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William Butler Yeats

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Title: The King's Threshold; and On Baile's Strand

Author: William Butler Yeats

Release Date: October 18, 2012 [EBook #41102]

Language: English

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_BY THE SAME AUTHOR._

  THE SECRET ROSE.
  THE CELTIC TWILIGHT.
  POEMS.
  THE WIND AMONG THE REEDS.
  THE SHADOWY WATERS.
  IDEAS OF GOOD AND EVIL.




PLAYS FOR AN IRISH THEATRE

VOLUME III.




  THE KING'S THRESHOLD:
  AND
  ON BAILE'S STRAND:

  BEING VOLUME THREE OF PLAYS
  FOR AN IRISH THEATRE:

  BY W. B. YEATS


  LONDON: A. H. BULLEN,
  47, GREAT RUSSELL STREET, W.C.
  1904

  CHISWICK PRESS: CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
  TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.




NOTE


Both these plays have been written for Mr. Fay's "Irish National
Theatre." "The King's Threshold" was played in October, 1903, and "On
Baile's Strand" will be played in February or March, 1904. Both are
founded on Old Irish Prose Romances, but I have borrowed some ideas for
the arrangement of my subject in "The King's Threshold" from "Sancan the
Bard," a play published by Mr. Edwin Ellis some ten years ago.

                                                      W. B. Y.




CONTENTS


                               PAGE

  THE KING'S THRESHOLD            1

  ON BAILE'S STRAND              67




THE KING'S THRESHOLD




LIST OF CHARACTERS

  KING GUAIRE.
  THE CHAMBERLAIN OF KING GUAIRE.
  A Soldier.
  A Monk.
  THE MAYOR OF KINVARA.
  A Cripple.
  Another Cripple.
  AILEEN,   } Ladies of the Court.
  ESSA,     }
  PRINCESS BUAN.
  PRINCESS FINNHUA, her Sister.
  FEDELM, Seanchan's Sweetheart.
  CIAN,     } Servants of Seanchan.
  BRIAN,    }
  SENIAS,   } Pupils of Seanchan.
  ARIAS,    }
  SEANCHAN (pronounced Shanahan), Chief Poet of Ireland.

  Pupils, Courtiers.




A PROLOGUE.[1]

  Footnote 1: Written for the first production of "The King's
    Threshold" in Dublin, but not used, as, owing to the smallness
    of the company, nobody could be spared to speak it.


    _An OLD MAN with a red dressing-gown, red slippers and red
    nightcap, holding a brass candlestick with a guttering candle in it,
    comes on from side of stage and goes in front of the dull green
    curtain._

_Old Man._ I've got to speak the prologue. [_He shuffles on a few
steps._] My nephew, who is one of the play actors, came to me, and I in
my bed, and my prayers said, and the candle put out, and he told me
there were so many characters in this new play, that all the company
were in it, whether they had been long or short at the business, and
that there wasn't one left to speak the prologue. Wait a bit, there's a
draught here. [_He pulls the curtain closer together._] That's better.
And that's why I'm here, and maybe I'm a fool for my pains.

And my nephew said, there are a good many plays to be played for you,
some to-night and some on other nights through the winter, and the most
of them are simple enough, and tell out their story to the end. But as
to the big play you are to see to-night, my nephew taught me to say what
the poet had taught him to say about it. [_Puts down candlestick and
puts right finger on left thumb._] First, he who told the story of
Seanchan on King Guaire's threshold long ago in the old books told it
wrongly, for he was a friend of the king, or maybe afraid of the king,
and so he put the king in the right. But he that tells the story now,
being a poet, has put the poet in the right.

And then [_touches other finger_] I am to say: Some think it would be a
finer tale if Seanchan had died at the end of it, and the king had the
guilt at his door, for that might have served the poet's cause better in
the end. But that is not true, for if he that is in the story but a
shadow and an image of poetry had not risen up from the death that
threatened him, the ending would not have been true and joyful enough to
be put into the voices of players and proclaimed in the mouths of
trumpets, and poetry would have been badly served.

    [_He takes up the candlestick again._

And as to what happened Seanchan after, my nephew told me he didn't
know, and the poet didn't know, and it's likely there's nobody that
knows. But my nephew thinks he never sat down at the king's table again,
after the way he had been treated, but that he went to some quiet green
place in the hills with Fedelm, his sweetheart, where the poor people
made much of him because he was wise, and where he made songs and
poems, and it's likely enough he made some of the old songs and the old
poems the poor people on the hillsides are saying and singing to-day.

    [_A trumpet-blast._

Well, it's time for me to be going. That trumpet means that the curtain
is going to rise, and after a while the stage there will be filled up
with great ladies and great gentlemen, and poets, and a king with a
crown on him, and all of them as high up in themselves with the pride of
their youth and their strength and their fine clothes as if there was no
such thing in the world as cold in the shoulders, and speckled shins,
and the pains in the bones and the stiffness in the joints that make an
old man that has the whole load of the world on him ready for his bed.

    [_He begins to shuffle away, and then stops._

And it would be better for me, that nephew of mine to be thinking less
of his play-acting, and to have remembered to boil down the knap-weed
with a bit of three-penny sugar, for me to be wetting my throat with
now and again through the night, and drinking a sup to ease the pains in
my bones.

    [_He goes out at side of stage._




THE KING'S THRESHOLD.


    SCENE: _Steps before the Palace of KING GUAIRE at Gort. A table in
    front of steps to right with food on it. SEANCHAN lying on steps to
    left. PUPILS before steps. KING on top of steps at centre._

  _King._ I welcome you that have the mastery
  Of the two kinds of music; the one kind
  Being like a woman, the other like a man;
  Both you that understand stringed instruments,
  And how to mingle words and notes together
  So artfully, that all the art is but speech
  Delighted with its own music; and you that carry
  The long twisted horn and understand
  The heady notes that being without words
  Can hurry beyond time and fate and change;
  For the high angels that drive the horse of time,
  The golden one by day, by night the silver,
  Are not more welcome to one that loves the world
  For some fair woman's sake.

                              I have called you hither
  To save the life of your great master, Seanchan,
  For all day long it has flamed up or flickered
  To the fast-cooling hearth.

  _Senias._ When did he sicken?
  Is it a fever that is wasting him?

  _King._ He did not sicken, but three days ago
  He said he would not eat, and lay down there
  And has not eaten since. Till yesterday
  I thought that hunger and weakness had been enough,
  But finding them too trifling and too light
  To hold his mouth from biting at the grave
  I called you hither, and have called others yet.
  The girl he is to wed at harvest-time,
  That should be of all living the most dear,
  Is coming from the South, and had I known
  Of any other neighbours or good friends
  That might persuade him, I had brought them hither,
  Even though I'd to ransack the world for them.

  _Senias._ What was it put him to this work, High King?

  _King._ You will call it no great matter. Three days ago
  I yielded to the outcry of my courtiers,
  Bishops, soldiers, and makers of the law,
  Who long had thought it against their dignity
  For a mere man of words to sit among them
  At my own table; and when the meal was spread
  I ordered Seanchan to good company,
  But to a lower table; and when he pleaded
  The poet's right, established when the world
  Was first established, I said that I was King
  And made and unmade rights at my own pleasure.
  And that it was the men who ruled the world,
  And not the men who sang to it, who should sit
  Where there was the most honour. My courtiers,
  Bishops, soldiers, and makers of the law
  Shouted approval, and amid that noise
  Seanchan went out, and from that hour to this,
  Although there is good food and drink beside him,
  Has eaten nothing. If a man is wronged,
  Or thinks that he is wronged, and will lie down
  Upon another's threshold until he dies,
  The common people for all time to come
  Will raise a heavy cry against that threshold,
  Even though it is the King's. He lies there now
  Perishing; he is calling against my majesty,
  That old custom that has no meaning in it,
  And as he perishes, my name in the world
  Is perishing also. I cannot give way
  Because I am King, because if I give way
  My nobles would call me a weakling, and it may be
  The very throne be shaken; but should you
  That are his friends speak to him and persuade him
  To turn his mouth from the ill-savouring grave
  And eat good food, he shall not lack my favour;
  For I will give plough-land and grazing-land,
  Or all but anything he has set his heart on.
  It is not all because of my good name
  I'd have him live, for I have found him a man
  That might well hit the fancy of a king
  Banished out of his country, or a woman's,
  Or any other's that can judge a man
  For what he is. But I that sit a throne,
  And take my measure from the needs of the state,
  Call his wild thought that over-runs the measure,
  Making words more than deeds, and his proud will
  That would unsettle all, most mischievous,
  And he himself a most mischievous man.

  _Senias._ King, whether you did right or wrong in this
  Let the King say, for all that I need say
  Is that there's nothing that cries out for death
  In the withholding of that ancient right,
  And that I will persuade him. Your own words
  Had been enough persuasion were it not
  That he is lost in dreams that hunger makes,
  And therefore heedless, or lost in heedless sleep.

  _King._ I leave him to your love, that it may promise
  Plough-lands and grass-lands, jewels and silken wear,
  Or anything but that old right of the poets.

    [_He goes out. The PUPILS, who have been standing perfectly quiet,
    all turn towards SEANCHAN, and move a step nearer._

  _Senias._ The King did wrong to abrogate our right,
  But Seanchan, who talks of dying for it,
  Talks foolishly. Look at us, Seanchan,
  Waken out of your dream and look at us,
  Who have ridden under the moon and all the day,
  Until the moon has all but come again,
  That we might be beside you.

