I
Connal was the name of the King who
ruled over Ireland at that time. He had three
sons, and, as the fir-trees grow, some crooked and
some straight, one of them grew up so wild that in
the end the King and the King’s Councillor had
to let him have his own way in everything. This
youth was the King’s eldest son and his mother
had died before she could be a guide to him.
Now after the King and the King’s
Councillor left him to his own way the youth I’m
telling you about did nothing but ride and hunt all
day. Well, one morning he rode abroad
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist;
A brave steed to carry him
whither he list,
And the blue sky over him,
and he rode on until he came to a
turn in the road. There he saw a gray old man
seated on a heap of stones playing a game of cards
with himself. First he had one hand winning and
then he had the other. Now he would say “That’s
my good right,” and then he would say “Play
and beat that, my gallant left.” The King
of Ireland’s Son sat on his horse to watch the
strange old man, and as he watched him he sang a song
to himself
I put the fastenings on my
boat
For a year and for a day,
And I went where the rowans
grow,
And where the moorhens lay;
And I went over the stepping-stones
And dipped my feet in the
ford,
And came at last to the Swineherd’s
house,
The Youth without a Sword.
A swallow sang upon his porch
“Glu-ee, glu-ee,
glu-ee,”
“The wonder of all wandering,
The wonder of the sea;”
A swallow soon to leave ground
sang
“Glu-ee, glu-ee,
glu-ee.”
“Prince,” said the old
fellow looking up at him, “if you can play a
game as well as you can sing a song, I’d like
if you would sit down beside me.”
“I can play any game,”
said the King of Ireland’s Son. He fastened
his horse to the branch of a tree and sat down on
the heap of stones beside the old man.
“What shall we play for?” said the gray
old fellow.
“Whatever you like,” said the King of
Ireland’s Son.
“If I win you must give me anything
I ask, and if you win I shall give you anything you
ask. Will you agree to that?”
“If it is agreeable to you it
is agreeable to me,” said the King of Ireland’s
Son.
They played, and the King of Ireland’s
Son won the game. “Now what do you desire
me to give, King’s Son?” said the gray
old fellow.
“I shan’t ask you for
anything,” said the King of Ireland’s Son,
“for I think you haven’t much to give.”
“Never mind that,” said
the gray old fellow. “I mustn’t break
my promise, and so you must ask me for something.”
“Very well,” said the
King’s Son. “Then there’s a
field at the back of my father’s Castle and
I want to see it filled with cattle to-morrow morning.
Can you do that for me?”
“I can,” said the gray old fellow.
“Then I want fifty cows, each
one white with a red ear, and a white calf going beside
each cow.”
“The cattle shall be as you wish.”
“Well, when that’s done
I shall think the wager has been paid,” said
the King of Ireland’s son. He mounted his
horse, smiling at the foolish old man who played cards
with himself and who thought he could bring together
fifty white kine, each with a red ear, and a white
calf by the side of each cow. He rode away
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist;
A brave steed to carry him whither
he list,
And the green ground under him,
and he thought no more of the gray old fellow.
But in the morning, when he was taking
his horse out of the stable, he heard the grooms talking
about a strange happening. Art, the King’s
Steward, had gone out and had found the field at the
back of the Castle filled with cattle. There
were fifty white red-eared kine there and each cow
had a white calf at her side. The King had ordered
Art, his Steward, to drive them away. The King
of Ireland’s Son watched Art and his men trying
to do it. But no sooner were the strange cattle
put out at one side of the field than they came back
on the other. Then down came Maravaun, the King’s
Councillor. He declared they were enchanted cattle,
and that no one on Ireland’s ground could put
them away. So in the seven-acre field the cattle
stayed.
When the King of Ireland’s Son
saw what his companion of yesterday could do he rode
straight to the glen to try if he could have another
game with him. There at the turn of the road,
on a heap of stones, the gray old fellow was sitting
playing a game of cards, the right hand against the
left. The King of Ireland’s Son fastened
his horse to the branch of a tree and dismounted.
“Did you find yesterday’s
wager settled?” said the gray old fellow.
“I did,” said the King of Ireland’s
Son.
“Then shall we have another
game of cards on the same understanding?” said
the gray old fellow.
“I agree, if you agree,”
said the King of Ireland’s son. He sat under
the bush beside him and they played again. The
King of Ireland’s Son won.
“What would you like me to do
for you this time?” said the gray old fellow.
Now the King’s Son had a step-mother,
and she was often cross-tempered, and that very morning
he and she had vexed each other. So he said, “Let
a brown bear, holding a burning coal in his mouth,
put Caintigern the Queen from her chair in the supper-room
to-night.”
“It shall be done,” said the gray old
fellow.
Then the King of Ireland’s Son mounted his horse
and rode away
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist;
A brave steed to carry him whither he
list,
And the green ground under him,
and he went back to the Castle.
That night a brown bear, holding a burning coal in
his mouth, came into the supper-room and stood between
Caintigern the Queen and the chair that belonged to
her. None of the servants could drive it away,
and when Maravaun, the King’s Councillor, came
he said, “This is an enchanted creature also,
and it is best for us to leave it alone.”
So the whole company went and left the brown bear in
the supper-room seated ’in the Queen’s
chair.
II
The next morning when he wakened the
King’s Son said, “That was a wonderful
thing that happened last night in the supper-room.
I must go off and play a third game with the gray
old fellow who sits on a heap of stones at the turn
of the road.” So, in the morning early he
mounted and rode away
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist;
A brave steed to carry him whither he
list,
And the green ground under him,
and he rode on until he came to the
turn in the road. Sure enough the old gray fellow
was there. “So you’ve come to me again,
King’s Son,” said he. “I have,”
said the King of Ireland’s Son, “and I’ll
play a last game with you on the same understanding
as before.” He tied his horse to the branch
and sat down on the heap of stones. They played.
The King of Ireland’s Son lost the game.
Immediately the gray old fellow threw the cards down
on the stones and a wind came up and carried them away.
Standing up he was terribly tall.
“King’s Son,” said
he, “I am your father’s enemy and I have
done him an injury. And to the Queen who is your
father’s wife I have done an injury too.
You have lost the game and now you must take the penalty
I put upon you. You must find out my dwelling-place
and take three hairs out of my beard within a year
and a day, or else lose your head.”
With that he took the King of Ireland’s
Son by the shoulders and lifted him on his horse,
turning the horse in the direction of the King’s
Castle. The King’s Son rode on
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist;
A brave steed to carry him whither he
list,
And the blue sky over him.
