Cuchulain of Muirthemne
XIII. The Two Bulls
This, now, is the story of the two bulls, the
Brown of Cuailgne, and the White-horned of Cruachan Ai, and this is the way it was
with them--for they were not right bulls, but there was enchantment on them. In the
time long ago Bodb was king of the Sidhe of Munster, and it is in Femen, of
Slieve-na-man he was, and Ochall Ochne was king of the Sidhe of Connaught, and it
is in Cruachan he used to be. They used at one time to be fighting one against the
other, but afterwards they made peace, and were good friends. Now Bodb had a swineherd,
whose name was Friuch, and Ochall had a swineherd whose name was Rucht, and they
were friendly with one another the same as their masters. And they had the
knowledge of enchantments, and could turn themselves to every shape. And when
there was a great plenty of mast in Munster, the swineherd from Connaught would
bring his lean swine to the south, and in the same way, when mast was plentiful
in Connaught, the swineherd would bring his swine northward, and would bring
them home again fat.
But after a while some bad feeling rose up between the two, for the men of
Connaught and the men of Munster began to set them one against the other. So one
year when there was great mast in Munster, and Rucht brought his herd from
Connaught, so soon as his comrade Friuch had bade him welcome, he said: "The
people are all saying your power is greater than mine." "It is no less any way,"
said Ochall's herd. "We will soon know that," said Friuch. "I will put an
enchantment on your swine, and even though they eat their share of mast, they
will not be fat, like mine will be." And so it happened, he put an enchantment
on the Connaught swine, and when Rucht went home with them they could hardly
walk at all, they were so thin and so weak, and all the people were laughing at
the state they were in. "It was a bad day for you, you went to the South," they
said, "for your comrade has greater power than what you have." "That is not
so," said he. "Wait till it is our turn to have mast, and I will play the same
trick on him."
So the next year he did as he had said, and the Munster swine pined away, so
that every one said their power was the same. And when Bodb's swineherd went
back home to Munster with his lean swine, his master put him out of the place.
And Ochall put his herd out of his place as well, because of the swine coming
back in so bad a state from Munster.
One day, two full years after that, the men of Munster were gathered together
near Femen, and they took notice of two ravens that were making a great cawing.
"What a noise those birds have been making all through the year!" they said.
"They never stop scolding at one another." Just then Findell, Ochall's steward
from Cruachan, came towards them on the hill, and they bade him welcome. "What a
noise those birds are making!" he said; "any one would think them to be the same
two birds we had in Cruachan last year." With that, they saw the two ravens
change into the shape of men, and they knew them to be the two swineherds, and
they bade them welcome. "It is not right you to welcome us," said Bodb's
swineherd, "for there will be many dead bodies of friends, and much crying on
account of us two." "What has happened you all through this time?" they asked.
"Nothing good," he said. "Since we went from you we have been all the time in
the shape of birds, and you saw the way we were scolding at one another all
through this year. And we were quarrelling in the same way the whole of last
year at Cruachan, and the men of the North and of the South have seen what our
power is. And now," he said, "we will go into the shape of water beasts, and be
under the water for the length of two years." And with that one of them went
into the Sionnan, and the other into the Suir, and they were seen for a year in
the Suir, and for a year in the Sionnan, and they devouring one another. And one
day the men of Connaught had a great gathering at Ednecha, on the Sionnan, and
they saw these two beasts in the river; each one of them looked to be as big as
the top of a hill, and they made such a furious attack on one another that fiery
swords seemed to be coming from their jaws, and the people came round them on
every side. They came out of the Sionnan then, and as soon as they touched the
shore, they changed again into the shape of the two swineherds. Ochall bade them
welcome. "Where have you been wandering?" he asked them. "Indeed it is tired we
are with our wanderings," they said. "You saw what we were doing before your
eyes, and that is what we were doing through these two years, under seas and
waters. And now we must take new shapes on us, till we try one another's
strength again." And with that they went away.
It happened a good while after that there was a great gathering of the men of
Connaught at Loch Riach, for Bodb was coming on a friendly visit to Ochall. And
Bodb brought a great troop with him, the most splendid ever seen; speckled
horses they had, and green cloaks with silver brooches, and shoes with clasps of
red bronze, and every one of them had a collar of gold, with a stone worth a
newly-calved cow set in it. When Ochall saw what grand clothes and horses they
had, he called to his people secretly, and asked could they match Bodb's people
in dress and in horses and aims, and they said they could not. Then Ochall said:
"That is a pity, and our great name is lost." But just then a troop of men were
seen coming from the North, and black horses with them, that you would think had
been cast up by the sea, and bridle-bits of gold in their mouths. And the men
bad black-grey cloaks, and a gold brooch at the breast of each, and a white
tunic with crimson stripes, and fifty coils of bright gold round every man. And
every man of them had black hair, as smooth as if a cow had licked it. And they
stopped a little way off, and then the men of Connaught stood up and gave up
their place to them. There was a Druid from Britain there, and when be saw them
make way he said: "From this out, to the end of life and time, the Connaught men
will be under the yoke, attending on hounds and on Sons of kings and queens for
ever."