    [_SEANCHAN turns half round leaning on his elbow, and speaks as if
    in a dream._

  _Seanchan._                  I was but now
  At Almhuin, in a great high-raftered house,
  With Finn and Osgar. Odours of roast flesh
  Rose round me and I saw the roasting spits,
  And then the dream was broken, and I saw
  Grania dividing salmon by a pool,
  And then I was awakened by your voice.

  _Senias._ It is your hunger that makes you dream of flesh
  Roasting, and for your hunger I could weep;
  And yet the hunger of the crane that starves
  Because the moonlight glittering on the pool
  And flinging a pale shadow has made it shy,
  Seems to me little more fantastical
  Than this that's blown into so great a trouble.

  _Seanchan._ [_Who has turned away again._]
  There is much truth in that, for all things change
  At times, as if the moonlight altered them,
  And my mind alters as if it were the crane's;
  For when the heavy body has grown weak
  There's nothing that can tether the wild mind
  That being moonstruck and fantastical
  Goes where it fancies. I had even thought
  I knew your voice and face, but now the words
  Are so unlikely that I needs must ask
  Who is it that bids me put my hunger by?

  _Senias._ I am your oldest pupil, Seanchan;
  The one that has been with you many years,
  So many that you said at Candlemas
  That I had almost done with school, and knew
  All but all that poets understand.

  _Seanchan._ My oldest pupil. No, that cannot be;
  For it is someone of the courtly crowds
  That have been round about me from sunrise
  And I am tricked by dreams, but I'll refute them.
  I asked the pupil that I loved the best,
  At Candlemas, why poetry is honoured,
  Wishing to know how he'd defend our craft
  In distant lands among strange churlish Kings.
  And he'd an answer.

  _Senias._           I said the poets hung
  Images of the life that was in Eden
  About the childbed of the world, that it,
  Looking upon those images, might bear
  Triumphant children; but why must I stand here
  Repeating an old lesson while you starve?

  _Seanchan._ Tell on, for I begin to know the voice;
  What evil thing will come upon the world
  If the arts perish?

  _Senias._           If the arts should perish
  The world that lacked them would be like a woman
  That looking on the cloven lips of a hare
  Brings forth a hare-lipped child.

  _Seanchan._                       But that's not all.
  For when I asked you how a man should guard
  Those images you had an answer also,
  If you're the man that you have claimed to be,
  Comparing them to venerable things
  God gave to men before he gave them wheat.

  _Senias._ I answered, and the word was half your own,
  That he should guard them, as the men of Dea
  Guard their four treasures, as the Grail King guards
  His holy cup, or the pale righteous horse
  The jewel that is underneath his horn,
  Pouring out life for it, as one pours out
  Sweet heady wine--but now I understand
  You would refute me out of my own mouth;
  And yet a place at table near the King
  Is nothing of great moment, Seanchan.
  How does so light a thing touch poetry?

    [_SEANCHAN is now sitting up. He still looks dreamily in front of
    him._

  _Seanchan._ At Candlemas you called this poetry
  One of the fragile mighty things of God
  That die at an insult.

  _Senias._ [_To other PUPILS._] Give me some true answer.
  For on that day we spoke about the court
  And said that all that was insulted there
  The world insulted, for the courtly life,
  Being the first comely child of the world,
  Is the world's model. How shall I answer him?
  Can you not give me some true argument?
  I will not tempt him with a lying one.

  _Arias._ [_Throwing himself at SEANCHAN'S feet._]
  Why did you take me from my father's fields?
  If you would leave me now, what shall I love?
  Where shall I go, what shall I set my hand to?
  And why have you put music in my ears
  If you would send me to the clattering houses?
  I will throw down the trumpet and the harp,
  For how could I sing verses or make music
  With none to praise me and a broken heart?

  _Seanchan._ What was it that the poets promised you
  If it was not their sorrow? Do not speak.
  Have I not opened school on these bare steps,
  And are not you the youngest of my scholars?
  And I would have all know that when all falls
  In ruin, poetry calls out in joy,
  Being the scattering hand, the bursting pod,
  The victim's joy among the holy flame,
  God's laughter at the shattering of the world,
  And now that joy laughs out and weeps and burns
  On these bare steps.

  _Arias._             O Master, do not die.

    [_Three men come in. CIAN and BRIAN, old men carrying basket with
    food, and MAYOR OF KINVARA. They stand at the side listening._

  _Senias._ Trouble him with no useless argument.
  Be silent; there is nothing we can do
  Except find out the King and kneel to him
  And beg our ancient right. These three have come
  To say whatever we could say and more,
  And fare as badly. Come, boy, that's no use;

    [_He lifts the BOY up._

  If it seem well that we beseech the King,
  Lay down your harps and trumpets on the stones
  In silence and come with me silently.
  Come with slow footfalls and bow all your heads,
  For a bowed head becomes a mourner best.

    [_They lay the harps and trumpets down one by one and then go out
    very solemnly and slowly, following one another._

  _Cian._ Let's show the food that's in the basket.

  _Mayor._ [_Who carries an Ogham stick._] No,
  I must get through my speech or I'll forget it;
  Besides, there is no reason why he'd eat
  Till he has heard my reasons.

  _Cian._                       It were better
  To show what we have brought him in the basket,
  For we have nothing that he has not liked
  From boyhood.

  _Brian._      For we have not brought kings' food
  That's cooked for everybody and nobody.

  _Mayor._ You are not showing right respect to me,
  Or to the people of Kinvara, when you wish
  That something else should come before my message.

  _Seanchan._ What brings you here? I never sent for you.

  _Cian._ He must be famishing, he looks so pale.
  We had better get the food out first. I tell you,
  That we have brought the things he likes the best.

  _Mayor._ No, no; I lost a word at every cross road
  And maybe if I do not speak it now
  I'll have forgot it.

  _Cian._              Well, out with it quickly.

  _Seanchan._ Why, what's this foolery?

  _Mayor._                              No foolery;
  A message from the richest, best born townsman
  Of your own town, and from your aged father.

  _Cian._ Run through it while I am getting out the food.

  _Mayor._ How was I to begin? What was the word
  That was to keep it in my memory?
  Wait, I have notched it on this Ogham stick.
  "Chief poet," "Ireland," "Townsman"; that is it.
  Chief poet of Ireland, when we heard that trouble
  Had come between you and the King of Ireland
  It plunged us in deep sorrow, part for you,
  Our honoured townsman, part for our good town.
  The King was said to be most friendly to us,
  And we had reasons, as you'll recollect,
  For thinking that he was about to give
  Those grazing lands inland we so much need,
  Being pinched between the water and the rocks.
  But now his friendliness being ill repaid
  Will be turned from us and our town get nothing.
  But there was something else--I'll find the word
  That was to keep it in my memory.
  "Pride"--that's the word,--we would not have you think,
  Weighty as these considerations are,
  That they have been as weighty in our minds
  As our desire that one we take much pride in,
  A man who has been an honour to our town,
  Should live and prosper, therefore we beseech you
  To give way in a matter of no moment,
  A matter of mere sentiment, a trifle,
  That we may always keep our pride in you.

  _Seanchan._ Their pride, their pride, what do they know of pride?
  My pupils do not know it, for they beg
  From the King's favour what is theirs by right,
  And how can men, that God has made so weak
  They need a rich man's favour every day,
  Know anything of pride?

  _Cian._ [_To MAYOR._] You have spoken it wrongly.
  You have forgotten something out of it about the cattle dying.

  _Mayor._ Maybe you do not know, being much away,
  How many of our cattle died last winter
  From lacking grass, and that there was much sickness
  Because the poor had nothing but salt fish
  To live upon. The people all came out
  And stood about the doors as I went by.

  _Seanchan._ What would you have of me?
  For there are men that shall be born at last
  And find sweet nurture that they may have voices
  Even in anger like the strings of harps.
  Yet how could they be born to majesty
  If I had never made the golden cradle?

  _Mayor._ What is it? "Father"--"Mother"; that is it;
  Your father sends this message.

  _Cian._                         He is listening.

  _Mayor._ He says that he is old and that he needs you,
  And that the people will be pointing at him
  And he not able to lift up his head
  If you should turn the King's favour away.
  And he adds to it, that he cared you well,
  And you in your young age, and that it's right
  That you should care him now.

  _Cian._                       And when he spoke
  He cried because the stiffness of his bones
  Prevented him from coming.

  _Mayor._                   But your mother
  Has sent no message, for when they had told her
  The way it is between you and the King
  She said, "No message can do any good,
  He will not send the answer that you want;
  We cannot change him," and she went indoors,
  Lay down upon her bed and turned her face
  Out of the light. And thereupon your father
  Said, "Tell him how she is, and that she sends
  No message." I have nothing more to say.
  Cian and Brian, you can set out the food.

    [_He sits down on steps. SEANCHAN is silent._

  _Mayor._ I have a horse waiting outside the town
  To bring me home, and all the neighbours wait
  Your answer. What answer am I to bring?

  _Seanchan._ Give them my answer--no, I have no answer:
  My mother knew it.

  _Mayor._           Maybe you have forgotten
  That all our fields are so heaped up with stones
  That the goats famish, and the mowers mow
  With knives, and that the King half promised us----

  _Seanchan._ Thrust that old cloak of yours into your mouth
  Till it's done gabbling.

  _Mayor._                 But----

  _Cian._                          You have said enough;
  I knew that you would never speak it right.

  _Seanchan._ Our mothers know us, they know us to the bone,
  They knew us before birth, and that is why
  They know us even better than the sweethearts
  Upon whose breasts we have lain.

  _Brian._ We have brought your honour
  The food that you have always liked the best,
  Young pigeons from Kinvara, and watercress
  Out of the stream that's by the blessed well,
  And dulse from Duras. Here is the dulse, your honour,
  It is wholesome, and has the good taste of the sea.