That evening the King noticed that
his son was greatly troubled. And when he lay
down to sleep everyone in the Castle heard his groans
and his moans. The next day he told his father
the story from beginning to end. The King sent
for Maravaun his Councillor and asked him if he knew
who the Enchanter was and where his son would be likely
to find him.
“From what he said,” said
Maravaun, “we may guess who he is. He is
the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands and his dwelling-place
is hard to find. Nevertheless your son must seek
for him and take the three hairs out of his beard
or else lose his head. For if the heir to your
kingdom does not honorably pay his forfeit, the ground
of Ireland won’t give crops and the cattle won’t
give milk.” “And,” said the
Councillor, “as a year is little for his search,
he should start off at once, although I’m bound
to say, that I don’t know what direction he should
go in.”
The next day the King’s Son
said good-by to his father and his foster-brothers
and started off on his journey. His step-mother
would not give him her blessing on account of his
having brought in the brown bear that turned her from
her chair in the supper-room. Nor would she let
him have the good horse he always rode. Instead
the Prince was given a horse that was lame in a leg
and short in the tail. And neither hawk nor hound
went with him this time.
All day the King’s Son was going,
traveling through wood and waste until the coming
on of night. The little fluttering birds were
going from the bush tops, from tuft to tuft, and to
the briar-roots, going to rest; but if they were,
he was not, till the night came on, blind and dark.
Then the King’s Son ate his bread and meat,
put his satchel under his head and lay down to take
his rest on the edge of a great waste.
In the morning he mounted his horse
and rode on. And as he went across the waste
he saw an extraordinary sight everywhere
were the bodies of dead creatures a cock,
a wren, a mouse, a weasel, a fox, a badger, a raven –all
the birds and beasts that the King’s Son had
ever known. He went on, but he saw no living
creature before him. And then, at the end of
the waste he came upon two living creatures struggling.
One was an eagle and the other was an eel. And
the eel had twisted itself round the eagle, and the
eagle had covered her eyes with the black films of
death. The King’s Son jumped off his horse
and cut the eel in two with a sharp stroke of his
sword.
The eagle drew the films from her
eyes and looked full at the King’s Son.
“I am Laheen the Eagle,” she said, “and
I will pay you for this service, Son of King Connal.
Know that there has been a battle of the creatures a
battle to decide which of the creatures will make laws
for a year. All were killed except the eel and
myself, and if you had not come I would have been
killed and the eel would have made the laws. I
am Laheen the Eagle and always I will be your friend.
And now you must tell me how I can serve you.”
“You can serve me,” said
the King’s Son, “by showing me how I may
come to the dominion of the Enchanter of the Black
Back-Lands.”
“I am the only creature who
can show you, King’s Son. And if I were
not old now I would carry you there on my back.
But I can tell you how you can get there. Ride
forward for a day, first with the sun before you and
then with the sun at your back, until you come to the
shore of a lake. Stay there until you see three
swans flying down. They are the three daughters
of the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands. Mark
the one who carries a green scarf in her mouth.
She is the youngest daughter and the one who can help
you. When the swans come to the ground they will
transform themselves into maidens and bathe in the
lake. Two will come out, put on their swanskins
and transform themselves and fly away. But you
must hide the swanskin that belongs to the youngest
maiden. She will search and search and when she
cannot find it she will cry out, ’I would do
anything in the world for the creature who would find
my swanskin for me.’ Give the swanskin
to her then, and tell her that the only thing she
can do for you is to show you the way to her father’s
dominion. She will do that, and so you will come
to the House of the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands.
And now farewell to you, Son of King Connal.”
Laheen the Eagle spread out her wings
and flew away, and the King’s Son journeyed
on, first with the sun before him and then with the
sun at his back, until he came to the shore of a wide
lake. He turned his horse away, rested himself
on the ground, and as soon as the clear day came he
began to watch for the three swans.
III
They came, they flew down, and when
they touched the ground they transformed themselves
into three maidens and went to bathe in the lake.
The one who carried the green scarf left her swanskin
under a bush. The King’s Son took it and
hid it in a hollow tree.
Two of the maidens soon came out of
the water, put on their swanskins and flew away as
swans. The younger maiden stayed for a while in
the lake. Then she came out and began to search
for her swanskin. She searched and searched,
and at last the King’s Son heard her say, “I
would do anything in the world for the creature who
would find my swanskin for me.” Then he
came from where he was hiding and gave her the swanskin.
“I am the Son of the King of Ireland,”
he said, “and I want you to show me the way
to your father’s dominion.”
“I would prefer to do anything
else for you,” said the maiden. “I
do not want anything else,” said the King of
Ireland’s Son.
“If I show you how to get there will you be
content?”
“I shall be content.”
“You must never let my father
know that I showed you the way. And he must not
know when you come that you are the King of Ireland’s
Son.”
“I will not tell him you showed
me the way and I will not let him know who I am.”
Now that she had the swanskin she
was able to transform herself. She whistled and
a blue falcon came down and perched on a tree.
“That falcon is my own bird,” said she.
“Follow where it flies and you will come to
my father’s house. And now good-by to you.
You will be in danger, but I will try to help you.
Fedelma is my name.” She rose up as a swan
and flew away.
The blue falcon went flying from bush
to bush and from rock to rock. The night came,
but in the morning the blue falcon was seen again.
The King’s Son followed, and at last he saw
a house before him. He went in, and there, seated
on a chair of gold was the man who seemed so tall when
he threw down the cards upon the heap of stones.
The Enchanter did not recognize the King’s Son
without his hawk and his hound and the fine clothes
he used to wear. He asked who he was and the King’s
Son said he was a youth who had just finished an apprenticeship
to a wizard. “And,” said he, “I
have heard that you have three fair daughters, and
I came to strive to gain one of them for a wife.”
“In that case,” said the
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands, “you will
have to do three tasks for me. If you are able
to do them I will give you one of my three daughters
in marriage. If you fail to do any one of them
you will lose your head. Are you willing to make
the trial?”
“I am willing,” said the King of Ireland’s
Son.
“Then I shall give you your
first task to-morrow. It is unlucky that you
came to-day. In this country we eat a meal only
once a week, and we have had our meal this morning.”
“It is all the same to me,”
said the King’s Son, “I can do without
food or drink for a month without any hardship.”
