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They did so. She cried "Naois,
son of Uisnech, will you leave me ?" " What piercing, shrill cry is
that-the most melodious my ear ever heard, and the shrillest that ever struck
my heart of all the cries I ever heard?" "It is anything else but the
wail of the wave-swans of Connachar," said his brothers. "No! yonder
is a woman's cry of distress," said Naois, and he swore he would not go
further until he saw from whom the cry came, and Naois turned back. Naois and
Deirdre met, and Deirdre kissed Naois three times, and a kiss each to his
brothers. With the confusion that she was in, Deirdre went into a crimson blaze
of fire, and her colour came and went as rapidly as the movement of the aspen by
the stream side. Naois thought he never saw a fairer creature, and Naois gave
Deirdre the love that he never gave to thing, to vision, or to creature but to
herself.
Then Naois placed Deirdre on the topmost height of his shoulder, and told
his brothers to keep up their pace, and they kept up their pace. Naois thought
that it would not be well for him to remain in Erin on account of the way in
which Connachar, King of Ulster, his uncle's son, had gone against him because
of the woman, though he had not married her; and he turned back to Alba, that
is, Scotland. He reached the side of Loch-Ness and made his habitation there.
He could kill the salmon of the torrent from out his own door, and the deer of
the grey gorge from out his window. Naois and Deirdre and Allen and Arden dwelt
in a tower, and they were happy so long a time as they were there.
By this time the end of the period came at which Deirdre had to marry
Connachar, King of Ulster. Connachar made up his mind to take Deirdre away by
the sword whether she was married to Naois or not. So he prepared a great and
gleeful feast. He sent word far and wide through Erin all to his kinspeople to
come to the feast. Connachar thought to himself that Naois would not come
though he should bid him; and the scheme that arose in his mind was to send for
his father's brother, Ferchar Mac Ro, and to send him on an embassy to Naois.
He did so; and Connachar said to Ferchar, " Tell Naois, son of Uisnech,
that I am setting forth a great and gleeful feast to my friends and kinspeople
throughout the wide extent of Erin all, and that I shall not have rest by day
nor sleep by night if he and Allen and Arden be not partakers of the
feast."
Ferchar Mac Ro and his three sons went on their journey, and reached the
tower where Naois was dwelling by the side of Loch Etive. The sons of Uisnech
gave a cordial kindly welcome to Ferchar Mac Ro and his three sons, and asked
of him the news of Erin. "The best news that I have for you," said
the hardy hero, "is that Connachar, King of Ulster, is setting forth a
great sumptuous feast to his friends and kinspeople throughout the wide extent
of Erin all, and he has vowed by the earth beneath him, by the high heaven
above him, and by the sun that wends to the west, that he will have no rest by
day nor sleep by night if the sons of Uisnech, the sons of his own father's
brother, will not come back to the land of their home and the Soil of their
nativity, and to the feast likewise, and he has sent us on embassy to invite
you."
"We will go with you," said Naois.
"We will," said his brothers.
But Deirdre did not wish to go with Ferchar Mac Ro, and she tried every
prayer to turn Naois from going with him-she said:
"I saw a vision, Naois, and do you interpret it to me," said
Deirdre - then she sang:
O Naois, son of Uisnech, hear
What was shown in a dream to me.
There came three white doves out of the South
Flying over the sea,
And drops of honey were in their mouth
From the hive of the honey-bee.
O Naois, son of Uisnech, hear,
What was shown in a dream to me.
I saw three grey hawks out of the south
Come flying over the sea,
And the red red drops they bare in their mouth
They were dearer than life to me.
Said Naois -
It is nought but the fear of woman's heart,
And a dream of the night, Deirdre.
"The day that Connachar sent the invitation to his feast will be
unlucky for us if we don't go, O Deirdre."
"You will go there," said Ferchar Mac Ro ; "and if Connachar
show kindness to you, show ye kindness to him ; and if he will display wrath
towards you display ye wrath towards him, and I and my three sons will be with
you."
