass. Hour after hour passed, but no change came
over the face of the waters, and when the night fell
sleep closed the eyelids of the dwarf.
The song of the lark awoke him in
the early morning, and, starting up, he looked at
the lake, but its waters were as bright as they had
been the day before.
Towards midday he beheld what he thought
was a black cloud sailing across the sky from east
to west. It seemed to grow larger as it came
nearer and nearer, and when it was high above the lake
he saw it was a huge bird, the shadow of whose outstretched
wings darkened the waters of the lake; and the dwarf
knew it was one of the Cormorants of the Western Seas.
As it descended slowly, he saw that it held in one
of its claws a branch of a tree larger than a full-grown
oak, and laden with clusters of ripe red berries.
It alighted at some distance from the dwarf, and,
after resting for a time, it began to eat the berries
and to throw the stones into the lake, and wherever
a stone fell a bright red stain appeared in the water.
As he looked more closely at the bird the dwarf saw
that it had all the signs of old age, and he could
not help wondering how it was able to carry such a
heavy tree.
Later in the day, two other birds,
as large as the first, but younger, came up from the
west and settled down beside him. They also ate
the berries, and throwing the stones into the lake
it was soon as red as wine.
When they had eaten all the berries,
the young birds began to pick the decayed feathers
off the old bird and to smooth his plumage. As
soon as they had completed their task, he rose slowly
from the hill and sailed out over the lake, and dropping
down on the waters, dived beneath them. In a
moment he came to the surface, and shot up into the
air with a joyous cry, and flew off to the west in
all the vigour of renewed youth, followed by the other
birds.
When they had gone so far that they
were like specks in the sky, the dwarf mounted his
horse and descended towards the lake.
He was almost at the margin, and in
another minute would have plunged in, when he heard
a fierce screaming in the air, and before he had time
to look up, the three birds were hovering over the
lake.
The dwarf drew back frightened.
The birds wheeled over his head, and
then, swooping down, they flew close to the water,
covering it with their wings, and uttering harsh cries.
Then, rising to a great height, they
folded their wings and dropped headlong, like three
rocks, on the lake, crashing its surface, and scattering
a wine-red shower upon the hills.
Then the dwarf remembered what the
fairy told him, that if he attempted to swim the lake,
without paying the price, the three Cormorants of
the Western Seas would pick the flesh off his bones.
He knew not what to do, and was about to turn away,
when he heard once more the twang of the golden harp,
and the little fairy of the hills stood before him.
“Faint heart never won fair
lady,” said the little harper. “Are
you ready to pay the price? The spear and shield
are on the opposite bank, and the Princess Finola
is crying this moment in the lonely moor.”
At the mention of Finola’s name
the dwarf’s heart grew strong.
“Yes,” he said; “I
am ready win or die. What is the price?”
“Your left eye,” said
the fairy. And as soon as said he scooped out
the eye, and put it in his pocket.
The poor blind dwarf almost fainted with pain.
“It’s your last trial,”
said the fairy, “and now do what I tell you.
Twist your horse’s mane round your right hand,
and I will lead him to the water. Plunge in,
and fear not. I gave you back your speech.
When you reach the opposite bank you will get back
your memory, and you will know who and what you are.”
Then the fairy led the horse to the margin of the
lake.
“In with you now, and good luck go with you,”
said the fairy.
The dwarf urged the horse. He
plunged into the lake, and went down and down until
his feet struck the bottom. Then he began to ascend,
and as he came near the surface of the water the dwarf
thought he saw a glimmering light, and when he rose
above the water he saw the bright sun shining and
the green hills before him, and he shouted with joy
at finding his sight restored.
But he saw more. Instead of the
old horse he had ridden into the lake he was bestride
a noble steed, and as the steed swam to the bank the
dwarf felt a change coming over himself, and an unknown
vigour in his limbs.
When the steed touched the shore he
galloped up the hillside, and on the top of the hill
was a silver shield, bright as the sun, resting against
a spear standing upright in the ground.
The dwarf jumped off, and, running
towards the shield, he saw himself as in a looking-glass.
He was no longer a dwarf, but a gallant
knight. At that moment his memory came back to
him, and he knew he was Conal, one of the Knights
of the Red Branch, and he remembered now that the spell
of dumbness and deformity had been cast upon him by
the Witch of the Palace of the Quicken Trees.
Slinging his shield upon his left
arm, he plucked the spear from the ground and leaped
on to his horse. With a light heart he swam back
over the lake, and nowhere could he see the black Cormorants
of the Western Seas, but three white swans floating
abreast followed him to the bank. When he reached
the bank he galloped down to the sea, and crossed
to the shore.
Then he flung the reins upon his horse’s
neck, and swifter than the wind the gallant horse
swept on and on, and it was not long until he was
bounding over the enchanted moor. Wherever his
hoofs struck the ground, grass and flowers sprang
up, and great trees with leafy branches rose on every
side.
At last the knight reached the little
hut. Three times he struck the shield with the
haft and three times with the blade of his spear.
At the last blow the hut disappeared, and standing
before him was the little princess.
The knight took her in his arms and
kissed her; then he lifted her on to the horse, and,
leaping up before her, he turned towards the north,
to the palace of the Red Branch Knights, and as they
rode on beneath the leafy trees from every tree the
birds sang out, for the spell of silence over the
lonely moor was broken for ever.