  _Seanchan._ O Brian, you would spread the table for me
  As you would spread it when I was in my childhood;
  But all that's finished.

  _Mayor._                 I knew he would not care
  For country things now that he's grown accustomed
  To the King's dishes. I told Brian too
  He'd have his pains for nothing. But he's old.

    [_Goes over to table at right. While he is speaking CIAN and BRIAN
    are in vain offering SEANCHAN food._

  And what dishes! Venison from Slieve Echtge
  Fattened with poor men's crops; flesh of wild pig;
  Not fat nor lean, but streaky and right well cured;
  Bread that's the whitest that I've ever seen.

  _Cian._ You're in the right, you're in the right, he will not eat.

    [_Pouring wine into cup._

  _Mayor._ Bring him some wine, it will give him strength to eat.

    [_BRIAN brings wine over towards SEANCHAN._

  No wonder if the King is proud and merry,
  And keeps all day in the saddle, when even I
  Am well-nigh drunken with the odour of it,
  And if I dared--I dare not.

  _Cian._                     Drink it, sir.

  _Brian._ Drink a few drops.

  _Seanchan._                 Drink it yourself, old man,
  For you have come a journey, and I daresay
  You did not eat or drink upon the road.

  _Cian._ How can I drink it when your honour's thirsty?

    [_He offers cup again. The KING'S HOUSEHOLD comes in. CHAMBERLAIN
    with long staff, a SOLDIER, a MONK, two LADIES, followed by
    CRIPPLES who beg from the ladies, who keep close together at
    right, talking to each other at intervals. SOLDIER goes over to
    MAYOR, and talks to him._

  _Chamberlain._ Well, have you it in imagination still
  To overthrow the dignity of the King,
  Or is the game finished?

    [_A pause._

                           How many days
  Will you keep up this quarrel with the King,
  With the King's nobles and myself and all
  Who'd gladly be your friends if you would let them?

  _Soldier._ [_Who has been speaking to MAYOR and SERVANTS._]
  Was it you that sent his servants and the Mayor
  Of his own town to wheedle him into life?

  _Chamberlain._ It was the King himself.

  _Soldier._                              Was it worth our while
  To have got rid of him from the King's table
  If he is to be humoured and made much of?

  _Chamberlain._ It seems that he has not eaten yet, although
  He's had another dozen hours of hunger.

  _Soldier._ If he's so proud and obstinate a neck
  I'd let him starve.

  _Monk._             Persuade him to eat, my lord.
  His death would make a scandal, and stir up
  The common people.

  _Chamberlain._     And I have a fancy
  That if it brought misfortune on the King,
  Or the King's house, we'd be as little thought of
  As summer linen when the winter's come.

  _Aileen._ [_To CIAN._]
  You've had no luck, old man.

  _Cian._                      We have not, lady.

  _Aileen._ Maybe he's out of humour with your ways,
  Having grown used to sprightlier service.

  _Cian._                                   Maybe.
  But the King's messengers have gone for one
  That will persuade him. [_To BRIAN._] Come, let us go;
  For she might lose her way in this fine place.
  Come, we have been too long upon the tree,

    [_Plucking sleeve of MAYOR._

  And there are little golden pippins here.

  _Soldier._ Give me the dish, I'll hand it him myself.

  _Aileen._ I wonder if she is pretty.

    [_MAYOR and SERVANTS have gone out._

  _Soldier._                           Eat this, old hedgehog.
  Sniff up the savour and unroll yourself.
  But if I were the King I'd make you do it
  With wisps of lighted straw.

  _Seanchan._                  You have rightly named me,
  I lie rolled up under the ragged thorns
  That are upon the edge of those great waters
  Where all things vanish away, and I have heard
  Murmurs that are the ending of all sound.
  I am out of life, I am rolled up, and yet,
  Hedgehog although I am, I'll not unroll
  For you, King's dog. Go to the King, your master,
  Crouch down and wag your tail, for it may be
  He has nothing now against you, and I think
  The stripes of your last beating are all healed.

  _Chamberlain._ Don't answer, you were never to his mind.
  And now you have angered him to no good purpose.
  But put the dish down and I will speak to him.

  _Seanchan._ You must needs keep your patience yet awhile,
  For I have some few mouthfuls of sweet air
  To swallow before I have grown to be as civil
  As any other dust.

  _Chamberlain._     You wrong us, Seanchan,
  There is none here but holds you in respect,
  And if you would only eat out of this dish
  The King would show how much he honours you.

  _Aileen._ [_Giving CRIPPLE money._]
  You are always discontented. Look at this cripple,
  He has had to cover up his eyes with rags
  Because they are too weak to look at the sun,
  And has a crooked body, and yet he is cheerful.
  Stand there where he can see you.

    [_CRIPPLE goes over and stands in front of SEANCHAN, bowing and
    smiling._

  _Chamberlain._                    We have come to you
  Because we wish you a long, prosperous life;
  Who could imagine you'd so take to heart
  Being put from the high table.

  _Seanchan._                    It was not I
  That you have driven away from the high table,
  But the images of them that weave a dance,
  By the four rivers in the mountain garden.

  _Monk._ He means we have driven poetry away.

  _Chamberlain._ It is the men who are learned in the laws,
  Or have led the King's armies that should sit
  At the King's table. Nor has poetry
  Been altogether driven away, for I,
  As you should know, have written poetry,
  And often when the table has been cleared
  And candles lighted, the King calls for me
  And I repeat it him. My poetry
  Is not to be compared with yours, but still
  Where I am honoured, poetry is honoured
  In some measure.

  _Seanchan._      If you are a poet,
  Cry out that the King's money would not buy,
  Nor the high circle consecrate his head,
  If poets had never christened gold, and even
  The moon's poor daughter, that most whey-faced metal,
  Precious; and cry out that none alive
  Would ride among the arrows with high heart
  Or scatter with an open hand, had not
  Our heady craft commended wasteful virtues.
  And when that story's finished, shake your coat
  Where the little jewels gleam on it, and say
  A herdsman sitting where the pigs had trampled
  Made up a song about enchanted kings,
  Who were so finely dressed one fancied them
  All fiery, and women by the churn
  And children by the hearth caught up the song
  And murmured it until the tailors heard it.

  _Monk._ How proud these poets are! It was full time
  To break their pride.

  _Seanchan._           And I would have you say
  That when we are driven out we come again
  Like a great wind that runs out of the waste
  To blow the tables flat.

  _Chamberlain._           If you'd eat something
  You'd find you have these thoughts because you are hungry.

  _Seanchan._ And when you have told them all these things, lie down
  On this bare threshold and starve until the King
  Restore to us the ancient right of the poets.

  _Aileen._ Let's come away. There's no use talking to him,
  For he's resolved to die, and that's no loss:
  We will go watch the hurley.

  _Monk._                      You should obey
  The King's commandment and not question it,
  For it is God himself who has made him king.

  _Essa._ Let's hear his answer to the monk.

  _Seanchan._                                Stoop down,
  For there is something I would say to you.
  Has that wild God of yours that was so wild
  When you'd but lately taken the King's pay,
  Grown any tamer? He gave you all much trouble
  Being so unruly and inconsiderate.

  _Aileen._ What does he mean?

  _Monk._                      Let go my habit, Seanchan.

  _Seanchan._ Or it may be you have persuaded him
  To chirp between two dishes when the King
  Sits down to table.

  _Monk._             Let go my habit, sir.
  What do I care about your insolent dreams.

  _Seanchan._ And maybe he has learnt to sing quite softly
  Because loud singing would disturb the King
  Who is sitting drowsily among his friends
  After the table has been cleared----

  _Monk._                              Let go.

    [_SEANCHAN has been dragged some feet, clinging to the MONK'S
    habit._

  _Seanchan._ Not yet; you did not think that hungry hands
  Could be so strong. They are not civil yet--
  I'd know if you have taught him to eat bread
  From the King's hand, and perch upon his finger.
  I think he perches on the King's strong hand,
  But it may be that he is still too wild.
  You must not weary in your work; a King
  Is often weary and he needs a God
  To be a comfort to him.

    [_The MONK plucks his habit away. SEANCHAN holds up his hand as if a
    bird perched upon it. He pretends to stroke the bird._

                          A little god,
  With soft well-coloured feathers, and bright eyes.

  _Aileen._ We have listened long enough.

  _Essa._                                 Let us away,
  Where we can watch the young men at the hurley.

  _Seanchan._ Yes, yes, go to the hurley, go to the hurley,
  Go to the hurley, gather up your skirts,
  Run quickly. You can remember many love songs;
  I know it by the light that's in your eyes,
  But you'll forget them. You're fair to look on,
  Your feet delight in dancing, and your mouths
  In the slow smiling that awakens love.
  The mothers that have borne you mated rightly,
  For they had little ears as thirsty as are yours
  For many love-songs. Go to the young men:
  Are not the ruddy flesh and the thin flanks
  And the broad shoulders worthy of desire?
  Go from me. Here is nothing for your eyes,
  But it is I that am singing you away,
  Singing you to the young men.

    [_The two young PRINCESSES BUAN and FINNHUA come in. While he has
    been speaking AILEEN and ESSA have shrunk back holding each others
    hands._

  _Aileen._                     Be quiet;
  Look who it is that has come out of the house.
  Princesses, we are for the hurling field.
  Will you come too?

  _Princess Buan._   We will go with you, Aileen,
  But we must have some words with Seanchan,
  For we have come to make him eat and drink.

  _Chamberlain._ I will hold out the dish and cup for him
  While you are speaking to him of his folly,
  If you desire it, Princess.