“I suppose you can do without
sleep too?” said the Enchanter of the Black
Back-Lands.
“Easily,” said the King of Ireland’s
Son.
“That is good. Come outside
now, and I’ll show you your bed.”
He took the King’s Son outside and showed him
a dry narrow water-tank at the gable end of the house.
“There is where you are to sleep” said
the Enchanter. “Tuck yourself into it now
and be ready for your first task at the rising of
the sun.”
The King of Ireland’s Son went
into the little tank. He was uncomfortable there
you may be sure. But in the middle of the night
Fedelma came and brought him into a fine room where
he ate and then slept until the sun was about to rise
in the morning. She called him and he went outside
and laid himself down in the water-tank.
As soon as the sun rose the Enchanter
of the Black Back-Lands came out of the house and
stood beside the water-tank. “Come now,”
said he, “and I will show you the first task
you have to perform.” He took him to where
a herd of goats was grazing. Away from the goats
was a fawn with white feet and little bright horns.
The fawn saw them, bounded into the air, and raced
away to the wood as quickly as any arrow that a man
ever shot from a bow.
“That is Whitefoot the Fawn,”
said the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands. “She
grazes with my goats but none of my gillies can bring
her into my goat-house. Here is your first task run
down Whitefoot the Fawn and bring her with my goats
into the goat-shelter this evening.” When
he said that the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands
went away laughing to himself.
“Good-by, my life,” said
the King of Ireland’s Son, “I might as
well try to catch an eagle on the wing as to run down
the deer that has gone out of sight already.”
He sat down on the ground and his despair was great.
Then his name was called and he saw Fedelma coming
towards him. She looked at him as though she
were in dread, and said, “What task has my father
set you?” He told her and then she smiled.
“I was in dread it would be a more terrible
task,” she said. “This one is easy.
I can help you to catch Whitefoot the Fawn. But
first eat what I have brought you.”
She put down bread and meat and wine,
and they sat down and he ate and drank. “I
thought he might set you this task,” she said,
“and so I brought you something from my father’s
store of enchanted things. Here are the Shoes
of Swiftness. With these on your feet you can
run down Whitefoot the Fawn. But you must catch
her before she has gone very far away. Remember
that she must be brought in when the goats are going
into their shelter at sunset. You will have to
walk back for all the time you must keep hold of her
silver horns. Hasten now. Run her down with
the Shoes of Swiftness and then lay hold of her horns.
Above all things Whitefoot dreads the loss of her
silver horns.”
He thanked Fedelma. He put on
the Shoes of Swiftness and went into the wood.
Now he could go as the eagle flies. He found Whitefoot
the Fawn drinking at the Raven’s pool.
When she saw him she went from thicket
to thicket. The Shoes of Swiftness were hardly
any use to him in these shut-in places. At last
he beat her from the last thicket. It was the
hour of noon-tide then. There was a clear plain
before them and with the Shoes of Swiftness he ran
her down. There were tears in the Fawn’s
eyes and he knew she was troubled with the dread of
losing her silver horns.
He kept his hands on the horns and
they went back over miles of plain and pasture, bog
and wood. The hours were going quicker than they
were going. When ’he came within the domain
of the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands he saw the
goats going quickly before him. They were hurrying
from their pastures to the goat-shelter, one stopping,
maybe, to bite the top of a hedge and another giving
this one a blow with her horns to hurry her on.
“By your silver horns, we must go faster,”
said the King of Ireland’s Son to the Fawn.
They went more quickly then.
He saw the Enchanter of the Black
Back-Lands waiting at the goat-house, now counting
the goats that came along and now looking at the sun.
When he saw the King of Ireland’s Son coming
with his capture he was so angry that he struck an
old full-bearded goat that had stopped to rub itself.
The goat reared up and struck him with his horns.
“Well,” said the Enchanter of the Black
Back-Lands, “you have performed your first task,
I see. You are a greater enchanter than I thought
you were. Whitefoot the Fawn can go in with my
goats. Go back now to your own sleeping-place.
To-morrow I’ll come to you early and give you
your second task.”
The King of Ireland’s Son went
back and into the dry water-tank. He was tired
with his day’s journey after Whitefoot the Fawn.
It was his hope that Fedelma would come to him and
give him shelter for that night.
IV
Until the white moon rose above the
trees; until the hounds went out hunting for themselves;
until the foxes came down and hid in the hedges, waiting
for the cocks and hens to stir out at the first light so
long did the King of Ireland’s Son stay huddled
in the dry water-tank.
By that time he was stiff and sore
and hungry. He saw a great white owl flying towards
the tank. The owl perched on the edge and stared
at the King’s Son. “Have you a message
for me?” he asked. The owl shrugged with
its wings three times. He thought that meant a
message. He got out of the tank and prepared
to follow the owl. It flew slowly and near the
ground, so he was able to follow it along a path through
the wood.
The King’s Son thought the owl
was bringing him to a place where Fedelma was, and
that he would get food there, and shelter for the rest
of the night. And sure enough the owl flew to
a little house in the wood. The King’s
Son looked through the window and he saw a room lighted
with candles and a table with plates and dishes and
cups, with bread and meat and wine. And he saw
at the fire a young woman spinning at a spinning wheel,
and her back was towards him, and her hair was the
same as Fedelma’s. Then he lifted the latch
of the door and went very joyfully into the little
house.
But when the young woman at the spinning
wheel turned round he saw that she was not Fedelma
at all. She had a little mouth, a long and a hooked
nose, and her eyes looked cross-ways at a person.
The thread she was spinning she bit with her long
teeth, and she said, “You are welcome here,
Prince.”
“And who are you?” said
the King of Ireland’s Son. “Aefa is
my name,” said she, “I am the eldest and
the wisest daughter of the Enchanter of the Black
Back-lands. My father is preparing a task for
you,” said she, “and it will be a terrible
task, and there will be no one to help you with it,
so you will lose your head surely. And what I
would advise you to do is to escape out of this country
at once.”
“And how can I escape?”
said the King of Ireland’s Son, “There’s
only one way to escape,” said she, “and
that is for you to take the Slight Red Steed that
my father has secured under nine locks. That steed
is the only creature that can bring you to your own
country. I will show you how to get it and then
I will ride to your home with you.”
“And why should you do that?”
said the King of Ireland’s Son.
“Because I would marry you,” said Aefa.
“But,” said he, “if I live at all
Fedelma is the one I will marry.”