Then after they bad been feasting for a while, Bodb asked could any Connaught
man be found that would fight against his champion Rinn, that was with him, and
that had a great name, but no one knew where he came from. And at first there
could no one be found, but then a strange champion came out from among the men
of Connaught, and he said, "I will go against him." "That is no welcome
news," said Rinn. Then they fought against one another for three days and three
nights, and before the end of that time the two armies began to join into the fight, and
a troop came from Leinster and joined with Bodb, and another troop came from
Meath and joined with Ochall. And four kings were killed there, and Ochall among
them, and then Bodb went back to Slieve-naman. But as to the two champions, they
were seen no more, and it was known they were the two swineherds. After that
they were for two years with the appearance of shadows, threatening one another,
the way that many people died of fright after seeing them.
And after that, they were in the shape of eels, and one went into the river
Cruind, in Cuailgne; and after a while a cow belonging to Daire, son of Fachna,
drank it down. And the other went into the Spring of Uaran Garad, in Connaught;
and one day Maeve went out to the spring, and a small bronze vessel in her hand,
and she dipped it in the water, and the little eel went into it, and every
colour was to be seen on him. And she was a long time looking at him, she
thought the colours so beautiful. Then the water went away, and the eel was
alone in the vessel. "It is a pity you cannot speak to me," said Maeve. "What is
it you want to know?" said the eel. "I would like to know what way it is with
you in that shape of a beast," she said; "and I would like to know what will
happen me after I get the sway over Connaught." "Indeed it is a tormented beast
I am," he said, "and it is in many shapes I have been. And as to yourself," he
said, "handsome as you are, you should take a good man to be with you in your
sway." "I have no wish," said Maeve, "to let a man of Connaught get the
upper hand over me," and with that she went home again.
But she married Ailell after that, and as for the eel, he was swallowed down
by one of Maeve's cows that came to drink at the spring.
And it was from that cow, and from the cow that belonged to Daire, son of
Fachna, the two bulls were born, the White-horned and the Brown. They were the
finest ever seen in Ireland, and gold and silver were put on their horns by the
men of Ulster and Connaught. In Connaught no bull dared bellow before the
White-horned, and in Ulster no bull dared bellow before the Brown.
As to the Brown, he that had been Friuch, the Munster swineherd, his lowing
when he would be coming home every evening to his yard was good music to the
people of the whole of Cuailgne. And wherever he was, neither Bocanachs nor
Bananachs nor witches of the valley, could come into the one place with him. And
it was on account of him the great war broke out.
Now, when Maeve saw at Ilgairech that the battle was going against her, she
sent eight of her own messengers to bring away the Brown Bull, and his heifers.
"For whoever goes back or does not go back," she said, "the Brown Bull must go
to Cruachan."
Now when the Brown Bull came into Connaught, and saw the beautiful trackless
country before him, he let three great loud bellowings out of him. As soon as
the White-horned heard that, he set out for the place those bellowings came
from, with his head high in the air.
Then Maeve said that the men of her army must not go to their homes till they
would see the fight between the two bulls.
And they all said some one must be put to watch the fight, and to give a fair
report of it afterwards. And it is what they agreed, that Bricriu should be sent
to watch it, because he had not taken any side in the war; for he had been
through the whole length of it under care of physicians at Cruachan, with the
dint of the wound he got the day he vexed Fergus, and that Fergus drove the
chessmen into his head. "I will go willingly," said Bricriu. So he went out and
took his place in a gap, where he could have a good view of the fight.
As soon as the bulls caught sight of one another they pawed the earth so
furiously that they sent the sods flying, and their eyes were like balls of fire
in their heads; they locked their horns together, and they ploughed up the
ground under them and trampled it, and they were trying to crush and to destroy
one another through the whole length of the day.
And once the White-horned went back a little way and made a rush at the
Brown, and got his horn into his side, and he gave out a great bellow, and they
rushed both together through the gap where Bricriu was, the way he was trodden
into the earth under their feet. And that is how Bricriu of the bitter tongue,
son of Cairbre, got his death.
Then when the night was coming on, Cormac Conloingeas took hold of a
spear-shaft, and he laid three great strokes on the Brown Bull from head to
tail,and he said: "This is a great treasure to be boasting of, that cannot get
the better of a calf of his own age." When the Brown Bull heard that insult,
great fury came on him, and he turned on the White-horned again. And all through
the night the men of Ireland were listening to the sound of their bellowing, and
they going here and there, all through the country.
On the morrow, they saw the Brown Bull coming over Cruachan from the west,
and be carrying what was left of the White-horned on his horns. Then Maeve's
sons, the Maines, rose up to make an attack on him on account of the Connaught
bull he had destroyed. "Where are those men going?" said Fergus. "They are going
to kill the Brown Bull of Cuailgne." "By the oath of my people," said Fergus,
"if you do not let the Brown Bull go back to his own country in safety, all he
has done to the White-horned is little to what I wilt do now to you."
Then the Brown Bull bellowed three times, and set out on his way. And when
became to the great ford of the Sionnan he stopped to drink, and the two loins
of the White-horned fell from his horns into the water. And that place is called
Ath-luain, the ford of the loin, to this day. And its liver fell in the same way
into a river of Meath, and it is called Ath-Truim, the ford of the liver to this
day.
Then he went on till he came to the top of Slieve Breagh, and when be looked
from it he saw his own home, the hills of Cuailgne; and at the sight of his own
country, a great spirit rose up in him, and madness and fury came on him, and he
rushed on, killing everyone that came in his way.
And when he got to his own place, he turned his back to a hilt and he gave
out a loud bellowing of victory. And with that his heart broke in his body, and
blood came bursting from his mouth, and he died.

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Cuchulain by John Duncan |