    [_He has taken up dish and cup._

  _Princess Buan._ Give me the cup.
  My sister there will carry the dish of meat:
  We'll offer them ourselves.

  _Aileen._                   They are so gracious,
  The dear little princesses are so gracious.

    [_PRINCESS BUAN holds out her hand for SEANCHAN to kiss it; he does
    not move._

  Although she is holding out her hand to him
  He will not kiss it.

  _Princess Buan._     My father bids us say
  That though he cannot have you at his table,
  You may ask any other thing you like
  And he will give it you. We carry you
  A dish and a cup of wine, with our own hands,
  To show in what great honour you are held.
  Will you not drink a little? Does he not show
  Every befitting honour to the poets?

  _Aileen._ O look, he has taken it, he has taken it!
  The dear princesses, I have always said
  That nobody could refuse them anything.

    [_SEANCHAN takes the cup in one hand, in the other he holds for a
    moment the hand of the PRINCESS._

  _Seanchan._ O long soft fingers and pale finger-tips
  Well worthy to be laid in a king's hand;
  O you have fair white hands, for it is certain
  There is uncommon whiteness in these hands.
  But there is something comes into my mind,
  Princess. A little while before your birth
  I saw your mother sitting by the road
  In a high chair, and when a leper passed
  She pointed him the way into the town,
  And he lifted his hand and blessed her hand;
  I saw it with my own eyes. Hold out your hands,
  I will find out if they are contaminated;
  For it has come into my thoughts that may be
  The King has sent me food and drink by hands
  That are contaminated. I would see all your hands,
  You've eyes of dancers, but hold out your hands,
  For it may be there are none sound among you----

    [_The PRINCESSES have shrunk back in terror._

  _Princess Buan._ He has called us lepers.

  _Chamberlain._                            He's out of his mind,
  And does not know the meaning of what he said.

  _Seanchan._ [_Standing up._]
  There are no sound hands among you. No sound hands.
  Away with you, away with all of you,
  You are all lepers. There is leprosy
  Among the plates and dishes that you have brought me.
  I would know why you have brought me leper's wine?

    [_He flings the wine in their faces._

  There, there, I have given it to you again, and now
  Begone or I will give my curse to you.
  You have the leper's blessing, but you think
  Maybe the bread will something lack in savour
  Unless you mix my curse into the dough.

    [_They go out to L., all except the CRIPPLES. SEANCHAN is
    staggering in the middle of the stage._

  _Seanchan._ Where did I say the leprosy came from?
  I said it came out of a leper's hand
  And that he walked the highway; but that's folly,
  For he was walking up there in the sky
  And there he is even now with his white hand
  Thrust out of the blue air and blessing them
  With leprosy.

  _A Cripple._ He's pointing at the moon
  That's coming out up yonder, and he calls it
  Leprous, because the daylight whitens it.

  _Seanchan._ He's holding up his hand above them all
  King, Noblemen, Princesses, blessing all.
  Who could imagine he'd have so much patience.

  _First Cripple._ Come out of this.

    [_Clutching other CRIPPLE._

  _Second Cripple._ If you don't need it, sir,
  May we not carry some of it away?

    [_He points to food._

  _Seanchan._ Who's speaking? Who are you?

  _First Cripple._                         Come out of this.

  _Second Cripple._ Have pity on us, that must beg our bread
  From table to table throughout the entire world
  And yet be hungry.

  _Seanchan._ But why were you born crooked?
  What bad poet did your mothers listen to
  That you were born so crooked?

  _First Cripple._               Come away.
  Maybe he's cursed the food and it might kill us.

  _Second Cripple._ Yes, better come away.

    [_They go out._

  _Seanchan._ [_Staggering and speaking wearily._]
  He has great strength
  And great patience to hold his right hand there
  Uplifted and not wavering about;
  He is much stronger than I am, much stronger.

    [_He sinks down on steps._

    _Enter from R. FEDELM, CIAN and BRIAN._

  _Brian._ There he is lying. Go over to him now
  And bid him eat.

  _Fedelm._        I'll get him out of this
  Before I have said a word of food and drink;
  For while he is on this threshold and can hear,
  It may be, the voices that made mock of him,
  He would not listen.

  _Brian._             That is a good plan.
  But there is little time, for he is weakening.

  _Fedelm._ [_Crying._] I cannot think of any other plan
  Although it breaks my heart.

  _Cian._                      Let's leave them now,
  For she will press the honey from her bag
  When we are gone.

  _Brian._          It will be hard to move him
  If hunger and thirst have got into his bones.

    [_They go out leaving FEDELM and SEANCHAN alone. FEDELM runs over to
    SEANCHAN and kneels down before him._

  _Fedelm._ Seanchan! Seanchan!

    [_He remains looking into the sky._

  Can you not see me, Seanchan?
  It is myself.

    [_SEANCHAN looks at her dreamily at first, then takes her hand._

  _Seanchan._   Is this your hand, Fedelm?
  I have been looking at another hand
  That is up yonder.

  _Fedelm._          I have come for you.

  _Seanchan._ Fedelm, I did not know that you were here.

  _Fedelm._ And can you not remember that I promised
  That I would come and take you home with me
  When I'd the harvest in? and now I've come,
  And you must come away, and come on the instant.

  _Seanchan._ Yes, I will come; but is the harvest in?
  This air has got a summer taste in it.

  _Fedelm._ But is not the wild middle of the summer
  A better time to marry? Come with me now.

  _Seanchan._ [_Seizing her by both wrists._]
  Who taught you that, for it's a certainty,
  Although I never knew it till last night,
  That marriage, because it is the height of life,
  Can only be accomplished to the full
  In the high days of the year. I lay awake,
  There had come a frenzy into the light of the stars
  And they were coming nearer and I knew
  All in a minute they were about to marry
  Clods out upon the plough-lands, to beget
  A mightier race than any that has been;
  But some that are within there made a noise
  And frighted them away.

  _Fedelm._               Come with me now;
  We have far to go, and daylight's running out.

  _Seanchan._ The stars had come so near me that I caught
  Their singing; it was praise of that great race
  That would be haughty, mirthful, and white-bodied
  With a high head, and open hand, and how
  Laughing, it would take the mastery of the world.

  _Fedelm._ But you will tell me all about their songs
  When we're at home. You have need of rest and care,
  And I can give them you when we're at home,
  And therefore let us hurry and get us home.

  _Seanchan._ That's true; and there's some trouble here, although
  I cannot now remember what it is,
  And I would get away from it. Give me your help.
  But why are not my pupils here to help me?
  Go, call my pupils, for I need their help.

  _Fedelm._ Come with me now, and I will send for them,
  For I have a great room that's full of beds
  I can make ready, and there is a smooth lawn
  Where they can play at hurley and sing poems
  Under an apple-tree.

  _Seanchan._          I know that place,
  An apple tree and a smooth level lawn,
  Where the young men can sway their hurley sticks.

      _Sings._

    The four rivers that run there,
    Through well-mown level ground,
    Have come out of a blessed well
    That is all bound and wound
    By the great roots of an apple,
    And all fowls of the air
    Have gathered in the wide branches
    And keep singing there.

    [_FEDELM, troubled, has covered her eyes with her hands._

  _Fedelm._ No, there are not four rivers, and those rhymes
  Praise Adam's Paradise.

  _Seanchan._             I can remember now.
  It's out of a poem I made long ago
  About the garden in the east of the world,
  And how spirits in the images of birds
  Crowd in the branches of old Adam's crab-tree;
  They come before me now and dig in the fruit
  With so much gluttony, and are so drunk
  With that harsh, wholesome savour that their feathers
  Are clinging one to another with the juice.
  But you would take me to some friendly place,
  And I would go there quickly.

  _Fedelm._                     Come with me.

    [_She helps him to rise. He walks slowly, supported by her till he
    comes to the table at R._

  _Seanchan._ But why am I so weak? Have I been ill?
  Sweetheart, why is it that I am so weak?

    [_He sinks on to the seat._

  _Fedelm._ I'll dip this piece of bread into the wine,
  For that will make you stronger for the journey.

  _Seanchan._ Yes, give me bread and wine, that's what I want,
  For it is hunger that is gnawing me.

    [_He takes bread from FEDELM, hesitates, and then thrusts it back
    into her hand._

  But no, I must not eat it.

  _Fedelm._                  Eat, Seanchan,
  For if you do not eat it you will die.

  _Seanchan._ Why did you give me food?
  Why did you come?
  For had I not enough to fight against
  Without your coming?

  _Fedelm._            Eat this little crust,
  Seanchan, if you have any love for me.

  _Seanchan._ I must not eat it: but that's beyond your wit;
  Child, child, I must not eat it though I die.

  _Fedelm._ You do not know what love is, for if you loved
  You would put every other thought away
  But you have never loved me.

  _Seanchan._ [_Seizing her by the wrist._] You, a child,
  Who have but seen a man out of the window,
  Tell me that I know nothing about love,
  And that I do not love you. Did I not say
  There was a frenzy in the light of the stars
  All through the livelong night, and that the night
  Was full of marriages? But that fight's over.
  And all that's done with, and I have to die.

  _Fedelm._ [_Throwing her arms about him._]
  I will not be put from you, although I think
  I had not grudged it you if some great lady,
  If the King's daughter, had set out your bed.
  I will not give you up to death; no, no,
  And are not these white arms and this soft neck
  Better than the brown earth?

  _Seanchan._                  I swear an oath
  Upon the holy tree that I'll not eat
  Until the King restore the right of the poets.
  O Sun and Moon, and all things that have strength,
  Become my strength that I may put a curse
  On all things that would have me break this oath.

