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So they passed the time for a year, until there came a day when Guleesh was
lying by himself on the grass, on the last day of the last month in autumn, and
he was thinking over again in his own mind of everything that happened to him
from the day that he went with the sheehogues across the sea. He remembered
then, suddenly, that it was one November night that he was standing at the
gable of the house, when the whirlwind came, and the sheehogues in it, and he
said to himself: "We have November night again to-day, and I'll stand in
the same place I was last year, until I see if the good people come again.
Perhaps I might see or hear something that would be useful to me, and might
bring back her talk again to Mary " - that was the name himself and the
priest called the king's daughter, for neither of them knew her right name. He
told his intention to the priest, and the priest gave him his blessing.
Guleesh accordingly went to the old rath when the night was darkening, and
he stood with his bent elbow leaning on a grey old flag, waiting till the
middle of the night should come. The moon rose slowly, and it was like a knob
of fire behind him; and there was a white fog which was;:! raised up over the
fields of grass and all damp places, through the coolness of the night after a
great heat in the day. The night was calm as is a lake when there is not a
breath of wind to move a wave on it, and there was no sound to be heard but the
cronawn of the insects that would go by from time to time, or the hoarse
sudden scream of the wild-geese, as they passed from lake to lake, half a mile
up in the air over his head ; or the sharp whistle of the golden and green
plover, rising and lying, lying and rising, as they do on a calm night. There
were a thousand thousand bright stars shining over his head, and there was a
little frost out, which left the grass under his foot white and crisp.
He stood there for an hour, for two hours, for three hours, and the frost
increased greatly, so that he heard the breaking of the traneens under
his foot as often as he moved. He was thinking, in his own mind, at last, that
the sheehogues would not come that night, and that it was as good for him to
return back again, when he heard a sound far away from him, coming towards him,
and he recognised what it was at the first moment. The sound increased, and at
first it was like the beating of waves on a stony shore, and then it was like
the falling of a great waterfall, and at last it was like a loud storm in the
tops of the trees, and then the whirlwind burst into the rath of one rout, and
the sheehogues were in it.
It all went by him so suddenly that he lost his breath with it, but he came
to himself on the spot, and put an ear on himself, listening to what they would
say.
Scarcely had they gathered into the rath till they all began shouting, and
screaming, and talking amongst themselves; and then each one of them cried out
: " My horse, and bridle, and saddle! My horse, and bridle, and saddle
!" and Guleesh took courage, and called out as loudly as any of them :
"My horse, and bridle, and saddle ! My horse, and bridle, and
saddle!" But before the word was well out of his mouth, another man cried
out: "Ora ! Guleesh, my boy, are you here with us again? How are you
getting on with your woman? There's no use in your calling for your horse
tonight. I'll go bail you won't play such a trick on us again. It was a good
trick you played on us last year?"
"It was," said another man ; "he won't do it again."
"Isn't he a prime lad, the same lad ! to take a woman with him that
never said as much to him as, 'How do you do ?' since this time last
year!" says the third man.
"Perhaps he likes to be looking at her," said another voice.
"And if the omadawn only knew that there's an herb growing up by
his own door, and if he were to boil it and give it to her, she'd be
well," said another voice.
"That's true for you."
"He is an omadawn."
"Don't bother your head with him; we'll be going."
"We'll leave the bodach as he is."
And with that they rose up into the air, and out with them with one roolya-boolya
the way they came; and they left poor Guleesh standing where they found
him, and the two eyes going out of his head, looking after them and wondering.
He did not stand long till he returned back, and he thinking in his own mind
on all he saw and heard, and wondering whether there was really an herb at his
own door that would bring back the talk to the king's daughter. " It can't
be," says he to himself, "that they would tell it to me, if there was
any virtue in it; but perhaps the sheehogue didn't observe himself when he let
the word slip out of his mouth. I'll search well as soon as the sun rises,
whether there's any plant growing beside the house except thistles and
dockings."
He went home, and as tired as he was he did not sleep a wink until the sun
rose on the morrow. He got up then, and it was the first thing he did to go out
and search well through the grass round about the house, trying could he get
any herb that he did not recognise. And, indeed, he was not long searching till
he observed a large strange herb that was growing up just by the gable of the
house.
