Cuchulain of Muirthemne
XVIII. The Only Son of Aoife
The time Cuchulain came back from Alban, after he had learned the use of arms
under Scathach, he left Aoife, the queen he had overcome in battle, with child.
And when he was leaving her, he told her what name to give the child, and he
gave her a gold ring, and bade her keep it safe till the child grew to be a lad,
and till his thumb would fill it; and he bade her to give it to him then, and to
send him to Ireland, and he would know he was his son by that token. She
promised to do so, and with that Cuchulain went back to Ireland.
It was not long after the child was born, word came to Aoife that Cuchulain
had taken Emer to be his wife in Ireland. When she heard that, great jealousy
came on her, and great anger, and her love for Cuchulain was turned to hatred;
and she remembered her three champions that he had killed, and how he had
overcome herself, and she determined in her mind that when her son would come to
have the strength of a man, she would get her revenge through him. She told
Conlaoch her son nothing of this, but brought him up like any king's son; and
when he was come to sensible years, she put him under the teaching of Scathach,
to be taught the use of arms and the art of war. He turned out as apt a scholar
as his father, and it was not long before he had learnt all Scathach had to
teach.
Then Aoife gave him the arms of a champion, and bade him go to Ireland, but
first she laid three commands on him: the first never to give way to any living
person, but to die sooner than be made turn back; the second, not to refuse a
challenge from the greatest champion alive, but to fight him at all risks, even
if he was sure to lose his life; the third, not to tell his name on any account,
though he might be threatened with death for hiding it. She put him under
geasa, that is, under bonds, not to do these things.
Then the young man, Conlaoch, set out, and it was not long before his ship
brought him to Ireland, and the place he landed at was Baile's Strand, near
Dundealgan.
It chanced that at that time Conchubar, the High King, was holding court
there, for it was a convenient gathering-place for his chief men, and they were
settling some business that belonged to the government of that district.
When word was brought to Conchubar that there was a ship come to the strand,
and a young lad in it armed as if for fighting, and armed men with him, he sent
one of the chief men of his household to ask his name, and on what business he
was come.
The messenger's name was Cuinaire, and he went down to the strand, and when
he saw the young man he said: "A welcome to you, young hero from the east, with
the merry face. It is likely, seeing you come armed as if for fighting, you are
gone astray on your journey; but as you are come to Ireland, tell me your name
and what your deeds have been, and your victories in the eastern bounds of the
world."
"As to my name," said Conlaoch, "it is of no great account; but whatever it
is, I am under bonds not to tell it to the stoutest man living."
"It is best for you to tell it at the king's desire," said Cuinaire, "before
you get your death through refusing it, as many a champion from Alban and from
Britain has done before now." "If that is the order you put on us when we land
here, it is I will break it," said Conlaoch, "and no one will obey it any longer
from this out."
So Cuinaire went back and told the king what the young lad had said. Then
Conchubar said to his people: 'Who will go out into the field, and drag the name
and the story out of this young man?" "I will go," said Conall, for his hand was
never slow in fighting. And he went out, and found the lad angry and destroying,
handling his arms, and they attacked one another with a great noise of swords
and shouts, and they were gripped together, and fought for a while, and then
Conall was overcome, and the great name and the praise that was on Conall, it
was on the head of Conlaoch it was now.
Word was sent then to where Cuchulain was, in pleasant, bright-faced
Dundealgan. And the messenger told him the whole story, and he said: "Conall is
lying humbled, and it is slow the help is in coming; it is a welcome there would
be before the Hound."
Cuchulain rose up then and went to where Conlaoch was, and he still handling
his arms. And Cuchulain asked him his name and said: "It would be well for you,
young hero of unknown name, to loosen yourself from this knot, and not to bring
down my hand upon you, for it will be hard for you to escape death." But
Conlaoch said: "If I put you down in the fight, the way I put down your comrade,
there will be a great name on me; but if I draw back now, there will be mockery
on me, and it will be said I was afraid of the fight. I will never give in to
any man to tell the name, or to give an account of myself. But if I was not held
with a command," he said, "there is no man in the world I would sooner give it
to than to yourself, since I saw your face. But do not think, brave champion of
Ireland, that I will let you take away the fame I have won, for nothing."
With that they fought together, and it is seldom such a battle was seen, and
all wondered that the young lad could stand so well against Cuchulain.
So they fought a long while, neither getting the better of the other, but at
last Cuchulain was charged so hotly by the lad that he was forced to give way,
and although he had fought so many good fights, and killed so many great
champions, and understood the use of arms better than any man living, he was
pressed very hard.
And he called for the Gae Bulg, and his anger came on him, and the flames of
the hero-light began to shine about his head, and by that sign Conlaoch knew him
to be Cuchulain, his father. And just at that time he was aiming his spear at
him, and when he knew it was Cuchulain, he threw his spear crooked that it might
pass beside him. But Cuchulain threw his spear, the Gae Bulg, at him with all
his might, and it struck the lad in the side and went into his body, so that he
fell to the ground.