    [_FEDELM has sunk down on the ground while he says this, and
    crouches at his feet._

  _Fedelm._ Seanchan, do not curse me; from this out
  I will obey like any married wife.
  Let me but lie before your feet.

  _Seanchan._                      Come nearer.

    [_He kisses her._

  If I had eaten when you bid me, sweetheart,
  The kiss of multitudes in times to come
  Had been the poorer.

  _King._ [_Entering from house._] Has he eaten yet?

  _Fedelm._ No, King, and will not till you have restored
  The right of the poets.

  _King._ [_Coming down and standing before SEANCHAN._]
  Seanchan, you have refused
  Everybody that I have sent, and now
  I come to you myself, and I have come
  To bid you put your pride as far away
  As I have put my pride. I had your love
  Not a great while ago, and now you have planned
  To put a voice by every cottage fire
  And in the night when no one sees who cries
  To cry against me till my throne has crumbled.
  And yet if I give way I must offend
  My courtiers and nobles till they too
  Strike at the crown. What would you have of me?

  _Seanchan._ When did the poets promise safety, King?

  _King._ Seanchan, I bring you bread in my own hands,
  And bid you eat it because of all these reasons,
  And for this further reason that I love you.

    [_SEANCHAN pushes bread away with FEDELM'S hand._

  You have refused it, Seanchan.

  _Seanchan._                    We have refused it.

  _King._ I have been patient though I am a king,
  And have the means to force you--but that's ended,
  And I am but a king and you a subject.

    [_He goes up steps._

  Nobles and courtiers, bring the poets hither
  For you can have your way: I that was man
  With a man's heart am now all king again,
  Remembering that the seed I come of, although
  A hundred kings have sown it and re-sown it,
  Has neither trembled nor shrunk backward yet
  Because of the hard business of a king.

    [_PRINCESSES, LADIES, and COURTIERS have come in with
    PUPILS, who have halters round their necks._

  Speak to your master, beg your life of him,
  Show him the halters that are round your necks;
  If his heart's set upon it he may die,
  But you shall all die with him; beg your lives;
  Begin, for you have little time to lose;
  Begin it you that are the oldest pupil.

  _Senias._ [_Going up to SEANCHAN._]
  Die, Seanchan, and proclaim the right of the poets.

  _King._ Silence, you are as crazy as your master.
  But that young boy that seems the youngest of you,
  I'd have him speak. Kneel down before him, boy,
  Hold up your hands to him that he may pluck
  That milky coloured neck out of the noose.

  _Arias._ Die, Seanchan, and proclaim the right of the poets.

    [_All the PUPILS turn towards the KING, holding out the ends of
    their halters._

  _Senias._ Gather the halters up into your hands
  And lead us where you will, for in all things
  But in our art we are obedient.

    [_The KING comes slowly down the steps._

  _King._ [_Kneeling down before SEANCHAN._]
  Kneel down, kneel down, he has the greater power.
  I give my crown to you.

    [_All kneel except SEANCHAN, FEDELM and PUPILS. SEANCHAN rises
    slowly, supported by one of the PUPILS and by FEDELM._

  _Seanchan._             O crown, O crown,
  It is but right if hands that made the crown
  In the old time should give it when they will.
  O silver trumpets be you lifted up

    [_He lays the crown on the KING'S head._

  And cry to the great race that is to come.
  Long-throated swans among the waves of time
  Sing loudly, for beyond the wall of the world
  It waits and it may hear and come to us.

    [_Some of the PUPILS blow a blast upon their horns._


CURTAIN.


       *       *       *       *       *




ON BAILE'S STRAND.


  CUCHULLAIN, the King of Muirthemne.
  CONCOBAR, the High King of Ullad.
  DAIRE, a King.
  FINTAIN, a blind man.
  BARACH, a fool.
  A Young Man.
  Young Kings and Old Kings.


    SCENE: _A great hall by the sea close to Dundalgan. There are two
    great chairs on either side of the hall, each raised a little from
    the ground, and on the back of the one chair is carved and painted a
    woman with a fish's tail, and on the back of the other a hound.
    There are smaller chairs and benches raised in tiers round the
    walls. There is a great ale vat at one side near a small door, and a
    large door at the back through which one can see the sea. BARACH, a
    tall thin man with long ragged hair, dressed in skins, comes in at
    the side door. He is leading FINTAIN, a fat blind man, who is
    somewhat older._

_Barach._ I will shut the door, for this wind out of the sea gets into
my bones, and if I leave but an inch for the wind there is one like a
flake of sea-frost that might come into the house.

_Fintain._ What is his name, fool?

_Barach._ It's a woman from among the Riders of the Sidhe. It's Boann
herself from the river. She has left the Dagda's bed, and gone through
the salt of the sea and up here to the strand of Baile, and all for love
of me. Let her keep her husband's bed, for she'll have none of me.
Nobody knows how lecherous these goddesses are. I see her in every kind
of shape but oftener than not she's in the wind and cries "give a kiss
and put your arms about me." But no, she'll have no more of me.
Yesterday when I put out my lips to kiss her, there was nothing there
but the wind. She's bad, Fintain. O, she's bad. I had better shut the
big door too.

    [_He is going towards the big door but turns hearing FINTAIN'S
    voice._

_Fintain._ [_Who has been feeling about with his stick._] What's this
and this?

_Barach._ They are chairs.

_Fintain._ And this?

_Barach._ Why, that's a bench.

_Fintain._ And this?

_Barach._ A big chair.

_Fintain._ [_Feeling the back of the chair._] There is a sea-woman
carved upon it.

_Barach._ And there is another big chair on the other side of the hall.

_Fintain._ Lead me to it. [_He mutters while the fool is leading him._]
That is what the High King Concobar has on his shield. The High King
will be coming. They have brought out his chair. [_He begins feeling the
back of the other chair._] And there is a dog's head on this. They have
brought out our master's chair. Now I know what the horse-boys were
talking about. We must not stay here. The Kings are going to meet here.
Now that Concobar and our master, that is his chief man, have put down
all the enemies of Ullad, they are going to build up Emain again. They
are going to talk over their plans for building it. Were you ever in
Concobar's town before it was burnt? O, he is a great King, for though
Emain was burnt down, every war had made him richer. He has gold and
silver dishes, and chessboards and candlesticks made of precious stones.
Fool, have they taken the top from the ale vat?

_Barach._ They have.

_Fintain._ Then bring me a horn of ale quickly, for the Kings will be
here in a minute. Now I can listen. Tell me what you saw this morning?

_Barach._ About the young man and the fighting?

_Fintain._ Yes.

_Barach._ And after that we can go and eat the fowl, for I am hungry.

_Fintain._ Time enough, time enough. You're in as great a hurry as when
you brought me to Aine's Seat, where the mad dogs gather when the moon's
at the full. Go on with your story.

_Barach._ I was creeping under a ditch, with the fowl in my leather bag,
keeping to the shore where the farmer could not see me, when I came upon
a ship drawn up upon the sands, a great red ship with a woman's head
upon it.

_Fintain._ A ship out of Aoife's country. They have all a woman's head
on the bow.

_Barach._ There was a young man with a pale face and red hair standing
beside it. Some of our people came up whose turn it was to guard the
shore. I heard them ask the young man his name. He said he was under
bonds not to tell it. Then words came between them, and they fought,
and the young man killed half of them, and the others ran away.

_Fintain._ It matters nothing to us, but he has come at last.

_Barach._ Who has come?

_Fintain._ I know who that young man is. There is not another like him
in the world. I saw him when I had my eyesight.

_Barach._ You saw him?

_Fintain._ I used to be in Aoife's country when I had my eyesight.

_Barach._ That was before you went on shipboard and were blinded for
putting a curse on the wind?

_Fintain._ Queen Aoife had a son that was red haired and pale faced like
herself, and everyone said that he would kill Cuchullain some day, but I
would not have that spoken of.

_Barach._ Nobody could do that. Who was his father?

_Fintain._ Nobody but Aoife knew that, not even he himself.

_Barach._ Not even he himself! Was Aoife a goddess and lecherous?

_Fintain._ I overheard her telling that she never had but one lover, and
that he was the only man who overcame her in battle. There were some who
thought him one of the Riders of the Sidhe, because the child was great
of limb and strong beyond others. The child was begotten over the
mountains; but come nearer and I will tell you something.

_Barach._ You have thought something?

_Fintain._ When I hear the young girls talking about the colour of
Cuchullain's eyes, and how they have seven colours, I have thought about
it. That young man has Aoife's face and hair, but he has Cuchullain's
eyes.

_Barach._ How can he have Cuchullain's eyes?

_Fintain._ He is Cuchullain's son.

_Barach._ And his mother has sent him hither to fight his father.

_Fintain._ It is all quite plain. Cuchullain went into Aoife's country
when he was a young man that he might learn skill in arms, and there he
became Aoife's lover.

_Barach._ And now she hates him because he went away, and has sent the
son to kill the father. I knew she was a goddess.

_Fintain._ And she never told him who his father was, that he might do
it. I have thought it all out, fool. I know a great many things because
I listen when nobody is noticing and I keep my wits awake. What ails you
now?

_Barach._ I have remembered that I am hungry.

_Fintain._ Well, forget it again, and I will tell you about Aoife's
country. It is full of wonders. There are a great many Queens there who
can change themselves into wolves and into swine and into white hares,
and when they are in their own shapes they are stronger than almost any
man; and there are young men there who have cat's eyes and if a bird
chirrup or a mouse squeak they cannot keep them shut, even though it is
bedtime and they sleepy; and listen, for this is a great wonder, a very
great wonder: there is a long narrow bridge, and when anybody goes to
cross it, that the Queens do not like, it flies up as this bench would
if you were to sit on the end of it. Everybody who goes there to learn
skill in arms has to cross it. It was in that country too that
Cuchullain got his spear made out of dragon bones. There were two
dragons fighting in the foam of the sea, and their grandam was the moon,
and nine Queens came along the shore.

