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Books: The King of Ireland\'s Son

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Then she ran out of the neighbor's house. The night after, in the Spae-Woman's
house she finished weaving the threads that were on the loom. The next night
she stitched the cloth and made the sixth shirt. The day after she went into
the bog to gather the bog-down for the seventh shirt. She had gathered her
basketful and was going through the wood about the hour of sunset. At the edge
of the thin wood she saw the Hunter-King standing. He took her hands and his
were warm hands. His brown face and his gentian-blue eyes were high and noble.
And Sheen felt a joy like the sharpness of a sword when he sang to her about
the brightness of her hair and the blue of her eyes. "0 Maid," said he, "is
there anything that binds you to this place?" Sheen showed him the bog-down in
the basket and the woven thread that was round her neck. "Come with me to my
kingdom," said he, "and you shall be my wife and the love of my heart." The
next evening Sheen went with him. She took the six shirts she had spun and
woven and stitched. The Hunter-King lifted her before him on a black horse and
they rode into his Kingdom.


And now Sheen was the wife of the Hunter-King. She would have been happy if
her husband's sisters had been kind. But they were jealous and they made
everything in the Castle unfriendly to her. And often they talked before her
brother saying that Sheen was not noble at all, and that the reason she did
not speak was because her language was a base one. They watched her when she
went out to gather bog-down in the daytime, and they watched her when she spun
by herself at night. Sheen longed for the days and nights to pass so that the
last threads might be spun and woven and the last stitches put in the seventh
shirt. Then her brothers would be with her. She could tell the King about
herself and silence the bad talk of his sisters. But as she neared the end of
her task she became more and more in dread.

The threads were spun and woven for the seventh shirt. The cloth was made and
the first stitches were put in it. Then Sheen's little son was born. The King
was away at the time, gathering his men together at far parts of the Kingdom,
and he sent a message saying that Sheen and her baby were to be well-minded,
and that his sisters were not to leave the chamber where she was until he
returned.

On the third night, while Sheen was in her bed with her baby beside her, and
while her sisters-in-law were in the room, a strange music was heard outside.
It was played all round the King's house. Whoever heard it fell into deep
slumber. The kern that were on guard slept. The maids that were whispering
together fell into a slumber. And a deep sleep came upon Sheen and her child
and on her three sisters-in-law who watched in the chamber.

Then a gray wolf that had been seen outside sprang in through the window
opening. He took Sheen's child in his mouth. He sprang back through the window
opening and was seen about the place no more. Her sisters-in-law wakened while
Sheen still slept. They went to tend it and found the child was gone. Then
they were afraid of what their brother would do to them for letting this
happen. They made a plot to clear themselves, and before Sheen wakened they
had killed a little beast and smeared its blood upon the pillows of the bed.


When the King came into his wife's chamber he saw his sisters on the ground
lamenting and tearing the hairs out of their heads. He went to where his wife
was sleeping and saw blood upon her hands and upon the pillows. He turned on
his sisters with his sword in his hand. They cried out that they could not
have prevented the thing that had happened--that the Queen had laid hands on
the child and having killed it had thrown its body to the gray wolf that had
been watching outside.

And while they were speaking Sheen awakened. She put out her arms but her
child was not beside her. She found blood upon the pillows. Then she heard her
sisters-in-law accuse her to the King of having killed her child and flung its
body to the gray wolf outside. She fell into a swoon and when she came out of
it her mind was lost to her.

The King knelt to her and begged her to tell him what had happened. But she
only knew she was to say no word. Then he used to watch her and he wondered
why she cried no tear. On the fourth day after she rose from her bed and
searched the Castle for the piece of cloth she had spun and woven out of the
bog-down. She found it and began to sew it for the seventh shirt. The King's
sisters came to him and said, "The woman you brought here is of another race
from ours. She has forgotten that a child was born to her, and that she killed
it and flung its body to the gray wolf. She sits there now just stitching a
garment." The King went and saw her stitching and stitching as if her life
depended on each stitch she put into the cloth. He spoke to her and she looked
up but did not speak. Then the King's heart was hardened. He took her and
brought her outside the gate of the Castle. "Go back to the people you came
from," said he, "for I cannot bear that you should be here, and not speak to
me of what has happened." Sheen knew she was being sent from the house he had
brought her to. A bitter cry came from her. Then the stitched cloth that was
in her hand became bog-down and was blown away on the breeze. When she saw
this happen she turned from the King's Castle and ran through the woods crying
and crying.