No sooner did he say the words than
Aefa screamed out, “Seize him, my cat-o’-the-mountain.
Seize him and hold him.” Then the cat-o’-the-mountain
that was under the table sprang across the room and
fixed himself on his shoulder. He ran out of the
house. All the time he was running the cat-o’-the-mountain
was trying to tear his eyes out. He made his
way through woods and thickets, and mighty glad he
was when he saw the tank at the gable-end of the house.
The cat-’o-the-mountain dropped from his back
then. He got into the tank and waited and waited.
No message came from Fedelma. He was a long time
there, stiff and sore and hungry, before the sun rose
and the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands came out
of the house.
V
“I hope you had a good night’s
rest,” said the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands,
when he came to where the King of Ireland’s Son
was crouched, just at the rising of the sun.
“I had indeed,” said the King’s
Son. “And I suppose you feel fit for another
task,” said the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands.
“More fit than ever in my life before,”
said the King of Ireland’s Son.
The Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands
took him past the goat-house and to where there was
an open shelter for his bee-hives. “I want
this shelter thatched,” said he, “and
I want to have it thatched with the feathers of birds.
Go,” said he, “and get enough feathers
of wild birds and come back and thatch the bee-hive
shelter for me, and let it be done before the set
of sun.” He gave the King’s Son arrows
and a bow and a bag to put the feathers in, and advised
him to search the moor for birds. Then he went
back to the house.
The King of Ireland’s Son ran
to the moor and watched for birds to fly across.
At last one came. He shot at it with an arrow
but did not bring it down. He hunted the moor
all over but found no other bird. He hoped that
he would see Fedelma before his head was taken off.
Then he heard his name called and
he saw Fedelma coming towards him. She looked
at him as before with dread in thier eyes and asked
him what task her father had set him. “A
terrible task,” he said, and he told her what
it was. Fedelma laughed. “I was in
dread he would give you another task,” she said.
“I can help you with this one. Sit down
now and eat and drink from what I have brought you.”
He sat down and ate and drank and
he felt hopeful seeing Fedelma beside him. When
he had eaten Fedelma said, “My blue falcon will
gather the birds and pull the feathers off for you.
Still, unless you gather them quickly there is danger,
for the roof must be thatched with feathers at the
set of sun.” She whistled and her blue falcon
came. He followed it across the moor. The
blue falcon flew up in the air and gave a bird-call.
Birds gathered and she swooped amongst them pulling
feathers off their backs and out of their wings.
Soon there was a heap of feathers on the ground pigeons’
feathers and pie’s feathers, crane’s and
crow’s, blackbird’s and starling’s.
The King of Ireland’s Son quickly gathered them
into his bag. The falcon flew to another place
and gave her bird-call again. The birds gathered,
and she went amongst them, plucking their feathers.
The King’s Son gathered them and the blue falcon
flew to another place. Over and over again the
blue falcon called to the birds and plucked out their
feathers, and over and over again the King’s
Son gathered them into his bag. When he thought
he had feathers enough to thatch the roof he ran back
to the shelter. He began the thatching, binding
the feathers down with little willow rods. He
had just finished when the sun went down. The
old Enchanter came up and when he saw what the King’s
Son had done he was greatly surprised. “You
surely learned from the wizard you were apprenticed
to,” said he.. “But to-morrow I will
try you with another task. Go now and sleep in
the place where you were last night.” The
King’s Son, glad that the head was still on
his shoulders, went and lay down in the water-tank.
VI
Until the white moon went out in the
sky; until the Secret People began to whisper in the
woods so long did the King of Ireland’s
Son remain in the dry water-tank that night.
And then, when it was neither dark
nor light, he saw a crane flying towards him.
It lighted on the edge of the tank. “Have
you a message for me?” said the King of Ireland’s
Son. The crane tapped three times with its beak.
Then the King’s Son got out of the tank and prepared
to follow the bird-messenger.
This was the way the crane went.
It would fly a little way and then light on the ground
until the Prince came up to it. Then it would
fly again. Over marshes and across little streams
the crane led him. And all the time the King
of Ireland’s Son thought he was being brought
to the place where Fedelma was to the place
where he would get food and where he could rest until
just before the sun rose.
They went on and on till they came
to an old tower. The crane lighted upon it.
The King’s Son saw there was an iron door in
the tower and he pulled a chain until it opened.
Then he saw a little room lighted with candles, and
he saw a young woman looking at herself in the glass.
Her back was towards him and her hair was the same
as Fedelma’s.
But when the young woman turned round
he saw she was not Fedelma. She was little, and
she had a face that was brown and tight like a nut.
She made herself very friendly to the King of Ireland’s
Son and went to him and took his hands and smiled
into his face.
“You are welcome here,” said she.
“Who are you?” he asked.
“I am Gilveen,” said she, “the second
and the most loving of the three daughters of the
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands.” She
stroked his face and his hands when she spoke to him.
“And why did you send for me?”
“Because I know what great trouble
you are in. My father is preparing a task for
you, and it will be a terrible one. You will never
be able to carry it out.”
“And what should you advise me to do, King’s
daughter?”
“Let me help you. In this
tower,” said she, “there are the wisest
books in the world. We’ll surely find in
one of them a way for you to get from this country.
And then I’ll go back with you to your own land.”
“Why would you do that?”
asked the King of Ire-land’s Son.
“Because I wish to be your wife,” Gilveen
said.
“But,” said he, “if I live at all
Fedelma is the one I’ll marry.”
When he said that Gilveen drew her
lips together and her chin became like a horn.
Then she whistled through her teeth, and instantly
everything in the room began to attack the King’s
Son. The looking glass on the wall flung itself
at him and hit him on the back of the head. The
leg of the table gave him a terrible blow at the back
of the knees. He saw the two candles hopping
across the floor to burn his legs. He ran out
of the room, and when he got to the door it swung around
and gave him a blow that flung him away from the tower.
The crane that was waiting on the tower flew down,
its neck and beak outstretched, and gave him a blow
on the back.
So the King of Ireland’s Son
went back over the marshes and across the little streams,
and he was glad when he saw the gable-end of the house
again. Je went into the tank. He knew
that he had not long to wait before the sun would
rise and the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands would
come to him and give him the third and the most difficult
of the three tasks. And he thought that Fedelma
was surely shut away from him and that she would not
be able to help him that day.
VII
At the rising of the sun the Enchanter
of the Black Back-Lands came to where the King of
Ireland’s Son was huddled and said, “I
am now going to set you the third and last task.