And Cuchulain said: "Now, boy, tell your name and what you are, for it is
short your life will be, for you will not live after that wound."
And Conlaoch showed the ring that was on his hand, and he said: "Come here
where I am lying on the field, let my men from the east come round me. I am
suffering for revenge. I am Conlaoch, son of the Hound, heir of dear Dundealgan;
I was bound to this secret in Dun Scathach, the secret in which I have found my
grief."
And Cuchulain said: "It is a pity your mother not to be here to see you
brought down. She might have stretched out her hand to stop the spear that
wounded you." And Conlaoch said: "My curse be on my mother, for it was she put
me under bonds; it was she sent me here to try my strength against yours." And
Cuchulain said:
"My curse be on your mother, the woman that is full of treachery; it is
through her harmful thoughts these tears have been brought on us." And Conlaoch
said:
"My name was never forced from my mouth till now; I never gave an account of
myself to any man under the sun. But, O Cuchulain of the sharp sword, it was a
pity you not to know me the time I threw the slanting spear behind you in the
fight."
And then the sorrow of death came upon Conlaoch, and Cuchulain took his sword
and put it through him, sooner than leave him in the pain and the punishment he
was in.
And then great trouble and anguish came on Cuchulain, and he made this
complaint:
"It is a pity it is, O son of Aoife, that ever you came into the province of
Ulster, that you ever met with the Hound of Cuailgne.
"If I and my fair Conlaoch were doing feats of war on the one side, the men
of Ireland from sea to sea would not be equal to us together. It is no wonder I
to be under grief when I see the shield and the arms of Conlaoch. A pity it is
there is no one at all, a pity there are not hundreds of men on whom I could get
satisfaction for his death.
"If it was the king himself had hurt your fair body, it is I would have
shortened his days.
"It is well for the House of the Red Branch, and for the heads of its fair
army of heroes, it was not they that killed my only son.
"It is well for Laegaire of Victories it is not from him you got your heavy
pain.
"It is well for the heroes of Conall they did not join in the killing of you;
it is well that travelling across the plain of Macha they did not fall in with
me after such a fight.
"It is well for the tall, well-shaped Forbuide; well for Dubthach, your Black
Beetle of Ulster.
"It is well for you, Cormac Conloingeas, your share of arms gave no help,
that it is not from your weapons he got his wound, the hard-skinned shield or
the blade.
"It is a pity it was not one on the plains of Munster, or in Leinster of the
sharp blades, or at Cruachan of the rough fighters, that struck down my comely
Conlaoch.
"It is a pity it was not in the country of the Cruithne, of the fierce Fians,
you fell in a heavy quarrel, or in the country of the Greeks, or in some other
place of the world, you died, and I could avenge you.
"Or in Spain, or in Sorcha, or in the country of the Saxons of the free
armies; there would not then be this death in my heart.
"It is very well for the men of Alban it was not they that destroyed your
fame; and it is well for the men of the Gall.
"Och! It is bad that it happened; my grief! it is on me is the misfortune, O
Conlaoch of the Red Spear, I myself to have spilled your. blood.
"I to be under defeat, without strength. It is a pity Aoife never taught you
to know the power of my strength in the fight.
"It is no wonder I to be blinded after such a fight and such a defeat.
"It is no wonder I to be tired out, and without the sons of Usnach beside me.
"Without a son, without a brother, with none to come after me; without
Conlaoch, without a name to keep my strength.
"To be without Naoise, without Ainnle, without Ardan; is it not with me is my
fill of trouble?
"I am the father that killed his son, the fine green branch; there is no hand
or shelter to help me.
"I am a raven that has no home; I am a boat going from wave to wave; I am a
ship that has lost its rudder; I am the apple left on the tree; it is little I
thought of falling from it; grief and sorrow will be with me from this time."
Then Cuchulain stood up and faced all the men of Ulster. "There is trouble on
Cuchulain," said Conchubar; "he is after killing his own son, and if I and all
my men were to go against him, by the end of the day he would destroy every man
of us. Go now," he said to Cathbad, the Druid, "and bind him to go down to
Baile's Strand, and to give three days fighting against the waves of the sea,
rather than to kill us all."
So Cathbad put an enchantment on him, and bound him to go down. And when he
came to the strand, there was a great white stone before him, and he took his
sword in his right hand, and he said: "If I had the head of the woman that sent
her son to his death, I would split it as I split this stone." And he made four
quarters of the stone.
Then he fought with the waves three days and three nights, till he fell from
hunger and weakness, so that some men said he got his death there. But it was
not there he got his death, but on the plain of Muirthemne.

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Cuchulain by John Duncan |