She went through the woods for many days, living on berries and the water of
springs. At last she came to the Spae-Woman's house. The Spae-Woman was before
the door and she welcomed Sheen back. She gave her drinks she had made from
strange herbs, and in a season Sheen's mind and health came back to her, and
she knew all that had happened. She thought she would win back her seven
brothers, and then, with their help, win back her child and her husband. But
she knew she would have to gather the bog-down, spin the threads and weave
them all over again, as her tears and cries had broken her task. She told her
story to the Spae-Woman. Then she went into silence again, gathering the bog-
down and spinning the thread.

But when the first thread was spun the memory of her child blew against her
heart and she cried tears down. The thread she had spun became bog-down and
was blown away. For days she wept and wept. Then the Spae-Woman said to her,
"Commit the child you have lost to Diachbha--that is, to Destiny--and Diachbha
may bring it about that he shall be the one that will restore your seven
brothers their human forms. And when you have committed your lost little son
to Diachbha go back to your husband and tell him all you have lived through."

Sheen, believing in the Spae-Woman's wisdom, did what was told her. She made
an image of her lost little son with leaves and left it on the top of the
house where it was blown away by the winds. Then she was ready to go back to
her husband and tell him all that had happened in her life. But on the day she
was bringing the last pitcher of water from the well she met him on the path
before her. "Do you remember that I carried you across the bog?" he said. "And
do you remember that I followed your soul?" said she.

These were the first words she ever spoke to him. They went back together to
the Spae-Woman's and she told him all that had been in her life. He told her
how his sisters had acknowledged that they had spoken falsely against her.

He took her back to his own Kingdom, and there, as King and Queen they still
live. But the name she bears is not Sheen or Storm now. Two sons more were
born to her. But her seven brothers are still seven wild geese, and the Queen
has found no trace of her first-born son. But the Spae-Woman has had a dream,
and the dream has revealed this to her: the Son that Sheen lost is in the
world, and if the maiden who will come to love him, will give seven drops of
her heart's blood, the Queen's seven brothers will regain their human forms.


"So that is the Unique Tale," said the Old Woman of Beare. "If you ever find
out what went before it and what comes after it come back here and tell it to
me. But I don't think you'll get the rest of it," said she, "seeing that the
two of you weren't able to count the horns outside." She went on talking and
talking, Gilly and the King's Son hearing what she said when she spoke in a
sudden high voice, and not hearing when she murmured on as if talking to the
ashes or to the pot or to the corncrake, the cuckoo or the swallow that were
picking grains off the floor. "If you see Laheen the Eagle again, or Blackfoot
the Elk or the Crow of Achill tell them to come and visit me sometime. I'm all
alone here except for my swallow and cuckoo and corncrake. And mind you, great
Kings and Princes used to come to see me." So she went on talking in low tones
and in sudden high tones.

"You must come with me and help me to get the rest of the Unique Tale," said
the King of Ireland's Son. "That I'll do," said Gilly of the Goatskin. "But I
must get a name first.

"Old Mother," said he, to the Old Woman of Beare. "You must now give me a
name."

"I'll give you a name," said the Old Woman of Beare, "but you must stand
before me and strip off the goatskin that covers you."

Gilly pulled at the strings and the goatskin fell on the ground. The Old Woman
of Beare nodded her head. "You have the stars on your breast that denote the
Son of a King," she said.

"The Son of a King--me!" said Gilly of the Goatskin.
"You have the stars on your breast," said the Old Woman of Beare.

Gilly looked at himself and saw the three stars on his breast. "If I am the
Son of a King I never knew it until now," he said.

"You are the son of a King," said the Old Woman of Beare, "and I will give you
a name when you come back to me. But I want you, first of all, to find out
what happened to the Crystal Egg."

"The Crystal Egg!" said Gilly in great surprise.

"The Crystal Egg indeed," said the Old Woman of Beare. "You must know that it
was stolen out of the nest of Laheen the Eagle, and the creature that stole it
was the Crow of Achill. But what happened to the Crystal Egg after that no one
knows."