_Barach._ I won't listen to your story.

_Fintain._ It is a very wonderful story. Wait till you hear what the
nine Queens did. Their right hands were all made of silver.

_Barach._ No, I will have my dinner first. You have eaten the fowl I
left in front of the fire. The last time you sent me to steal something
you made me forget all about it till you had eaten it up.

_Fintain._ No, there is plenty for us both.

_Barach._ Come with me where it is.

_Fintain._ [_Who is being led towards the door at the back by BARACH._]
O, it is all right, it is in a safe place.

_Barach._ It is a fine fowl. It was the biggest in the yard.

_Fintain._ It had a good smell, but I hope that the wild dogs have not
smelt it. [_Voices are heard outside the door at the side._] Here is our
master. Let us stay and talk with him. Perhaps Cuchullain will give you
a new cap with a feather. He told me that he would give you a new cap
with a feather, a feather with an eye that looks at you, a peacock's
feather.

_Barach._ No, no.

    [_He begins pulling FINTAIN towards the door._

_Fintain._ If you do not get it now, you may never get it, for the
young man may kill him.

_Barach._ No, no, I am hungry. What a head you have, blind man! Who but
you would have remembered that the hen-wife slept for a little at noon
every day!

_Fintain._ [_Who is being led along very slowly and unwillingly._] Yes,
I have a good head. The fowl should be done just right, but one never
knows when a wild dog may come out of the woods.

    [_They go out through the big door at the back. As they go out
    CUCHULLAIN and certain YOUNG KINGS come in at the side door.
    CUCHULLAIN, though still young, is a good deal older than the
    others. They are all very gaily dressed, and have their hair
    fastened with balls of gold. The young men crowd about CUCHULLAIN
    with wondering attention._

  _First Young King._ You have hurled that stone beyond our utmost mark
  Time after time, but yet you are not weary.

  _Second Young King._ He has slept on the bare ground of Fuad's Hill
  This week past, waiting for the bulls and the deer.

  _Cuchullain._ Well, why should I be weary?

  _First Young King._                        It is certain
  His father was the god who wheels the sun,
  And not King Sualtam.

  _Third Young King._ [_To a YOUNG KING who is beside him._]
                        He came in the dawn,
  And folded Dectara in a sudden fire.

  _Fourth Young King._ And yet the mother's half might well grow weary,
  And it new come from labours over sea.

  _Third Young King._ He has been on islands walled about with silver,
  And fought with giants.

    [_They gather about the ale vat and begin to drink._

  _Cuchullain._ Who was it that went out?

  _Third Young King._ As we came in?

  _Cuchullain._                      Yes.

  _Third Young King._ Barach and blind Fintain.

  _Cuchullain._ They always flock together; the blind man
  Has need of the fool's eyesight and strong body,
  While the poor fool has need of the other's wit,
  And night and day is up to his ears in mischief
  That the blind man imagines. There's no hen-yard
  But clucks and cackles when he passes by
  As if he'd been a fox. If I'd that ball
  That's in your hair and the big stone again,
  I'd keep them tossing, though the one is heavy
  And the other light in the hand. A trick I learnt
  When I was learning arms in Aoife's country.

  _First Young King._ What kind of woman was that Aoife?

  _Cuchullain._                                          Comely.

  _First Young King._ But I have heard that she was never married,
  And yet that's natural, for I have never known
  A fighting woman, but made her favours cheap,
  Or mocked at love till she grew sandy dry.

  _Cuchullain._ What manner of woman do you like the best?
  A gentle or a fierce?

  _First Young King._   A gentle, surely.

  _Cuchullain._ I think that a fierce woman's better, a woman
  That breaks away when you have thought her won,
  For I'd be fed and hungry at one time.
  I think that all deep passion is but a kiss
  In the mid battle, and a difficult peace
  'Twixt oil and water, candles and dark night,
  Hill-side and hollow, the hot-footed sun,
  And the cold sliding slippery-footed moon,
  A brief forgiveness between opposites
  That have been hatreds for three times the age
  Of this long 'stablished ground. Here's Concobar;
  So I'll be done, but keep beside me still,
  For while he talks of hammered bronze and asks
  What wood is best for building, we can talk
  Of a fierce woman.

    [_CONCOBAR, a man much older than CUCHULLAIN, has come in through
    the great door at the back. He has many KINGS about him. One of
    these KINGS, DAIRE, a stout old man, is somewhat drunk._

  _Concobar._ [_To one of those about him._] Has the ship gone yet?
  We have need of more bronze workers, and that ship
  I sent to Africa for gold is late.

  _Cuchullain._ I knew their talk.

  _Concobar._ [_Seeing CUCHULLAIN._] You are before us, King.

  _Cuchullain._ So much the better, for I welcome you
  Into my Muirthemne.

  _Concobar._         But who are these?
  The odour from their garments when they stir
  Is like a wind out of an apple garden.

  _Cuchullain._ My swordsmen and harp players and fine dancers,
  My bosom friends.

  _Concobar._ I should have thought, Cuchullain,
  My graver company would better match
  Your greatness and your years; but I waste breath
  In harping on that tale.

  _Cuchullain._            You do, great King.
  Because their youth is the kind wandering wave
  That carries me about the world; and if it sank,
  My sword would lose its lightness.

  _Concobar._                        Yet, Cuchullain,
  Emain should be the foremost town of the world.

  _Cuchullain._ It is the foremost town.

  _Concobar._                            No, no, it's not.
  Nothing but men can make towns great, and he,
  The one over-topping man that's in the world,
  Keeps far away.

  _Daire._        He will not hear you, King,
  And we old men had best keep company
  With one another. I'll fill the horn for you.

  _Concobar._ I will not drink, old fool. You have drunk a horn
  At every door we came to.

  _Daire._                  You'd better drink,
  For old men light upon their youth again
  In the brown ale. When I have drunk enough,
  I am like Cuchullain as one pea another,
  And live like a bird's flight from tree to tree.

  _Concobar._ We'll to our chairs for we have much to talk of,
  And we have Ullad and Muirthemne, and here
  Is Conall Muirthemne in the nick of time.

    [_He goes to the back of stage to welcome a company of KINGS who
    come in through the great door. The other KINGS gradually get into
    their places. CUCHULLAIN sits in his great chair with certain of the
    young men standing around him. Others of the young men, however,
    remain with DAIRE at the ale vat. DAIRE holds out the horn of ale to
    one or two of the older KINGS as they pass him going to their
    places. They pass him by, most of them silently refusing._

  _Daire._ Will you not drink?

  _An Old King._               Not till the council's over.

  _A Young King._ But I'll drink, Daire.

  _Another Young King._ Fill me a horn too, Daire.

  _Another Young King._ If I'd drunk half that you have drunk to-day,
  I'd be upon all fours.

  _Daire._               That would be natural
  When Mother Earth had given you this good milk
  From her great breasts.

  _Cuchullain._ [_To one of the YOUNG KINGS beside him._]
                          One is content awhile
  With a soft warm woman who folds up our lives
  In silky network. Then, one knows not why,
  But one's away after a flinty heart.

  _The Young King._ How long can the net keep us?

  _Cuchullain._                                   All our lives
  If there are children, and a dozen moons
  If there are none, because a growing child
  Has so much need of watching it can make
  A passion that's as changeable as the sea
  Change till it holds the wide earth to its heart.
  At least I have heard a father say it, but I
  Being childless do not know it. Come nearer yet;
  Though he is ringing that old silver rod
  We'll have our own talk out. They cannot hear us.

    [_CONCOBAR who is now seated in his great chair, opposite
    CUCHULLAIN, beats upon the pillar of the house that is nearest to
    him with a rod of silver, till the KINGS have become silent.
    CUCHULLAIN alone continues to talk in a low voice to those about
    him, but not so loud as to disturb the silence. CONCOBAR rises and
    speaks standing._

  _Concobar._ I have called you hither, Kings of Ullad, and Kings
  Of Muirthemne and Connall Muirthemne,
  And tributary Kings, for now there is peace--
  It's time to build up Emain that was burned
  At the outsetting of these wars; for we,
  Being the foremost men, should have high chairs
  And be much stared at and wondered at, and speak
  Out of more laughing overflowing hearts
  Than common men. It is the art of kings
  To make what's noble nobler in men's eyes
  By wide uplifted roofs, where beaten gold,
  That's ruddy with desire, marries pale silver
  Among the shadowing beams; and many a time
  I would have called you hither to this work,
  But always, when I'd all but summoned you,
  Some war or some rebellion would break out.

  _Daire._ Where's Maine Morgor and old Usnach's children,
  And that high-headed even-walking Queen,
  And many near as great that got their death
  Because you hated peace? I can remember
  The people crying out when Deirdre passed
  And Maine Morgor had a cold gray eye.
  Well, well, I'll throw this heel-tap on the ground,
  For it may be they are thirsty.

  _A King._                       Be silent, fool.

  _Another King._ Be silent, Daire.

  _Concobar._                       Let him speak his mind.
  I have no need to be afraid of ghosts,
  For I have made but necessary wars.
  I warred to strengthen Emain, or because
  When wars are out they marry and beget
  And have their generations like mankind
  And there's no help for it; but I'm well content
  That they have ended and left the town so great,
  That its mere name shall be in times to come
  Like a great ale vat where the men of the world
  Shall drink no common ale but the hard will,
  The unquenchable hope, the friendliness of the sword.

