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"Well then," said Conall, "on condition that thou dost that,
I will tell thee how I was once in a harder case than to be in thy power in
prison to-night."
"Let's hear," said the king.
"I was then," said Conall, " quite a young lad, and I went
out hunting, and my father's land was beside the sea, and it was rough with
rocks, caves, and rifts. When I was going on the top of the shore, I saw as if
there were a smoke coming up between two rocks, and I began to look what might
be the meaning of the smoke coming up there. When I was looking, what should I
do but fall; and the place was so full of heather, that neither bone nor skin
was broken. I knew not how I should get out of this. I was not looking before
me, but I kept looking overhead the way I came - and thinking that the day
would never come that I could get up there. It was terrible for me to be there
till I should die. I heard a great clattering coming, and what was there but a
great giant and two dozen of goats with him, and a buck at their head. And when
the giant had tied the goats, he came up and he said to me, ' Hao O ! Conall,
it's long since my knife has been rusting in my pouch waiting for thy tender
flesh.' 'Och !' said I, 'it's not much you will be bettered by me, though you
should tear me asunder; I will make but one meal for you. But I see that you
are one-eyed. I am a good leech, and I will give you the sight of the other
eye.' The giant went and he drew the great caldron on the site of the fire. I
myself was telling him how he should heat the water, so that I should give its
sight to the other eye. I got heather and I made a rubber of it, and I set him
upright in the cauldron. I began at the eye that was well, pretending to him
that I would give its sight to the other one, till I left them as bad as each
other; and surely it was easier to spoil the one that was well than to give sight
to the other.
"When he saw that he could not see a glimpse, and when I myself said to
him that I would get out in spite of him, he gave a spring out of the water,
and he stood in the mouth of the cave, and he said that he would have revenge
for the sight of his eye. I had but to stay there crouched the length of the
night, holding in my breath in such a way that he might not find out where I
was.
"When he felt the birds calling in the morning, and knew that the day
was, he said - ' Art thou sleeping? Awake and let out my lot of goats.' I
killed the buck. He cried, 'I do believe that thou art killing my buck.'
"'I am not,' said I, ' but the ropes are so tight that I take long to
loose them.' I let out one of the goats, and there he was caressing her, and he
said to her, 'There thou art thou shaggy, hairy white goat, and thou seest me,
but I see thee not.' I kept letting them out by the way of one and one, as I
flayed the buck, and before the last one was out I had him flayed bag-wise.
Then I went and I put my legs in place of his legs, and my hands in place of
his forelegs, and my head in place of his head, and the horns on top of my
head, so that the brute might think that it was the buck. I went out. When I
was going out the giant laid his hand on me, and he said, 'There thou art, thou
pretty buck; thou seest me, but I see thee not.' When I myself got out, and I
saw the world about me, surely, oh, king ! joy was on me. When I was out and
had shaken the skin off me, I said to the brute, 'I am out now in spite of
you.'
"'Aha!' said he, 'hast thou done this to me. Since thou wert so
stalwart that thou hast got out, I will give thee a ring that I have here ;
keep the ring, and it will do thee good.'
"'I will not take the ring from you,' said I,' but throw it, and I will
take it with me.' He threw the ring on the flat ground, I went myself and I
lifted the ring, and I put it on my finger. When he said me then, ' Is the ring
fitting thee ?' I said to him, 'It is.' Then he said, 'Where art thou, ring ?'
And the ring said, 'I am here.' The brute went and went towards where the ring
was speaking, and now I saw that I was in a harder case than ever I was. I drew
a dirk. I cut the finger from off me, and I threw it from me as far as I could
out on the loch, and there was a great depth in the place. He shouted, 'Where
art thou, ring?' And the ring said, 'I am here,' though it was on the bed of
ocean. He gave a spring after the ring, and out he went in the sea. And I was
as pleased then when I saw him drowning, as though you should grant my own life
and the life of my two sons with me, and not lay any more trouble on me.
"When the giant was drowned I went in, and I took with me all he had of
gold and silver, and I went home, and surely great joy was on my people when I
arrived. And as a sign now look, the finger is off me."
"Yes, indeed, Conall, you are wordy and wise," said the king.