"I myself had it after that," said Gilly, "and it was stolen from me by Rory
the Fox. And then it was put under a goose to hatch." "A goose to hatch the
Crystal Egg after an Eagle had half-hatched it! Aye, aye, to be sure, that's
right," said the 0ld Woman of Beare. "And now you must go and find out what
happened to it. Go now, and when you come back I will give you your name."

"I will do that," said Gilly of the Goatskin. Then he turned to the King's
Son. "Three days before Midsummer's Day meet me on the road to the Town of the
Red Castle, and I will go with you to find out what went before and what comes
after the Unique Tale," he said.

"I will meet you," said the King of Ireland's Son.

The two youths went to the table and ate slices of the unwasted loaf and drank
draughts from the inexhaustible bottle. "I shall stay here to practise sword-
cuts and sword-thrusts," said the King's Son, "until four days before
Midsummer's Day." The two youths went to the door.

"Seven waves of good-luck to you, 0ld Woman of Beare," said Gilly of the
Goatskin.

"May your double be slain and yourself remain," said the King's Son. Then they
went out together, but not along the same path did the two youths go.


Gilly slept as he traveled that night, for he fell in with a man who was
driving a load of hay to the fair, and when he got into the cart he lay
against the hay and slept. When he parted with the carter he cut a holly stick
and journeyed along the road by himself. At the fall of night he came to a
place that made him think he had been there before: he looked around and then
he knew that this was the place he had lived in when he had the Crystal Egg.
He looked to see if the house was there: it was, and people were li;5ng in it,
for he saw smoke coming out of the chimney. It was dark now and Gilly thought
he could not do better than take shelter in that house.

He went to the door and knocked. There was a lot of rattling behind, and then
a crooked old woman opened the door to him. "What do you want?" said she.

"Can I have shelter here for to-night, ma'am?" said Gilly.

"You can get no shelter hem," said the old woman, "and I'd advise you to
begone."

"May I ask who lives here?" said Gilly, putting his foot inside the door.

"Six very honest men whose business keeps them out until two and three in the
morning," said the crooked old woman.

Gilly guessed that the honest men whose business kept them out until two and
three in the morning were the robbers he had heard about. And he thought they
might be the very men who had carried off the Spae-Woman's goose and the
Crystal Egg along with it. "Would you tell me, good woman," said Gilly, "did
your six honest men ever bring to this house an old hatching goose?"

"They did indeed," said the crooked woman, "and a heart-scald the same old
hatching goose is. It goes round the house and round the house, trying to
hatch the cups I leave out of my hands."

Then Gilly pushed the door open wide and stepped into the house.

"Don't stay in the house," said the crooked old woman. "I'll tell you the
truth now. My masters are robbers, and they'll skin you alive if they find you
here when they come back in the morning."

"It's more likely I'll skin them alive," said Gilly, and he looked so fierce
that he fairly frightened the old woman. "And if you don't satisfy me with
supper and a bed I'll leave you to meet them hanging from the door."

The crooked old woman was so terrified that she gave him a supper of porridge
and showed him a bed to sleep in. He turned in and slept. He was roused by a
candle being held to his eyes. He wakened up and saw six robbers standing
round him with knives in their hands.

"What brings you under our roof?" said the Captain. "Answer me now before we
skin you as we would skin an eel."

"Speak up and answer the Captain," said the robbers.

"Why shouldn't I be under this roof?" said Gilly. "I am the Master-Thief of
the World."

The robbers put their hands on their knees and laughed at that. Gilly jumped
out of the bed. "I have come to show you the arts of thievery and roguery,"
said he. "I'll show you some tricks that will let you hold up your heads
amongst the thieves and robbers of the world."


He looked so bold and he spoke so bold that the robbers began to think he
might have some reason for talking as he did. They left him and went off to
their beds. Gilly slept again. At the broad noon they were all sitting at
breakfast--Gilly and the six robbers. A farmer went past leading a goat to the
fair.

"Could any of you steal that goat without doing any violence to the man who is
driving it?" said Gilly.

"I couldn't," said one robber, and "I couldn't," said another robber, and "I'd
be hardly able to do that myself," said the Captain of the Robbers.

"I can do it," said Gilly. "I'll be back with the goat before you are through
with your breakfast." He went outside.