"We will," said Daring Drop. "We will," said Hardy
Holly. " We will," said Fiallan the Fair.
"I have three sons, and they are three heroes, and in any harm or
danger that may befall you, they will be with you, and I myself will be along
with them." And Ferchar Mac Ro gave his vow and his word in presence of
his arms that, in any harm or danger that came in the way of the sons of
Uisnech, he and his three sons would not leave head on live body in Erin,
despite sword or helmet, spear or shield, blade or mail, be they ever so good.
Deirdre was unwilling to leave Alba, but she went with Naois. Deirdre wept
tears in showers and she sang:
Dear is the Iand, the land over there,
Alba full of woods and lakes;
Bitter to my heart is leaving thee,
But I go away with Naois.
Ferchar Mac Ro did not stop till he got the sons of Uisnech away with him,
despite the suspicion of Deirdre.
The coracle was put to sea,
The sail was hoisted to it;
And the second morrow they arrived
On the white shores of Erin.
As soon as the sons of Uisnech landed in Erin, Ferchar Mac Ro sent word to
Connachar, king of Ulster, that the men whom he wanted were come, and let him
now show kindness to them. "Well," said Connachar, "I did not
expect that the sons of Uisnech would come, though I sent for them, and I am
not quite ready to receive them. But there is a house down yonder where I keep
strangers, and let them go down to it to-day, and my house will be ready before
them to-morrow."
But he that was up in the palace felt it long that he was not getting word
as to how matters were going on for those down in the house of the strangers.
"Go you, Gelban Grednach, son of Lochlin's King, go you down and bring me
information as to whether her former hue and complexion are on Deirdre. If they
be, I will take her out with edge of blade and point of sword, and if not, let
Naois, son of Uisnech, have her for himself," said Connachar.
Gelban, the cheering and charming son of Lochlin's King, went down to the
place of the strangers, where the sons of Uisnech and Deirdre were staying. He
looked in through the bicker-hole on the door-leaf. Now she that he gazed upon
used to go into a crimson blaze of blushes when any one looked at her. Naois looked
at Deirdre and knew that some one was looking at her from the back of the
door-leaf. He seized one of the dice on the table before him and fired it
through the bicker-hole, and knocked the eye out of Gelban Grednach the
Cheerful and Charming, right through the back of his head. Gelban returned back
to the palace of King Connachar.
"You were cheerful, charming, going away, but you are cheerless,
charmless, returning. What has happened to you, Gelban? But have you seen her,
and are Deirdre's hue and complexion as before?" said Connachar.
"Well, I have seen Deirdre, and I saw her also truly, and while I was
looking at her through the bicker-hole on the door, Naois, son of Uisnech,
knocked out my eye with one of the dice in his hand. But of a truth and verity,
although he put out even my eye, it were my desire still to remain looking at
her with the other eye, were it not for the hurry you told me to be in,"
said Gelban.
"That is true," said Connachar ; "let three hundred brave
heroes go down to the abode of the strangers, and let them bring hither to me
Deirdre, and kill the rest."
Connachar ordered three hundred active heroes to go down to the abode of the
strangers and to take Deirdre up with them and kill the rest. "The pursuit
is coming," said Deirdre.
Yes, but I will myself go out and stop the pursuit," said Naois.
"It is not you, but we that will go," said Daring Drop, and Hardy
Holly, and Fiallan the Fair ; "it is to us that our father entrusted your
defence from harm and danger when he himself left for home." And the
gallant youths, full noble, full manly, full handsome, with beauteous brown
locks, went forth girt with battle arms fit for fierce fight and clothed with
combat dress for fierce contest fit, which was burnished, bright, brilliant, bladed,
blazing, on which were many pictures of beasts and birds and creeping things,
lions and lithe-limbed tigers, brown eagle and harrying hawk and adder fierce;
and the young heroes laid low three-thirds of the company.
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