Part 31 (2/2)
out of the ground; then Misty struck him with a rod of enchantment which he had, and brought life into him again.
Then Misty turned to Fin and said: ”I am a brother of the seven boys who went with you to save the children of the king of France. I was too young for action at that time, but my mother sent me here now as a gift to help you and tell you what to do. When you go to the hag she'll ask you for the sword, but you'll not give it, you'll only show it to her.
And when she has seen the sword she'll ask for the head. And you'll not give the head to her either, you'll only show it; and when she sees the head, she'll open her mouth with joy at seeing the head of her brother; and when you see her open her mouth be sure to strike her on the breast with the head; and if you don't do that, the whole world wouldn't be able to kill her.”
Then Fin left Misty where he met him and with ”Iron back without action”
he made for Tara of the Kings.
When he came in front of the old hag she asked him had he the gifts. Fin said he had. She asked for the sword but she didn't get it, Fin only showed it to her. Then she asked for the head, and when she saw the head, she opened her mouth with delight at seeing the head of her brother.
While she stood there with open mouth gazing, Fin picked out the mark and struck her on the breast with the head. She fell to the ground; they left her there dead and went into the castle.
BLACK, BROWN, AND GRAY.
On a day Fin Macc.u.mhail was near Tara of the Kings, south of Ballyshannon, hunting with seven companies of the Fenians of Erin.
During the day they saw three strange men coming towards them, and Fin said to the Fenians: ”Let none of you speak to them, and if they have good manners they'll not speak to you nor to any man till they come to me.”
When the three men came up, they said nothing till they stood before Fin himself. Then he asked what their names were and what they wanted. They answered:--
”Our names are Dubh, Dun, and Glasan [Black, Brown, and Gray]. We have come to find Fin Macc.u.mhail, chief of the Fenians of Erin, and take service with him.”
Fin was so well pleased with their looks that he brought them home with him that evening and called them his sons. Then he said, ”Every man who comes to this castle must watch the first night for me, and since three of you have come together, each will watch one third of the night.
You'll cast lots to see who'll watch first and second.”
Fin had the trunk of a tree brought, three equal parts made of it, and one given to each of the men.
Then he said, ”When each of you begins his watch he will set fire to his own piece of wood, and so long as the wood burns he will watch.”
The lot fell to Dubh to go on the first watch. Dubh set fire to his log, then went out around the castle, the dog Bran with him. He wandered on, going further and further from the castle, and Bran after him. At last he saw a bright light and went towards it. When he came to the place where the light was burning, he saw a large house. He entered the house and when inside saw a great company of most strange looking men, drinking out of a single cup.
The chief of the party, who was sitting on a high place, gave the cup to the man nearest him; and when he had drunk his fill out of it, he pa.s.sed it to his neighbor, and so on to the last.
While the cup was going the round of the company, the chief said, ”This is the great cup that was taken from Fin Macc.u.mhail a hundred years ago; and as much as each man wishes to drink he always gets from it, and no matter how many men there may be, or what they wish for, they always have their fill.”
Dubh sat near the door on the edge of the crowd, and when the cup came to him he drank a little, then slipped out and hurried away in the dark; when he came to the fountain at the castle of Fin Macc.u.mhail, his log was burned.
As the second lot had fallen on Dun, it was now his turn to watch, so he set fire to his log and went out, in the place of Dubh, with the dog Bran after him.
Dun walked on through the night till he saw a fire. He went towards it, and when he had come near he saw a large house, which he entered; and when inside he saw a crowd of strange looking men, fighting. They were ferocious, wonderful to look at, and fighting wildly.
The chief, who had climbed on the crossbeams of the house to escape the uproar and struggle, called out to the crowd below: ”Stop fighting now; for I have a better gift than the one you have lost this night.” And putting his hand behind his belt, he drew out a knife and held it before them, saying: ”Here is the wonderful knife, the small knife of division, that was stolen from Fin Macc.u.mhail a hundred years ago, and if you cut on a bone with the knife, you'll get the finest meat in the world, and as much of it as ever your hearts can wish for.”
Then he pa.s.sed down the knife and a bare bone to the man next him, and the man began to cut; and off came slices of the sweetest and best meat in the world.
The knife and the bone pa.s.sed from man to man till they came to Dun, who cut a slice off the bone, slipped out unseen, and made for Fin's castle as fast as his two legs could carry him through the darkness and over the ground.
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