Gilly knew that country well and he ran through the wood until he was a bend
of the road ahead of the farmer who was leading his goat to the fair. He took
off one shoe and left it in the middle of the road. He ran on then until he
was round another bend of the road. He took off the other shoe and left it
down. Then he hid behind the hedge and waited.

The farmer came to where the first shoe was. "That's not a bad shoe," said he,
"and if there was a comrade for it, it would be worth picking up." He went on
then and came to where the other shoe was lying. "Here is the comrade," said
he, "and it's worth my while now to go back for the first."

He tied the goat to the mile-stone and went back. As soon as the farmer had
turned his back, Gilly took the collar off the goat, left it on the milestone
and took the goat through a gap in the hedge. He brought it to the house
before the robbers were through with their breakfast. They were all terribly
surprised. The Captain began to bite at his nails.

The farmer, with the two shoes under his arm, came to where he had left the
goat. The goat was gone and its collar was left on the milestone. He knew that
a robber had taken his goat. "And I had promised Ann, my wife, to buy her a
new shawl at the fair," said he. "She'll never stop scolding me if I go back
to her now with one hand as long as the other. The best thing I can do is to
take a sheep out of my field and sell that. Then when she is in good humor on
account of getting the shawl I'll tell her about the loss of my goat." So the
farmer went back to the field.

They were sitting down to a game of cards after breakfast--the six robbers and
Gilly--when they saw the farmer going past with the sheep. "I'll be bound that
he'll watch that sheep more closely than he watched the goat," said one of the
robbers. "Could any of you steal that sheep without doing him any violence?"
said Gilly. "I couldn't," said one robber, and "I couldn't," said another
robber. "I could hardly do that myself," said the Captain of the Robbers.
"I'll bring the sheep here before you're through with the game of cards," said
Gilly.

The farmer was just past the milestone when he saw a man hanging on a tree.
"The saints between us and harm," said he, "do they hang men along this road?"
Now the man hanging from the tree was Gilly. He had fastened himself to a
branch with his belt, putting it under his arm-pits. He slipped down from the
branch and ran till he was ahead of the farmer. The farmer saw another man
hanging from a tree. "The saints preserve us," said he, "sure; it's not
possible that they hanged two men along this road?" Gilly slipped down from
that tree too and ran on until he was ahead of the farmer again. The farmer
saw a third man hanging from a tree. "Am I leaving my senses?" said he. "I'll
go back and see if the other men are hanging there as I thought they were." He
tied the sheep to a bush and went back. As soon as he turned, Gilly slipped
down from the tree, took the sheep through a gap, and got back to the robbers
before they were through with the game. All the robbers said it was a
wonderful thing he had done. The Captain of the Robbers was left standing by
himself scratching his head.

The farmer found no men hanging on trees and he thought he was out of his
mind. He came back and he found his sheep gone. "What will I do now?" said he.
"I daren't let Ann know I lost a goat and a sheep until I put her into good
humor by showing the shawl I bought her at the fair. There's nothing to be
done now, but take a bullock out of the field and sell it at the fair." He
went to the field then, took a bullock out of it, and passed the house just as
the robbers were lighting their pipes. "If he watched the goat and the sheep
closely he'll watch the bullock nine times as closely," said one of the
robbers.

"Which of you could take the bullock without doing the man any violence?" said
Gilly. "I couldn't," said one robber, and "I couldn't," said another robber.
"If you could do it," said the Captain of the Robbers to Gilly, "I'll resign
my command and give it to you." "Done," said Gilly, and he went out of the
house again.

He went quickly through the wood, and when he came near where the farmer was
he began to bleat like a goat. The farmer stopped and listened. Then Gilly
began to baa like the sheep. "That sounds very like my goat and sheep," said
the farmer. "Maybe they weren't taken at all, but just strayed off. If I can
get them now, I needn't make any excuses to Ann my wife." He tied the bullock
to a tree and went into the wood. As soon as he did, Gilly slipped out, took
the bullock by the rope and hurried back to the house. The robbers were
gathered at the door to watch for his coming back. When they saw him with the
bullock they threw up their hats. "This man must be our Captain," they said.
The Captain was biting his lips and his nails. At last he took off his hat
with the feathers in it and gave it to Gilly. "You're our Captain now," said
the robbers.