Rise up now and come with me.”
The King’s Son came out of the
water-tank and fol-lowed the Enchanter.
They went to where there was a well. The King’s
Son looked down and he could not see the bottom, so
deep the well was. “At the bottom,”
said the Enchanter “is the Ring of Youth.
You must get it and bring it to me, or else you must
lose your head at the setting of that sun.”
That was all he said. He turned then and went
away.
The King’s Son looked into the
well and he saw no way of getting down its deep smooth
sides. He walked back towards the Castle.
On his way he met Fedelma, and she looked at him with
deep dread in her eyes. “What task did
my father set you to-day?” said she. “He
bids me go down into a well,” said the King’s
Son. “A well!” said Fedelma, and she
became all dread. “I have to take the Ring
of Youth from the bot-tom and bring it to him,”
said the King’s Son. “Oh,” said
Fedelma,’"he has set you the task I dreaded.”
Then she said, “You will lose
your life if the Ring of Youth is not taken out of
the well. And if you lose yours I shall lose my
life too. There is one way to get down the sides
of the well. You must kill me. Take my bones
and make them as steps while you go down the sides.
Then, when you have taken the Ring of Youth out of
the water, put my bones as they were before, and put
the Ring above my heart. I shall be alive again.
But you must be careful that you leave every bone as
it was.”
The King’s Son fell into a deeper
dread than Fedelma when he heard what she said.
“This can never be,” he cried. “It
must be,” said she, “and by all your vows
and promises I command that you do it. Kill me
now and do as I have bidden you. If it be done
I shall live. If it be not done you will lose
your life and I will never regain mine.”
He killed her. He took the bones
as she had bidden him, and he made steps down the
sides of the well. He searched at the bottom,
and he found the Ring of Youth. He brought the
bones together again. Down on his knees he went,
and his heart did not beat nor did his breath come
or go until he had fixed them in their places.
Over the heart he placed the Ring. Life came
back to Fedelma.
“You have done well,”
she said. “One thing only is not in its
place the joint of my little finger.”
She held up her hand and he saw that her little finger
was bent.
“I have helped you in everything,”
said Fedelma, “and in the last task I could
not have helped you if you had not been true to me
when Aefa and Gilveen brought you to them. Now
the three tasks are done, and you can ask my father
for one of his daughters in marriage. When you
bring him the Ring of Youth he will ask you to make
a choice. I pray that the one chosen will be
myself.”
“None other will I have but
you, Fedelma, love of my heart,” said the King
of Ireland’s Son.
VIII
The King of Ireland’s Son went
into the house before the setting of the sun.
The Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands was seated on
his chair of gold. “Have you brought me
the Ring of Youth?” he asked.
“I have brought it,” said the King’s
Son.
“Give it to me then,” said the Enchanter.
“I will not,” said the
King’s Son, “until you give what you promised
me at the end of my tasks one of your three
daughters for my wife.”
The Enchanter brought him to a closed
door. “My three daughters are within that
room,” said he. “Put your hand through
the hole in the door, and the one whose hand you hold
when I open it it is she you will have
to marry.”
Then wasn’t the mind of the
King’s Son greatly troubled? If he held
the hand of Aefa or Gilveen he would lose his love
Fedelma. He stood without putting out his hand.
“Put your hand through the hole of the door or
go away from my house altogether,” said the Enchanter
of the Black Back-Lands.
The King of Ireland’s Son ventured
to put his hand through the hole in the door.
The hands of the maidens inside were all held in a
bunch. But no sooner did he touch them than he
found that one had a broken finger. This he knew
was Fedelma’s hand, and this was the hand he
held.
“You may open the door now,”
said he to the Enchanter. He opened the door
and the King of Ireland’s Son drew Fedelma to
him. “This is the maiden I choose,”
said he, “and now give her her dowry.”
“The dowry that should go with
me,” said Fedelma, “is the Slight Red
Steed.” “What dowry do you want with
her, young man?” said the Enchanter.
“No other dowry but the Slight Red Steed.”
“Go round to the stable then
and get it. And I hope no well-trained wizard
like you will come this way again.”
“No well-trained wizard am I,
but the King of Ire-land’s Son. And I have
found your dwelling-place within a year and a day.
And now I pluck the three hairs out of your heard,
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands.”
The beard of the Enchanter bristled
like spikes on a hedgehog, and the balls of his eyes
stuck out of his head. The King’s Son plucked
the three hairs of his beard before he could lift
a hand or say a word. “Mount the Slight
Red Steed and be off, the two of you,” said the
Enchanter.
The King of Ireland’s Son and
Fedelma mounted the Slight Red Steed and rode off,
and the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands, and his
two daughters, Aefa and Gilveen, in a rage watched
them ride away.
IX
They crossed the River of the Ox,
and went over the Mountain of the Fox and were in
the Glen of the Badger before the sun rose. And
there, at the foot of the Hill of Horns, they found
an old man gathering dew from the grass.
“Could you tell us where we
might find the Little Sage of the Mountain?”
Fedelma asked the old man.
“I am the Little Sage of the
Mountain,” said he, “and what is it you
want of me?”
“To betroth us for marriage,” said Fedelma.
“I will do that. Come to
my house, the pair of you. And as you are both
young and better able to walk than I am it would be
fitting to let me ride on your horse.”
The King’s Son and Fedelma got
off and the Little Sage of the Mountain got on the
Slight Red Steed. They took the path that went
round the Hill of Horns. And at the other side
of the hill they found a hut thatched with one great
wing of a bird. The Little Sage got off the Slight
Red Steed. “Now,” said he, “you’re
both young, and I’m an old man and it would
be fitting for you to do my day’s work before
you call upon me to do anything for you. Now
would you,” said he to the King of Ireland’s
Son, “take this spade in your hand and go into
the garden and dig my potatoes for me? And would
you,” said he to Fedelma, “sit down at
the quern-stone and grind the wheat for me?”
The King of Ireland’s Son went
into the garden and Fedelma sat at the quern-stone
that was just outside the door; he dug and she ground
while the Little Sage sat at the fire looking into
a big book. And when Fedelma and the King’s
Son were tired with their labor he gave them a drink
of buttermilk.
She made cakes out of the wheat she
had ground and the King’s Son washed the potatoes
and the Little Sage boiled them and so they made their
supper. Then the Little Sage of the Mountain melted
lead and made two rings; and one ring he gave to Fedelma
to give to the King’s Son and one he gave to
the King’s Son to give to Fedelma. And when
the rings were given he said, “You are betrothed
for your marriage now.”
