The Tain Bo Culaigne
The Slaying of Loch Son of Mofemis
It was then that Loch Mor son of Mofemis was summoned to the pavilion of
Ailill and Medb. "What would ye of me?" asked Loch. "To have fight with
Cuchulain," replied Medb. "I will not go on that errand, for I esteem it no
honour nor becoming to attack a tender, young, smooth-chinned, beardless boy.
And not to belittle him do I say it, but I have a doughty brother, the match of
himself," said Loch, "a man to confront him, Long macEmonis, to wit, and he will
rejoice to accept an offer from you."
Thereupon Long was summoned to the tent of Ailill and Medb, and Medb promised
him great gifts, even livery for twelve men of cloth of every colour, and a
chariot worth four a times seven bondmaids, and Finnabair to wife for him alone,
and at all times entertainment in Cruachan, and that wine would be poured out
for him. Long went to seek Cuchulain, and Cuchulain slew him.
Then Medb called upon her woman-bands to go speak with Cuchulain and to
charge him to put a false beard on. The woman-troop went their way to Cuchulain
and told him to put a false beard on: "For no brave warrior in the camp thinks
it seemly to come fight with thee, and thou beardless," said they. Thereupon
Cuchulain bedaubed himself a beard. And he came onto the knoll overlooking the
men of Erin and made that beard manifest to them all.
Loch son of Mofemis saw it, and what he said was, "Why, that is a beard on
Cuchulain!" "It is what I perceive," Medb answered. Medb promised the same great
terms to Loch to put a check to Cuchulain.
"I will go forth and attack him," cried Loch. Loch went to attack
Cuchulain;
so they met on the ford where Long had fallen. "Let us move to the upper ford,"
said Loch, "for I will not fight on this ford," since he held it defiled, cursed
and unclean, the ford whereon his brother had fallen. Thereafter they fought on
the upper ford.
Then it was that the Morrigan daughter of Aed Ernmas came from the fairy
dwellings to destroy Cuchulain. For she had threatened on the Cattle-raid of
Regomaina that she would come to undo Cuchulain what time he would be in sore
distress when engaged in battle and combat with a goodly warrior, with Loch, in
the course of the Cattle-spoil of Cualnge. Thither then the Morrigan came in the
shape of a white, hornless, red-eared heifer, with fifty heifers about her and a
chain of silvered bronze between each two of the heifers. The women came with
their strange sorcery, and constrained Cuchulain by geasa and by inviolable
bonds to check the heifer for them lest she should escape from him without harm.
Cuchulain made an unerring cast from his sling-stick at her, so that he
shattered one of the Morrigan's eyes.
Then the Morrigan came thither in the shape of a slippery, black eel down the
stream. Then she came on the linn and she coiled around the two feet of
Cuchulain. While Cuchulain was busied freeing himself, Loch wounded him
crosswise through the breast. [Then at this incitation Cuchulain arose, and with
his left heel he smote the eel on the head, so that its ribs broke within it and
he destroyed one half of its brains after smashing half of its head.]
The Morrigan next came in the form of a rough, grey-red bitch-wolf [and she
bit Cuchulain in the arm and drove the cattle against him westwards, and
Cuchulain made a cast of his little javelin at her, strongly, vehemently, so
that it shattered one eye in her head.] During this space of time, whether long
or short, while Cuchulain was engaged in freeing himself, Loch wounded him
through the loins. Thereupon Cuchulain's anger arose within him and he wounded
Loch with the Gae Bulga ('the Barbed-spear'), so that it passed through his
heart in his breast.
"Grant me a boon now, O Cuchulain," said Loch. "What boon askest thou?"
"'Tis
no boon of quarter nor a prayer of cowardice that I make of thee," said Loch.
"But fall back a step from me and permit me to rise, that it be on my face to
the east I fall and not on my back to the west toward the warriors of Erin, to
the end that no man of them shall say, if I fall on my back, it was in retreat
or in flight I was before thee, for fallen I have by the Gae Bulga!" "That will
I do," answered Cuchulain, "for 'tis a true warrior's prayer that thou makest."
And Cuchulain stepped back. Hence cometh the name the ford bears ever since,
namely Ath Traged (' Foot-ford ') in Cenn Tire Moir (' Great Headland').
And deep distress possessed Cuchulain that day more than any other day for
his being all alone on the Táin. Thereupon Cuchulain enjoined upon Laeg his
charioteer to go to the men of Ulster, that they should come to defend their
drove. And weariness of heart and weakness overcame him, and he gave utterance
to a lay:--
Rise, O Laeg, arouse the hosts, Say for me in Emain
strong: I am worn each day in fight, Full of wounds, and bathed in gore!
My right side and eke my left: Hard to say which suffers
worse; Fingin's hand hath touched them not, Stanching blood with strips
of wood!
Bring this word to Conchobar dear, I am weak, with wounded
sides. Greatly has he changed in mien, Dechtirè's fond, rich-trooped
son!
I alone these cattle guard, Leave them not, yet hold them
not. Ill my plight, no hope for me, Thus alone on many fords!
Showers of blood rain on my arms, Full of hateful wounds am
I. No friend comes to help me here Save my charioteer alone!
Few make music here for me, Joy I've none in single
horn. When the mingled trumpets sound, This is sweetest from the drone!
This old saying, ages old:-- Single log gives forth no
flame; Let there be a two or three, Up the firebrands all will blaze!
One sole log burns not so well As when one burns by its
side. Guile can be employed on one; Single mill-stone doth not grind!
Hast not heard at every time, One is duped?-- 'tis true of
me. That is why I cannot last These long battles of the hosts!
However small a host may be, It receives some thought and
pains; Take but this: its daily meat On one fork is never cooked!
Thus alone I've faced the host By the ford in broad Cantire; Many came, both Loch and
Badb, As foretold in 'Regomain!'
Loch has mangled my two thighs; Me the grey-red wolf hath
bit; Loch my sides has wounded sore And the eel has dragged me down!
With my spear I kept her off; I put out the she-wolf's
eye; and I broke her lower leg, At the outset of the strife!
Then when Laeg sent Aifè's spear, Down the stream-- like swarm
of bees-- That sharp deadly spear I hurled, Loch, Mobebuis' son, fell
there!
Will not Ulster battle give To Ailill and Eocho's
lass, While I linger here in pain, Full of wounds and bathed in blood?
Tell the splendid Ulster chiefs They shall come to guard their
drove. Maga's sons have seized their kine And have portioned them all
out!
Fight on fight-- though much I vowed, I have kept my word in
all. For pure honour's sake I fight; 'Tis too much to fight alone!
Vultures joyful at the breach In Ailill's and in Medb's
camp. Mournful cries of woe are heard; On Murthemne's plain is grief!
Conchobar comes not out with help; In the fight, no troops of
his. Should one leave him thus alone, Hard 'twould be his rage to tell
Men have almost worn me out In these single-handed
fights; Warrior's deeds I cannot do, Now that I must fight
alone!
This then is the Combat of Loch Mor ('the Great') son of Mofemis against
Cuchulain on the Driving of the Kine of Cualnge.

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