Gilly ordered that the goat, the sheep and the bullock be put into the byre,
that the door be locked and the key be given to him. All that was done. Then
said he to all the robbers, "I demand to know what became of the Crystal Egg
that was with the goose you stole from the Spae-Woman." "The Crystal Egg,"
said one of the robbers. "It hatched, and a queer bird came out of it." "Where
is that bird now?" said Gilly. "On the waves of the lake near at hand," said
the robbers. "We see it every day." "Take me to the lake till I see the Bird
out of the Crystal Egg," said Gilly. They locked the door of the house behind
them, and the seven, Gilly at their head, wearing the hat with feathers,
marched down to the lake.




XVI



Then they showed him the bird that was on the waves of the lake-- a swan she
was and she floated proudly. The swan came towards them and as she drew nearer
they could hear her voice. The sounds she made were not like any sound of
birds, but like the sounds bards make chanting their verses. Words came on
high notes and low notes, but they were like words in a strange language. And
still the swan chanted as she drew near to the shore where Gilly and the six
robbers stood.

She spread out her wings, and, raising her neck she curved it, while she
stayed watching the men on the bank. "Hear the Swan of Endless Tales--the Swan
of Endless Tales" she sang in words they knew. Then she raised herself out of
the water, turned round in the air, and flew back to the middle of the lake.

"Time for us to be leaving the place when there is a bird on the lake that can
speak like that," said Mogue, who had been the Captain of the Robbers. "To-
night I'm leaving this townland."

"And I am leaving too," said another robber. "And I too," said another. "And I
may be going away from this place," said Gilly of the Goatskin.

The robbers went away from him and back to the house and Gilly sat by the edge
of the lake waiting to see if the Swan of Endless Tales would come back and
tell him something. She did not come. As Gilly sat there the farmer who had
lost his goat, his sheep and his bullock came by. He was dragging one foot
after the other and looking very downcast. "What is the matter with you,
honest man?" said Gilly.

The farmer told him how he had lost his goat, his sheep and his bullock. He
told him how he had thought he heard his goat bleating and his sheep ba'ing,
and how he went through the wood to search for them, and how his bullock was
gone when he came back to the road. "And what to say to my wife Ann I don't
know," said he, "particularly as I have brought no shawl to put her in good
humor. Heavy is the blame she'll give me on account of my losing a goat, a
sheep and a bullock."

Gilly took a key out of his pocket. "Do you see this key?" said he. "Take it
and open the byre door at such a place, and you'll find in that byre your
goat, your sheep and your bullock. There are robbers in that house, but if
they try to prevent your taking your own tell them that all the threshers of
the country are coming to beat them with flails." The farmer took the key and
went away very thankful to Gilly. The story says that he got back his goat,
his sheep and his bullock and made it an excuse that he had seen three magpies
on the road for not going to the fair to buy a shawl for his wife Ann. The
robbers were very frightened when he told them about the threshers coming and
they went away from that part of the country.

As for Gilly, he thought he would go back to the Old Woman of Beare for his
name. He took the path by the edge of the lake. And as he journeyed along with
his holly-stick in his hand he heard the Swan of Endless Tales chanting.




The Town of the Red Castle

I


Flann was the name that the Old Woman of Beare gave to Gilly of the Goatskin
when he came back to tell her that the Swan of Endless Tales had been hatched
out of the Crystal Egg. He went from her house then and came to where the King
of Ireland's Son waited for him. The two comrades went along a well-traveled
road. As they went on they fell in with men driving herds of ponies, men
carrying packs on their backs, men with tools for working gold and silver,
bronze and iron. Every man whom they asked said, "We are going to the Town of
the Red Castle, and to the great fair that will be held there." The King's Son
and Flann thought they should go to the Town of the Red Castle too, for where
so many people would be, there was a chance of hearing what went before and
what came after the Unique Tale. So they went on.

And when they had come to a well that was under a great rock those whom they
were with halted. They said it was the custom for the merchants and sellers to
wait there for a day and to go into the Town of the Red Castle the day
following. "On this day," they said, "the people of the Town celebrate the
Festival of Midsummer, and they do not like a great company of people to go
into their Town until the Festival is over."

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