They stayed with the Little Sage of
the Mountain that night, and when the sun rose they
left the house that was thatched with the great wing
of a bird and they turned towards the Meadow of Brightness
and the Wood of Shadows that were between them and
the King of Ireland’s domain. They rode
on the Slight Red Steed, and the Little Sage of the
Mountain went with them a part of the way. He
seemed downcast and when they asked him the reason
he said, “I see dividing ways and far journeys
for you both.” “But how can that
be,” said the King’s Son, “when,
in a little while we will win to my father’s
domain?” “It may be I am wrong,”
said the Little Sage, “and if I am not, remember
that devotion brings together dividing ways and that
high hearts win to the end of every journey.”
He bade them good-by then, and turned back to his
hut that was thatched with the great wing of a bird.
They rode across the Meadow of Brightness
and Fedelma’s blue falcon sailed above them.
“Yonder is a field of white flowers,” said
she, “and while we are crossing it you must
tell me a story.”
“I know by heart,” said
the King’s Son, “only the stories that
Maravaun, my father’s Councillor, has put into
the book he is composing the book that
is called ‘The Breastplate of Instruction.’”
“Then,” said Fedelma,
“tell me a story from ’The Breastplate
of Instruction,’ while we are crossing this
field of white flowers.”
“I will tell you the first story
that is in it,” said the King’s Son.
Then while they were crossing the field of white flowers
the King’s Son told Fedelma the story of
The Ass and the Seal
X
A seal that had spent a curious fore-noon
paddling around the island of Ilaun-Beg drew itself
up on a rock the better to carry on its investigations.
It was now within five yards of the actual island.
On the little beach there were three curraghs in which
the island-men went over the sea; they were turned
bottom up and heavy stones were placed upon them to
prevent their being carried away by the high winds.
The seal noted them as he rested upon the flat rock.
He noted too a little ass that was standing beyond
the curraghs, sheltering himself where the cliffs
hollowed in.
Now this ass was as curious as the
seal, and when he saw the smooth creature that was
moving its head about with such intelligence he came
down to the water’s edge. Two of his legs
were spancelled with a piece of straw rope, but being
used to such impediment he came over without any awkwardness.
He looked inquiringly at the seal.
The gray-headed crow of the cliff
lighted on a spar of rock and made herself an interpreter
between the two. “Shaggy beast of the Island,”
said the seal, “friend and follower of men, tell
me about their fabulous existence.”
“Do you mean the hay-getters?” said the
ass.
“You know well whom he means,”
said the gray-headed crow viciously. “Answer
him now.”
“You gravell me entirely when
you ask about men,” said the ass. “I
don’t know much about them. They live to
themselves and I live to myself. Their houses
are full of smoke and it blinds my eyes to go in.
There used to be green fields here and high grass
that became hay, but there’s nothing like that
now. I think men have given up eating what grows
out of the ground. I see nothing, I smell nothing,
but fish, fish, fish.”
The gray-headed crow had a vicious
eye fixed on the ass all the time he was speaking.
“You’re saying all that,” said she,
“because they let the little horse stay all
night in the house and beat you out of it.”
“My friend,” said the
seal, “it is evident that men deceive you by
appearances. I know men. I have followed
their boats and have listened to the wonderful sounds
they make with their voices and with instruments.
Do they not draw fish out of the depths by enchantments?
Do they not build their habitations with music?
Do they not draw the moon out of the sea and set it
for a light in their houses? And is it not known
that the fairest daughters of the sea have loved men?”
“When I’m awake long o’
moonlit nights I feel like that myself,” said
the ass. Then the recollections of these long,
frosty nights made him yawn. Then he brayed.
“What it is to live near men,”
said the seal in admiration. “What wonderful
sounds!”
“I’d cross the water and
rub noses with you,” said the ass, “only
I’m afraid of crocodiles.”
“Crocodiles?” said the gray-headed crow.
“Yes,” said the ass.
“It’s because I’m of a very old family,
you know. They were Egyptians. My people
never liked to cross water in their own country.
There were crocodiles there.”
“I don’t want to waste
any more time listening to nonsense,” said the
gray-headed crow. She flew to the ass’s
back and plucked out some of the felt. “I’ll
take this for my own habitation,” she said, and
flew back to the cliff.
The ass would have kicked up his heels
only two of his legs were fastened with the straw
rope. He turned away, and without a word of farewell
to the seal went scrambling up the bank of the island.
The seal stayed for a while moving
his head about intelligently. Then he slipped
into the water and paddled off. “One feels
their lives in music,” he said; “great
tones vibrate round the island where men live.
It is very wonderful.”
“That,” said the King’s
Son, “is the first story in ’The Breastplate
of Instruction,’ ’The Ass and
the Seal.’ And now you must tell me a story
while we are crossing the field of blue flowers.”
“Then it will be a very little
story,” said Fedelma. They crossed a little
field of blue flowers, and Fedelma told
The Sending of the Crystal Egg
XI
The Kings of Murias heard that King
Atlas had to bear The world upon his back, so they
sent him then and there The Crystal Egg that would
be the Swan of Endless Tales That his burthen for
a while might lie on his shoulder-scales Fair-balanced
while he heard the Tales the Swan poured forth North-world
Tales for the while he watched the Star of the North;
And East-world Tales he would hear in the morning swart
and cool, When the Lions Nimrod had spared came up
from the drinking pool; West-world Tales for the King
when he turned him with the sun; Then whispers of
magic Tales from Africa, his own.
But the Kings of Murias made the Crane
their messenger The fitful Crane whose
thoughts are always frightening her She slipped from
Islet to Isle, she sloped from Foreland to Coast;
She passed through cracks in the mountains and came
over trees like a ghost; And then fled back in dismay
when she saw on the hollow plains The final battle
between the Pigmies and the Cranes.
Where is the Crystal Egg that was
sent King Atlas then? Hatched it will be one
day and the Tales will be told to men: That is
if it be not laid in some King’s old Treasury:
That is if the fitful Crane did not lose it threading
the Sea!
They were not long going through the
little field of blue flowers, and when they went through
it they came to another field of white flowers.
Fedelma asked the King’s Son to tell her another
story, and thereupon he told her the second story
in “The Breastplate of Instruction.”