    [_He takes thin boards on which plans have been carved by those
    about him._

  Give me the building plans, and have you written
  That we--Cuchullain is looking in his shield;
  It may be the pale riders of the wind
  Throw pictures on it, or that Mananan,
  His father's friend and sometime fosterer,
  Foreknower of all things, has cast a vision,
  Out of the cold dark of the rich sea,
  Foretelling Emain's greatness.

  _Cuchullain._                  No, great King,
  I looked on this out of mere idleness,
  Imagining a far-off country and one
  That held it with a sword, although a woman.

  _Concobar._ A woman needs but laugh, or a friend sigh,
  And you're afar off sounding through the world,
  While I plan Emain's greatness.

    [_The sound of a trumpet without._

                                  Open the doors!
  I hear a herald's trumpet, and await,
  It may be, the heavy fleeces of the sea
  And golden and silver apples or ancient crowns
  Long hidden in the well at the World's End,
  Or glittering garments of the salmon, tributes
  From the Great Plain, or the high people of Sorcha,
  Or the walled garden in the east of the world.

    [_The great door at the back is flung open; a YOUNG MAN, who is
    fully armed and carries a shield with a woman's head painted on it,
    stands upon the threshold. Behind him are trumpeters. He walks into
    the centre of the hall, the trumpeting ceases._

  What is your message?

  _Young Man._          I am of Aoife's army.

  _First King._ Queen Aoife and her army have fallen upon us.

  _Second King._ Out swords! Out swords!

  _Third King._ They are about the house.

  _Fourth King._ Rush out! Rush out! Before they have fired the thatch.

  _Young Man._ Aoife is far away. I am alone.
  I have come alone in the midst of you
  To weigh this sword against Cuchullain's sword.

    [_There is a murmur amongst the KINGS._

  _Concobar._ And are you noble? for if of common seed
  You cannot weigh your sword against his sword
  But in mixed battle.

  _Young Man._         I am under bonds
  To tell my name to no man, but it's noble.

  _Concobar._ But I would know your name and not your bonds.
  You cannot speak in the Assembly House
  If you are not noble.

  _A King._             Answer the High King.

  _Young Man._ [_Drawing his sword._]
  I will give no other proof than the hawk gives
  That it's no sparrow.

    [_He is silent a moment, then speaks to all._

                        Yet look upon me, Kings;
  I too am of that ancient seed and carry
  The signs about this body and in these bones.

  _Cuchullain._ To have shown the hawk's gray feather is enough,
  And you speak highly too.

    [_CUCHULLAIN comes down from his great chair. He remains standing on
    the steps of the chair. The YOUNG KINGS gather about him and begin
    to arm him._

                            Give me that helmet!
  I'd thought they had grown weary sending champions.
  That leathern coat will do. The High King there
  Being old in wisdom can think of times to come,
  But the hawk's sleepy till its well-beloved
  Cries out amid the acorns, or it has seen
  Its enemy like a speck upon the sun.
  What's Emain to the hawk when that clear eye
  Is burning nearer up in the high air?
  That buckle should be tighter. Give me your shield.
  There is good level ground at Baile's Yew-tree,
  Some dozen yards from here, and it's but truth
  That I am sad to-day and this fight welcome.

    [_He looks hard at the YOUNG MAN, and then steps down on the floor
    of the Assembly House. He grasps the YOUNG MAN by the shoulder._

  Hither into the light.

    [_Turning to one of the YOUNG KINGS._

                         The very tint
  Of her that I was speaking of but now:
  Not a pin's difference.

    [_To the YOUNG MAN._

                          You are from the North,
  Where there are many that have that tint of hair,
  Red-brown, the light red-brown. Come nearer, boy!
  For I would have another look at you.
  There's more likeness, a pale, a stone pale cheek.
  What brought you, boy? Have you no fear of death?

  _Young Man._ Whether I live or die is in the Gods' hands.

  _Cuchullain._ That is all words, all words, a young man's talk;
  I am their plough, their harrow, their very strength,
  For he that's in the sun begot this body
  Upon a mortal woman, and I have heard tell
  It seemed as if he had outrun the moon,
  That he must always follow through waste heaven,
  He loved so happily. He'll be but slow
  To break a tree that was so sweetly planted.
  Let's see that arm; I'll see it if I like.
  That arm had a good father and a good mother,
  But it is not like this.

  _Young Man._             You are mocking me.
  You think I am not worthy to be fought,
  But I'll not wrangle but with this talkative knife.

  _Cuchullain._ Put up your sword, I am not mocking you.
  I'd have you for my friend, but if it's not
  Because you have a hot heart and a cold eye
  I cannot tell the reason. You've got her fierceness,
  And nobody is as fierce as those pale women.

    [_To the YOUNG KINGS._

  We'll keep him here in Muirthemne awhile.

  _A Young King._ You are the leader of our pack and therefore
  May cry what you will.

  _Cuchullain._          You'll stop with us
  And we will hunt the deer and the wild bulls,
  And, when we have grown weary, light our fires
  In sandy places where the wool-white foam
  Is murmuring and breaking, and it may be
  That long-haired women will come out of the dunes
  To dance in the yellow fire-light. You hang your head,
  Young man, as if it was not a good life;
  And yet what's better than to hurl the spear,
  And hear the long-remembering harp, and dance?
  Friendship grows quicker in the murmuring dark;
  But I can see there's no more need for words
  And that you'll be my friend now.

  _First Old King._                 Concobar,
  Forbid their friendship, for it will get twisted
  To a reproach against us.

  _Concobar._               Until now
  I'd never need to cry Cuchullain on
  And would not now.

  _First Old King._ They'll say his manhood's quenched.

  _Cuchullain._ I'll give you gifts, but I'll have something too,
  An arm-ring or the like, and if you will
  We'll fight it out when you are older, boy.

  _An Old King._ Aoife will make some story out of this.

  _Cuchullain._ Well, well, what matter, I'll have that arm-ring, boy.

  _Young Man._ There is no man I'd sooner have my friend
  Than you whose name has gone about the world
  As if it had been the wind, but Aoife'd say
  I had turned coward.

  _Cuchullain._        I'll give you gifts
  That Aoife'll know and all her people know
  To have been my gifts. Mananan, son of the sea,
  Gave me this heavy embroidered cloak. Nine Queens
  Of the Land-under-Wave had woven it
  Out of the fleeces of the sea. O! tell her
  I was afraid, or tell her what you will.
  No! tell her that I heard a raven croak
  On the north side of the house and was afraid.

  _An Old King._ Some witch of the air has troubled Cuchullain's mind.

  _Cuchullain._ No witchcraft, his head is like a woman's head
  I had a fancy for.

  _Second Old King._ A witch of the air
  Can make a leaf confound us with memories.
  They have gone to school to learn the trick of it.

  _Cuchullain._ But there's no trick in this. That arm-ring, boy.

  _Third Old King._ He shall not go unfought, I'll fight with him.

  _Fourth Old King._ No! I will fight with him.

  _First Old King._ I claim the fight,
  For when we sent an army to her land----

  _Second Old King._ I claim the fight, for one of Aoife's galleys
  Stole my great cauldron and a herd of pigs.

  _Third Old King._ No, no, I claim it, for at Lammas' time----

  _Cuchullain._ Back! Back! Put up your swords! Put up your swords!
  There's none alive that shall accept a challenge
  I have refused. Laegaire, put up your sword.

  _Young Man._ No, let them come, let any three together.
  If they've a mind to, I'll try it out with four.

  _Cuchullain._ That's spoken as I'd spoken it at your age,
  But you are in my house. Whatever man
  Would fight with you shall fight it out with me.
  They're dumb. They're dumb. How many of you would meet

    [_Drawing his sword._

  This mutterer, this old whistler, this sandpiper,
  This edge that's grayer than the tide, this mouse
  That's gnawing at the timbers of the world,
  This, this--Boy, I would meet them all in arms
  If I'd a son like you. He would avenge me
  When I have withstood for the last time the men
  Whose fathers, brothers, sons, and friends I have killed
  Upholding Ullad; when the four provinces
  Have gathered with the ravens over them.
  But I'd need no avenger. You and I
  Would scatter them like water from a dish.

  _Young Man._ We'll stand by one another from this out.
  Here is the ring.

  _Cuchullain._     No, turn and turn about,
  But my turn is first, because I am the older.
  Cliodna embroidered these bird wings, but Fand
  Made all these little golden eyes with the hairs
  That she had stolen out of Aengus' beard,
  And therefore none that has this cloak about him
  Is crossed in love. The heavy inlaid brooch
  That Buan hammered has a merit too.

    [_He begins spreading the cloak out on a bench, showing it to the
    YOUNG MAN. Suddenly CONCOBAR beats with his silver rod on a pillar
    beside his chair. All turn towards him._

  _Concobar._ [_In a loud voice._]
  No more of that, I will not have this friendship.
  Cuchullain is my man and I forbid it;
  He shall not go unfought for I myself----

  _Cuchullain._ [_Seizing CONCOBAR._]
  You shall not stir, High King, I'll hold you there.

  _Concobar._ Witchcraft has maddened you.

  _The Kings._ [_Shouting._] Yes, witchcraft, witchcraft.

  _A King._ You saw another's head upon his shoulders
  All of a sudden, a woman's head, Cuchullain.
  Then raised your hand against the King of Ullad.

  _Cuchullain._ [_Letting CONCOBAR go, and looking wildly about him._]
  Yes, yes, all of a sudden, all of a sudden.

  _Daire._ Why, there's no witchcraft in it, I myself
  Have made a hundred of these sudden friendships
  And fought it out next day. But that was folly,
  For now that I am old I know it is best
  To live in comfort.

  _A King._           Pull the fool away!