He went over to it, and observed it closely, and saw that there were seven
little branches coming out of the stalk, and seven leaves growing on every
brancheen of them and that there was a white sap in the leaves. "
It's very wonderful," said he to himself, "that I never noticed this
herb before. If there's any virtue in an herb at all, it ought to be in such a
strange one as this."
He drew out his knife, cut the plant, and carried it into his own house ;
stripped the leaves off it and cut up the stalk ; and there came a thick, white
juice out of it, as there comes out of the sow-thistle when it is bruised,
except that the juice was more like oil.
He put it in a little pot and a little water in it, and laid it on the fire
until the water was boiling, and then he took a cup, filled it half up with the
juice, and put it to his own mouth. It came into his head then that perhaps it
was poison that was in it, and that the good people were only tempting him that
he might kill himself with that trick, or put the girl to death without meaning
it. He put down the cup again, raised a couple of drops on the top of his
finger, and put it to his mouth. It was not bitter, and, indeed, had a sweet,
agreeable taste. He grew bolder then, and drank the full of a thimble of it,
and then as much again, and he never stopped till he had half the cup drunk. He
fell asleep after that, and did not wake till it was night, and there was great
hunger and great thirst on him.
He had to wait, then, till the day rose ; but he determined, as soon as he
should wake in the morning, that he would go to the king's daughter and give
her a drink of the juice of the herb.
As soon as he got up in the morning, he went over to the priest's house with
the drink in his hand, and he never felt himself so bold and valiant, and
spirited and light, as he was that day, and he was quite certain that it was
the drink he drank which made him so hearty.
When he came to the house, he found the priest and the young lady within,
and they were wondering greatly why he had not visited them for two days.
He told them all his news, and said that he was certain that there was great
power in that herb, and that it would do the lady no hurt, for he tried it
himself and got good from it, and then he made her taste it, for he vowed and
swore that there was no harm in it.
Guleesh handed her the cup, and she drank half of it, and then fell back on
her bed and a heavy sleep came on her, and she never woke out of that sleep
till the day on the morrow.
Guleesh and the priest sat up the entire night with her, waiting till she
should awake, and they between hope and unhope, between expectation of saving
her and fear of hurting her.
She awoke at last when the sun had gone half its way through the heavens.
She rubbed her eyes and looked like a person who did not know where she was.
She was like one astonished when she saw Guleesh and the priest in the same
room with her, and she sat up doing her best to collect her thoughts.
The two men were in great anxiety waiting to see would she speak, or would
she not speak, and when they remained silent for a couple of minutes, the
priest said to her:
"Did you sleep well, Mary?"
And she answered him: "I slept, thank you."
No sooner did Guleesh hear her talking than he put a shout of joy out of
him, and ran over to her and fell on his two knees, and said: "A thousand
thanks to God, who has given you back the talk; lady of my heart, speak again
to me."
The lady answered him that she understood it was he who boiled that drink
for her, and gave it to her; that she was obliged to him from her heart for all
the kindness he showed her since the day she first came to Ireland, and that he
might be certain that she never would forget it.
Guleesh was ready to die with satisfaction and delight. Then they brought
her food, and she ate with a good appetite, and was merry and joyous, and never
left off talking with the priest while she was eating.
After that Guleesh went home to his house, and stretched himself on the bed
and fell asleep again, for the force of the herb was not all spent, and he passed
another day and a night sleeping. When he woke up he went back to the priest's
house, and found that the young lady was in the same state, and that she was
asleep almost since the time that he left the house.
He went into her chamber with the priest, and they remained watching beside
her till she awoke the second time, and she had her talk as well as ever, and
Guleesh was greatly rejoiced. The priest put food on the table again, and they
ate together, and Guleesh used after that to come to the house from day to day,
and the friendship that was between him and the king's daughter increased,
because she had no one to speak to except Guleesh and the priest, and she liked
Guleesh best.
So they married one another, and that was the fine wedding they had, and if
I were to be there then, I would not be here now; but I heard it from a birdeen
that there was neither cark nor care, sickness nor sorrow, mishap nor
misfortune on them till the hour of their death, and may the same be with me,
and with us all !
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