The Story of the Young Cuckoo
XII
The young cuckoo made desperate attempts
to get himself through the narrow opening in the hollow
tree. He screamed when he failed to get through.
His foster-parents had remained so
long beside him that they were wasted and sad while
the other birds, their broods reared, were vigorous
and joyful. They heard the one that had been
reared in their nest, the young cuckoo, scream, but
this time they did not fly towards him. The young
cuckoo screamed again, but there was something in that
scream that reminded the foster-parents of hawks.
They flew away. They were miserable in their
flight, these birds, for they knew they were committing
a treason.
They had built their nest in a hollow
tree that had a little opening. A cuckoo laid
her egg on the ground and, carrying it in her beak,
had placed it in the nest. Their own young had
been pushed out. They had worn themselves to
get provision for the terrible and fascinating creature
who had remained in their nest.
When the time came for him to make
his flight he could not get his body through the little
opening. Yesterday he had begun to try. The
two foster-parents flew to him again and again with
food. But now their own nesting place had become
strange to them. They would never go near it
again. The young cuckoo was forsaken.
A woodpecker ran round the tree.
He looked into the hollow and saw the big bird crumpled
up.
“Hello,” said the woodpecker. “How
did you get here?”
“Born here,” said the young cuckoo sulkily.
“Oh, were you?” said the woodpecker and
he ran round the tree again.
When he came back to the opening the
young cuckoo was standing up with his mouth open.
“Feed me,” said he.
“I’ve to rush round frightfully
to get something for myself,” said the woodpecker.
“At least, someone ought to bring me food,”
said the young cuckoo.
“How is that?” said the woodpecker.
“Well, oughtn’t they to?” said the
young cuckoo.
“I wouldn’t say so,”
said the woodpecker, “you have the use of your
wits, haven’t you?” He ran round the trunk
of the tree again and devoured a lean grub. The
young cuckoo struggled at the opening and screamed
again.
“Don’t be drawing too
much attention to yourself,” advised the woodpecker
when he came to the opening again. “They
might take you for a young hawk, you know.”
“Who might?” said the
cuckoo. “The neighbors. They would
pull a young hawk to pieces.”
“What am I to do?” said the young cuckoo.
“What’s in your nature to do?”
“My nature?” said the
young cuckoo. “It’s my nature to swing
myself on branches high up in a tree. It’s
my nature to spread out my wings and fly over pleasant
places. It is my nature to be alone. But
not alone as here. Alone with the sound of my
own voice.” Suddenly he cried, “Cuckoo,
cuckoo, cuckoo!”
“I know you now,” said
the woodpecker. “There’s going to
be a storm,” he said; “trust a woodpecker
to know that.”
The young cuckoo strove towards the
big sky again, and he screamed so viciously that a
rat that had just come out of the ditch fastened his
eyes on him. That creature looked bad to the young
cuckoo. Rain plopped on the leaves. Thunder
crashed. A bolt struck the tree, and the part
above the opening was torn away.
The young cuckoo flung himself out
on the grass and went awkwardly amongst the blue bells.
“What a world,” said he. “All
this wet and fire and noise to get me out of the nest.
What a world!” The young cuckoo was free, and
these were the first words he said when he went into
the world.
That was the last story the King’s
Son told from Maravaun’s book, “The Breastplate
of Instruction.” They had another little
field of blue flowers to cross, and as they went across
it Fedelma told the King’s Son
THE STORY OF THE CLOUD-WOMAN
XIII
The Cloud-woman, Mor,
was the daughter
Of Griann, the Sun, well,
and she
Made a marriage to equal
that grandeur,
For her Goodman was
Lir, the Sea.
The Cloud-woman Mor,
she had seven
Strong sons, and the
story-books say
Their inches grew in
the night-time,
And grew over again
in the day.
The Cloud-woman Mor, as
they grew in
Their bone, she grew
in her pride,
Till her haughtiness
turned away, men say,
Her goodman Lir from
her side;
Then she lived in Mor’s
Home and she watched
With pride her sons
and her crop,
Till one day the wish
in her grew
To view from the mountain-top
All, all that she owned,
so she
Traveled without any
stop.
And what did she see?
A thousand
Fields and her own fields
small, small!
“What a fine and
wide place is Eirinn,” said she,
“I am Mor, but
not great after all.”
Then a herdsman came,
and he told her
That her sons had stolen
away:
They had left the calves
in the hollow,
With the goose-flock
they would not stay:
They had seen three
ships on the sea
And nothing would do
them but go:
Mor wept and wept when
she heard it,
And her tears made runnels
below.
Then her shining splendor
departed:
She went, and she left
no trace,
And the Cloud-woman,
Mor, was never
Beheld again in that
place.
The proud woman, Mor,
who was daughter
Of Griann, the Sun,
and who made
A marriage to equal
that grandeur,
Passed away as a shade.
XIV
And that was the last story that Fedelma
told, for they had crossed the Meadows of Brightness
and had come to a nameless place a stretch
of broken ground where there were black rocks and
dead grass and bare roots of trees with here and there
a hawthorn tree in blossom. “I fear this
place. We must not halt here,” Fedelma said.
And then a flock of ravens came from
the rocks, and flying straight at them attacked Fedelma
and the King of Ireland’s Son. The King’s
Son sprang from the steed and taking his sword in
his hand he fought the ravens until he drove them
away. They rode on again. But now the ravens
flew back and attacked them again and the King of Ireland’s
Son fought them until his hands were wearied.
He mounted the steed again, and they rode swiftly
on. And the ravens came the third time and attacked
them more fiercely than before. The King’s
Son fought them until he had killed all but three
and until he was covered with their blood and feathers.
The three that had escaped flew away.
“Oh, mount the Slight Red Steed and let us ride
fast,” said Fedelma to the King’s Son.
“I am filled with weariness,”
he said. “Bid the steed stay by the rock,
lay my sword at my side, and let me sleep with my head
on your lap.”
“I fear for us both if you slumber here,”
said Fedelma.
“I must sleep, and I pray that you let me lay
my head on your lap.”
“I know not what would awaken you if you slumber
here.”
“I will awaken,” said
the King’s Son, “but now I must sleep,
and I would slumber with my head on your lap.”
She got down from the Slight Red Steed
and she bade it stay by a rock; she put his sword
by the place he would sleep and she took his head upon
her lap. The King’s Son slept.
As she watched over him a great fear
grew in Fedelma. Every hour she would say to
him, “Are you near waking, my dear, my dear?”