"I see the finger is off you. You have freed your two sons, but tell me a
case in which you ever were that is harder than to be looking on your son being
hanged to-morrow, and you shall get the soul of your eldest son."
"Then went my father," said Conall "and he got me a wife, and
I was married. I went to hunt. I was going beside the sea, and I saw an island
over in the midst of the loch, and I came there where a boat was with a rope
before her, and a rope behind her, and many precious things within her. I
looked myself on the boat to see how I might get part of them. I put in the one
foot, and the other foot was on the ground, and when I raised my head what was
it but the boat over in the middle of the loch, and she never stopped till she
reached the island. When I went out of the boat the boat returned where she was
before. I did not know now what I should do. The place was without meat or
clothing, without the appearance of a house on it. I came out on the top of a
hill. Then I came to a glen ; I saw in it, at the bottom of a hollow, a woman
with a child, and the child was naked on her knee, and she had a knife in her
hand. She tried to put the knife to the throat of the babe, and the babe began
to laugh in her face, and she began to cry, and she threw the knife behind her.
I thought to myself that I was near my foe and far from my friends, and I
called to the woman, 'What are you doing here?' And she said to me, 'What
brought you here?' I told her myself word upon word how I came. 'Well then,'
said she, 'it was so I came also.' She showed me to the place where I should
come in where she was. I went in, and I said to her, 'What was the matter that
you were putting the knife on the neck of the child?' 'it is that he must be
cooked for the giant who is here, or else no more of my world will be before
me.' Just then we could be hearing the footsteps of the giant, 'What shall I
do? what shall I do?' cried the woman. I went to the cauldron, and by luck it
was not hot, so in it I got just as the brute came in. 'Hast thou boiled that
youngster for me ?' he cried. ' He's not done yet,' said she, and I cried out
from the cauldron, 'Mammy, mammy, it's boiling I am.' Then the giant laughed
out HAl, HAW, HOGARAICH, and heaped on wood under the caldron.
"And now I was sure I would scald before I could get out of that. As
fortune favoured me, the brute slept beside the cauldron. There I was scalded
by the bottom of the cauldron. When she perceived that he was asleep, she set
her mouth quietly to the hole that was in the lid, and she said to me 'was I
alive?' I said I was. I put up my head, and the hole in the lid was so large,
that my head went through easily. Everything was coming easily with me till I
began to bring up my hips. I left the skin of my hips behind me, but I came
out. When I got out of the caldron I knew not what to do; and she said to me
that there was no weapon that would kill him but his own weapon. I began to
draw his spear and every breath that he drew I thought I would be down his
throat, and when his breath came out I was back again just as far. But with
every ill that befell me I got the spear loosed from him. Then I was as one
under a bundle of straw in a great wind for I could not manage the spear. And
it was fearful to look on the brute, who had but one eye in the midst of his
face; and it was not agreeable for the like of me to attack him. I drew the
dart as best I could, and I set it in his eye. When he felt this he gave his
head a lift, and he struck the other end of the dart on the top of the cave,
and it went through to the back of his head. And he fell cold dead where he
was; and you may be sure, oh king, that joy was on me. I myself and the woman
went out on clear ground, and we passed the night there. I went and got the
boat with which I came, and she was no way lightened, and took the woman and
the child over on dry land ; and I returned home."
The king of Lochlann's mother was putting on a fire at this time, and
listening to Conall telling the tale about the child.
"Is it you," said she, " that were there ?"
"Well then," said he, " 'twas I."
"Och! och ! " said she, " 'twas I that was there, and the
king is the child whose life you saved ; and it is to you that life thanks
should be given." Then they took great joy.
The king said, "Oh, Conall, you came through great hardships. And now
the brown horse is yours, and his sack full of the most precious things that
are in my treasury."
They lay down that night, and if it was early that Conall rose, it was
earlier than that that the queen was on foot making ready. He got the brown
horse and his sack full of gold and silver and stones of great price, and then
Conall and his three sons went away, and they returned home to the Erin realm
of gladness. He left the gold and silver in his house, and he went with the
horse to the king. They were good friends evermore. He returned home to his
wife, and they set in order a feast ; and that was a feast if ever there was
one, oh son and brother.
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