The Essential Celtic Folklore Collection. Lady Gregory. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Lady Gregory
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isbn: 9781456613594
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Men and arms for battle hard,

       With the grey steed's horseman brave,

       All the night and all the day!"

       Medb: "I have kept here in reserve

       Heroes fit for fight and spoil;

       Thirty hundred hostage-chiefs,

       Leinster's bravest champions they.

       Fighting men from Cruachan fair,

       Braves from clear-streamed Luachair,

       Four full realms of goodly Gaels

       Will defend me from this man!"

       Fergus: "Rich in troops from Mourne and Bann,

       Blood he'll draw o'er shafts of spears;

       He will cast to mire and sand

       These three thousand Leinstermen.

       With the swallow's swiftest speed,

       With the rush of biting wind,

       So bounds on my dear brave Hound,

       Breathing slaughter on his foes!"

       Medb: "Fergus, should he come 'tween us,

       To Cuchulain bear this word:

       He were prudent to stay still;

       Cruachan holds a check in store."

       Fergus: "Valiant will the slaughter be

       Badb's wild daughter gloats upon.

       For the Blacksmith's Hound will spill

       Showers of blood on hosts of men!"

      After this lay the men of the four grand provinces of Erin marched on the morrow over Moin Coltna ('the Marsh of Coltain') eastwards that day; and there met them eight score deer in a single herd. The troops spread out and surrounded and killed them so that none of them escaped. But there is one event to add: Although the division of the Galian had been dispersed among the men of Erin, wherever there was a man of the Galian, it was he that got them, except five deer only which was the men of Erin's share thereof, so that one division took all the eight score deer.

      It was on that same day, after the coming of the warning from Fergus to the Ulstermen, that Cuchulain son of Sualtaim, and Sualtaim Sidech ('of the Fairy Mound'), his father, when they had received the warning from Fergus, came so near on their watch for the host that their horses grazed in pasture round the pillarstone on Ard Cuillenn ('the Height of Cuillenn'). Sualtaim's horses cropped the grass north of the pillarstone close to the ground; Cuchulain's cropped the grass south of the pillar-stone even to the ground and the bare stones.

      "Well, O master Sualtaim," said Cuchulain; "the thought of the host is fixed sharp upon me to-night, so do thou depart for us with warnings to the men of Ulster, that they remain not in the smooth plains but that they betake themselves to the woods and wastes and steep glens of the province, if so they may keep out of the way of the men of Erin." "And thou, lad, what wilt thou do?" "I must go southwards to Temair to keep tryst with the maid of Fedlimid Nocruthach ('of the Nine Forms') Conchobar's daughter, according to my own agreement, till morning." "Alas, that one should go on such a journey," said Sualtaim, "and leave the Ulstermen under the feet of their foes and their enemies for the sake of a tryst with a woman!" "For all that, I needs must go. For, an I go not, the troth of men will be held for false and the promises of women held for true."

      Sualtaim departed with warnings to the men of Ulster. Cuchulain strode into the wood, and there, with a single blow, he lopped the prime sapling of an oak, root and top, and with only one foot and one hand and one eye he exerted himself; and he made a twig-ring thereof and set an ogam script on the plug of the ring, and set the ring round the narrow part of the pillar-stone on Ard ('the Height') of Cuillenn. He forced the ring till it reached the thick of the pillar-stone. Thereafter Cuchulain went his way to his tryst with the woman.

      Touching the men of Erin, the account follows here: They came up to the pillar-stone at Ard Cuillenn, which is called Crossa Coil to-day, and they began looking out upon the province that was unknown to them, the province of Ulster. And two of Medb's people went always before them in the van of the host, at every camp and on every march, at every ford and every river and every gap. They were wont to do so that they might save the brooches and cushions and cloaks of the host, so that the dust of the multitude might not soil them and that no stain might come on the princes' raiment in the crowd or the crush of the hosts or the throng: these were the two sons of Nera, who was the son of Nuathar, son of Tacan, two sons of the house-stewards of Cruachan, Err and Innell, to wit. Fraech and Fochnam were the names of their charioteers.

      The nobles of Erin arrived at the pillar-stone and they there beheld the signs of the browsing of the horses, cropping around the pillar, and they looked close at the rude hoop which the royal hero had left behind about the pillar-stone. And Ailill took the withy in his hand and placed it in Fergus' hand, and Fergus read the ogam script graven on the plug of the withy, and made known to the men of Erin what was the meaning of the ogam writing that was on it.

      When Medb came, she asked, "Why wait ye here?" "Because of yonder withy we wait," Fergus made answer; "there is an ogam writing on its binding and this is what it saith: ' Let no one go past here till a man be found to throw a withy like unto this, using only one hand and made of a single branch, and I except my master Fergus.' Truly," Fergus added, "it was Cuchulain threw it, and it was his steeds that grazed this plain." And he placed the hoop in the hands of the druids, and it is thus he began to recite and he pronounced a lay:--

       "What bespeaks this withe to us,

       What purports its secret rede?

       And what number cast it here,

       Was it one man or a host?

       "If ye go past here this night,

       And bide not a one night in camp

       On ye'll come the tear-flesh Hound;

       Yours the blame, if ye it scorn!

       "'Evil on the host he'll bring,

       If ye go your way past this.

       Find, ye druids, find out here,

       For what cause this withe was made!"

       A druid speaks: "Cut by hero, cast by chief,

       As a perfect trap for foes.

       Stayer of lords--with hosts of men--

       One man cast it with one hand!

       "With fierce rage the battle 'gins

       Of the Smith's Hound of Red Branch.

       Bound to meet this madman's rage;

       This the name that's on the withe!

       "Woes to bring with hundred fights

       On four realms of Erin's land;

       Naught I know 'less it be this

       For what cause the withe was made!"

      After that lay: "I pledge you my word," said Fergus, "if so ye set at naught yon withy and the royal hero that made it, and if ye go beyond without passing a night's camp and quarterage here, or until a man of you make a withy of like kind, using but one foot and one eye and one hand, even as he made it, certain it is, whether ye be under the ground or in a tight-shut house, the man that wrote the ogam hereon will bring slaughter and bloodshed upon ye before the hour of rising on the morrow, if ye make light of him!"

      "That, surely, would not be pleasing to us," quoth Medb, "that any one should straightway spill our blood or besmirch us red, now that we are come to this unknown province, even to the province of Ulster. More pleasing would it be to us, to spill another's blood and redden him." "Far be it from us to set this withy at naught," said Ailill, "nor shall we make little of the royal hero that wrought it, rather