But no flush of waking appeared on the face of the
King of Ireland’s Son.
Then she saw a man coming across the
nameless place, across the broken ground, with its
dead grass and black rocks and with its roots and
stumps of trees. The man who came near them was
taller than any man she had seen before he
was tall as a tree. Fedelma knew him from what
she had heard told about him she knew him
to be the King of the Land of Mist.
The King of the Land of Mist came
straight to them. He stood before Fedelma and
he said, “I seek Fedelma, the daughter of the
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands and the fairest
woman within the seas of Eirinn.”
“Then go to her father’s
house and seek Fedelma there,” said she to him.
“I have sought her there,”
said the King of the Land of Mist, “but she
left her father’s house to go with the King of
Ireland’s Son.”
“Then seek her in the Castle
of the King of Ireland,” said Fedelma.
“That I will not. Fedelma
is here, and Fedelma will come with me,” said
the King of the Land of Mist.
“I will not leave him with whom
I am plighted,” said Fedelma.
Then the King of the Land of Mist
took up the King of Ireland’s Son. High
he held him higher than a tree grows.
“I will dash him down on the rocks and break
the life within him,” said he.
“Do not so,” said Fedelma.
“Tell me. If I go with you what would win
me back?”
“Nothing but the sword whose
stroke would slay me the Sword of Light,”
said the King of the Land of Mist. He held up
the King of Ireland’s Son again, and again he
was about to dash him against the rocks. The blue
falcon that was overhead flew down and settled on the
rock behind her. Fedelma knew that what she and
the King of the Land of Mist would say now would be
carried some place and told to someone. “Leave
my love, the King’s Son, to his rest,”
she said.
“If I do not break the life
in him will you come with me, Fedelma?”
“I will go with you if you tell
again what will win me back from you.”
“The Sword of Light whose stroke will slay me.”
“I will go with you if you swear
by all your vows and promises not to make me your
wife nor your sweetheart for a year and a day.”
“I swear by all my vows and
promises not to make you my wife nor my sweetheart
for a year and a day.”
“I will go with you if you let
it be that I fall into a slumber that will last for
a year and a day.”
“I will let that be, fairest
maid within the seas of Eirinn.”
“I will go with you if you will
tell me what will take me out of that slumber.”
“If one cuts a tress of your
hair with a stroke of the Sword of Light it will take
you out of that slumber.”
The blue falcon that was behind heard
what the King of the Land of Mist said. She rose
up and remained overhead with her wings outspread.
Fedelma took the ring off her own finger and put it
on the finger of the King of Ireland’s Son,
and she wrote upon the ground in Ogham letters, “The
King of the Land of Mist.”
“If it be not you who wakens
me, love,” she said, “may it be that I
never waken.”
“Come, daughter of the Enchanter,”
said the King of the Land of Mist.
“Pluck the branch of hawthorn
and give it to me that I may fall into my slumber
here,” said Fedelma.
The King of the Land of Mist plucked
a flowering branch of hawthorn and gave it to her.
She held the flowers against her face and fell into
slumber. For a while she and the King of Ireland’s
Son were side by side in sleep.
Then the King of the Land of Mist
took Fedelma in his arms and strode along that nameless
place, over the broken ground with its dead grass
and its black rocks and its stumps and roots of trees
and the three ravens that had escaped the sword of
the King of Ire-land’s Son followed where he
went.
XV
Long, long after Fedelma had been
taken by the King of the Land of Mist the King of
Ireland’s Son came out of his slumber. He
saw around him that nameless place with its black
rocks and bare roots of trees. He remembered
he had come to it with Fedelma. He sprang up and
looked for her, but no one was near him. “Fedelma,
Fedelma!” He searched and he called, but it
was as if no one had ever been with him. He found
his sword; be searched for his steed, but the Slight
Red Steed was gone too.
He thought that the Enchanter of the
Black Back-Lands had followed them and had taken Fedelma
from him. He turned to go towards the Enchanter’s
country and then he found what Fedelma had written
upon the ground in Ogham letters
____II_____________\/______//___ IIII /\
“The King of the Land of Mist”
He did not know what direction to
take to get to the dominion of the King of the Land
of Mist. He crossed the broken ground and he found
no trace of Fedelma nor of him who had taken her.
He found himself close to the Wood of Shadows.
He went through it. As he went on he saw scores
and scores of shadows. Nothing else was in the
wood no bird, no squirrel, no cricket.
The shadows had the whole wood to themselves.
They ran swiftly from tree to tree, and now and then
one would stop at a tree and wait. Often the
King of Ireland’s Son came close to a waiting
shadow. One became like a small old man with
a beard. The King’s Son saw this shadow
again and again. What were they, the shadows,
he asked himself? Maybe they were wise creatures
and could tell him what he wanted to know.
He thought he heard them whispering
together. Then one little shadow with trailing
legs went slowly from tree to tree. The King of
Ireland’s Son thought he would catch and hold
a shadow and make it tell him where he should go to
find the dominion of the King of the Land of Mist.
He went after one shadow and another
and waited beside a tree for one to come. Often
he thought he saw the small old man with the beard
and the little creature with trailing legs. And
then he began to see other shadows men
with the heads of rooks and men with queer heavy swords
upon their shoulders. He followed them on and
on through the wood and he heard their whispering
becoming louder and louder, and then he thought that
as he went on the shadows, instead of slipping before
him, began to turn back and go past and surround him.
Then he heard a voice just under the ground at his
feet say, “Shout shout out your own
name, Son of King Connal!” Then the King’s
Son shouted out his own name and the whispers ceased
in the wood and the shadows went backward and forward
no more.
He went on and came to a stream within
the wood and he went against its flow all night as
well as all day, hoping to meet some living thing that
would tell him how he might come to the dominion of
the King of the Land of Mist. In the forenoon
of another day he came to where the wood grew thin
and then he went past the last trees.
He saw a horse grazing: he ran
up to it and found that it was the Slight Red Steed
that had carried Fedelma and himself from the house
of the Enchanter. Then as he laid hold of the
steed a hound ran up to him and a hawk flew down and
he saw that they were the hawk and the hound that
used to be with him when he rode abroad from his father’s
Castle.
He mounted and seeing his hound at
his heel and his hawk circling above he felt a longing
to go back to his father’s Castle which he knew
to be near and where he might find out where the King
of the Land of Mist had his dominion.
So the King of Ireland’s Son
rode back to his father’s Castle
His hound at his heel,
His hawk on his wrist.