  _Daire._ I'll throw a heel-tap to the one that dies.

  _Concobar._ Some witch is floating in the air above us.

  _Cuchullain._ Yes, witchcraft, witchcraft and the power of witchcraft.

    [_To the YOUNG MAN._

  Why did you do it? was it Calatin's daughters?
  Out, out, I say, for now it's sword on sword.

  _Young Man._ But, but, I did not.

  _Cuchullain._ Out, I say, out, out!
  Sword upon sword.

    [_He goes towards the door at back, followed by YOUNG MAN. He
    turns on the threshold and cries out, looking at the YOUNG MAN._

  That hair my hands were drowned in!

    [_He goes out, followed by YOUNG MAN. The other KINGS begin to
    follow them out._

  _A King._ I saw him fight with Ferdiad.

  _Second King._                          We'll be too late,
  They're such a long time getting through the door.

  _Third King._ Run quicker, quicker.

  _Daire._                            I was at the Smith's
  When he that was the boy Setanta then----

    [_Sound, of fighting outside._

  _Third King._ He will have killed him.
  They have begun the fight!

    [_They all go out, leaving the house silent and empty. There is a
    pause during which one hears the clashing of the swords. BARACH and
    FINTAIN come in from side door. BARACH is dragging FINTAIN._

_Barach._ You have eaten it, you have eaten it, you have left me nothing
but the bones.

_Fintain._ O, that I should have to endure such a plague. O, I ache all
over. O, I am pulled in pieces. This is the way you pay me for all the
good I have done you!

_Barach._ You have eaten it, you have told me lies about a wild dog.
Nobody has seen a wild dog about the place this twelve month. Lie there
till the Kings come. O, I will tell Concobar and Cuchullain and all the
Kings about you!

_Fintain._ What would have happened to you but for me, and you without
your wits? If I did not take care of you what would you do for food and
warmth?

_Barach._ You take care of me? You stay safe and send me into every kind
of danger. You sent me down the cliff for gull's eggs while you warmed
your blind eyes in the sun. And then you ate all that were good for
food. You left me the eggs that were neither egg nor bird. [_The blind
man tries to rise. BARACH makes him lie down again._] Keep quiet now
till I shut the door. There is some noise outside. There are swords
crossing; a high vexing noise so that I can't be listening to myself.
[_He goes to the big door at the back and shuts it._] Why can't they be
quiet, why can't they be quiet! Ah, you would get away, would you? [_He
follows the blind man who has been crawling along the wall and makes him
lie down close to the KING'S chair._] Lie there, lie there. No, you
won't get away. Lie there till the Kings come, I'll tell them all about
you. I shall tell it all. How you sit warming yourself, when you have
made me light a fire of sticks, while I sit blowing it with my mouth. Do
you not always make me take the windy side of the bush when it blows and
the rainy side when it rains?

_Fintain._ O good fool, listen to me. Think of the care I have taken of
you. I have brought you to many a warm hearth, where there was a good
welcome for you, but you would not stay there, you were always wandering
about.

_Barach._ The last time you brought me in, it was not I who wandered
away, but you that got put out because you took the crubeen out of the
pot, when you thought nobody was looking. Keep quiet now, keep quiet
till I shut the door. Here is Cuchullain, now you will be beaten. I am
going to tell him everything.

_Cuchullain._ [_Comes in and says to the fool._] Give me that horn.

    [_The fool gives him a horn which CUCHULLAIN fills with ale and
    drinks._

_Fintain._ Do not listen to him, listen to me.

_Cuchullain._ What are you wrangling over?

_Barach._ He is fat and good for nothing. He has left me the bones and
the feathers.

_Cuchullain._ What feathers?

_Barach._ I left him turning a fowl at the fire. He ate it all. He left
me nothing but the bones and feathers.

_Fintain._ Do not believe him. You do not know how vain this fool is. I
gave him the feathers, because I thought he would like nothing so well.

    [_BARACH is sitting on a bench playing with a heap of feathers,
    which he has taken out of the breast of his coat._

  _Barach._ [_Singing._] When you were an acorn on the tree top----

_Fintain._ Where would he be but for me? I must be always thinking,
thinking to get food for the two of us, and when we've got it, if the
moon's at the full or the tide on the turn, he'll leave the rabbit in
its snare till it is full of maggots, or let the trout slip through his
hands back into the water.

  _Barach._ [_Singing._] When you were an acorn on the tree top,
  Then was I an eagle cock;
  Now that you are a withered old block,
  Still am I an eagle cock!

_Fintain._ Listen to him now! That's the sort of talk I have to put up
with, day out day in.

    [_The fool is putting the feathers into his hair. CUCHULLAIN takes a
    handful of feathers out of the heap and out of the fool's hair, and
    begins to wipe the blood from his sword with them._

_Barach._ He has taken my feathers to wipe his sword. It is blood that
he is wiping from his sword!

_Fintain._ Whose blood? Whose blood?

_Cuchullain._ That young champion's.

_Fintain._ He that came out of Aoife's country?

_Cuchullain._ The Kings are standing round his body.

_Fintain._ Did he fight long?

_Cuchullain._ He thought to have saved himself with witchcraft.

_Barach._ That blind man there said he would kill you. He came from
Aoife's country to kill you. That blind man said they had taught him
every kind of weapon that he might do it. But I always knew that you
would kill him.

_Cuchullain._ [_To the blind man._] You knew him, then?

_Fintain._ I saw him when I had my eyes, in Aoife's country.

_Cuchullain._ You were in Aoife's country?

_Fintain._ I knew him and his mother there.

_Cuchullain._ He was about to speak of her when he died.

_Fintain._ He was a Queen's son.

_Cuchullain._ What Queen, what Queen? [_He seizes the blind man._] Was
it Scathach? There were many Queens. All the rulers were Queens.

_Fintain._ No, not Scathach.

_Cuchullain._ It was Uathach, then. Speak, speak!

_Fintain._ I cannot speak, you are clutching me too tightly.
[_CUCHULLAIN lets him go._] I cannot remember who it was. I am not
certain. It was some Queen.

_Barach._ He said a while ago that the young man was Aoife's son.

_Cuchullain._ She? No, no, she had no son when I was there.

_Barach._ That blind man there said that she owned him for her son.

_Cuchullain._ I had rather he had been some other woman's son. What
father had he? A soldier out of Alba? She was an amorous woman, a proud,
pale amorous woman.

_Fintain._ None knew whose son he was.

_Cuchullain._ None knew? Did you know, old listener at doors?

_Fintain._ No, no, I knew nothing.

_Barach._ He said a while ago that he heard Aoife boast that she'd never
but the one lover, and he the only man that had overcome her in battle.

    [_A pause._

_Fintain._ Somebody is trembling. Why are you trembling, fool? the bench
is shaking, why are you trembling? Is Cuchullain going to hurt us? It
was not I who told you, Cuchullain.

_Barach._ It is Cuchullain who is trembling. He is shaking the bench
with his knees.

_Cuchullain._ He was my son, and I have killed my son.

    [_A pause._

  'Twas they that did it, the pale windy people,
  Where, where, where? My sword against the thunder.
  But no, for they have always been my friends;
  And though they love to blow a smoking coal
  Till it's all flame, the wars they blow aflame
  Are full of glory, and heart uplifting pride,
  And not like this; the wars they love awaken
  Old fingers and the sleepy strings of harps.
  Who did it then? Are you afraid; speak out,
  For I have put you under my protection
  And will reward you well. Dubthach the Chafer.
  He had an old grudge. No, for he is with Maeve.
  Laegaire did it. Why do you not speak?
  What is this house? [_A pause._] Now I remember all.

  _Fintain._ He will kill us. O, I am afraid!

  _Cuchullain._ [_Who is before CONCOBAR'S chair._]
  'Twas you who did it, you who sat up there
  With that old branch of silver, like a magpie
  Nursing a stolen spoon. Magpie, magpie,
  A maggot that is eating up the earth!

    [_Begins hacking at the chair with his sword._

  No, but a magpie, for he's flown away.
  Where did he fly to?

  _Fintain._           He is outside the door.

  _Cuchullain._ Outside the door?

  _Fintain._                      He is under Baile's yew-tree.

  _Cuchullain._ Concobar, Concobar, the sword into your heart.

    [_He goes out. A pause. The fool goes to the great door at back and
    looks out after him._

_Barach._ He is going up to King Concobar; they are all under the tree.
No, no, he is standing still. There is a great wave going to break and
he is looking at it. Ah! now he is running down to the sea, but he is
holding up his sword as if he were going into a fight. [_A pause._] Well
struck, well struck!

_Fintain._ What is he doing now?

_Barach._ Oh! he is fighting the waves.

_Fintain._ He sees King Concobar's crown on every one of them.

_Barach._ There, he has struck at a big one. He has struck the crown off
it, he has made the foam fly. There again another big one.

    [_Shouting without._

_Fintain._ Where are the Kings? What are the Kings doing?

_Barach._ They are shouting and running down to the shore, and the
people are running out of the houses, they are all running.

_Fintain._ You say they are running out of the houses, there will be
nobody left in the houses. Listen, fool.

_Barach._ There, he is down! He is up again! He is going out into the
deep water.

_Fintain._ Come here, fool; come here, I say.

_Barach._ [_Coming towards him but looking backward towards the door._]
What is it?

_Fintain._ There will be nobody in the houses. Come this way, come
quickly; the ovens will be full; we will put our hands into the ovens.

[_They go out._




[Illustration]

  CHISWICK PRESS: CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
  TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.


       *       *       *       *       *


Transcriber's Note:

Punctuation has been standardised. Spelling and hyphenation have been
preserved as printed.





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