SCATHACH OF THE SHADOWS.
ONE day, when the heat of summer lay like a
golden shimmering mist over the land, Fionn,
with a few Fians, slowly mounted the slopes
of Bearnas Mor, and when they reached the
top sat down to rest in the shade of a big rock,
while their hounds ranged over the hillside
as they chose. They had left the Hill of
Allen a few days before, thinking how much
pleasanter the sea and mountains of Donegal
would be than the sun-baked bog-country of
the midlands.
They had been resting only a short time
when they heard a furious barking from the
hounds, mingled with the shrill squeals of
some animal. The Fians rose and looked
round them, then saw that the hounds had
started from its lair an immense wild boar,
which, instead of running from the dogs,
turned round and attacked them. The Fians
cheered their hounds on, thinking they would
soon conquer the boar, but, to their grief and
anger, it killed one after another of the hounds,
until there was left only Bran, the wise and
beautiful hound that was Fionn's joy and
delight, and one of the greatest treasures he
ever possessed.
Bran circled round and round the boar,
waiting for an opportunity to spring on it. At
last she made a leap, and fastened her teeth in
the boar's shoulder, and though the boar shook
himself and ran to and fro, he could not free
himself from Bran. Then he screamed horribly
with rage and pain, and at that moment a
man, grotesquely ugly and gigantic, appeared
suddenly on the hillside. Where he came
from the Fians did not know, and they looked
at him in astonishment.
"Call your hound from my boar at once,
Fionn," he said, "or I will kill her."
Hearing him speak like that the Fians grew
very angry. A number of their best dogs had
been slain by this fierce boar; now the strange
man spoke of killing Bran, who was the very
best hound the Fians ever had, or ever would
have. So they rushed at the man, intending
to capture him; afterwards they would kill
his wild beast, and cook it for their supper.
But no sooner did the Fians lay their hands
upon him than all the strength ebbed from
their bodies. They could neither speak nor
move. Fionn alone, who had not touched
him, was free from the enchantment. The
man spoke again:
"Call off your hound, Fionn. Do you not
see she has conquered the boar, and it has not
strength to escape?"
Fionn called Bran to him, and the man
walked over to where the boar lay panting on
the ground. He struck it lightly with a hazel
wand, and to the wonder of the Fians the
fierce, ungainly beast changed instantly into a
beautiful girl. He then touched himself, and
from an ugly giant he became a tall, handsome
man.
On seeing this Fionn drew back a step or
two. He thought that perhaps the man might
touch him with his magic stick, and he had
no mind to be transformed into a pig, or a fly,
or whatever else the enchanter might choose
to make him. The man seemed to know what
Fionn was thinking, and laughed as he said:
"I shall do you no harm. On the contrary,
if I can serve you at any time I will
gladly do so, in return for the service you have
unknowingly rendered me."
"Indeed, then," said Fionn, "it would please
me if you would take that enchantment from
my men. They are of no use to me as they
are. Afterwards, perhaps, you will tell me
who you and that young girl are, and why you
appeared in forms not your own."
He glanced at his men, and laughed out
loud as he saw them standing stiffly there,
unable to put one foot before the other or even
raise a finger. The enchanter laughed also,
then he waved his hand upward, and power
returned to the Fians.
"Now," said the man to Fionn, "it will
give me much pleasure if you and your comrades
will take supper with me; afterwards I
will relate to you our story. It will not take
us long to reach my dún, which is just on the
other side of the hill."
Fionn and his men walked over the hill with
the strangers, and soon they came to a house
which the Fians thought even more beautiful
than the kingly dún at Tara. The roof and
door-posts were fashioned of silver, and glittered
in the sunset; the door was made of bronze,
inset with crystals and amethysts. But the
interior was still more beautiful, the walls were
hung with silks of many colours, and couches
of carved red yew and gold were placed on
every side. In the middle of the dún a
glimmering pool of water shone like silver in
the dusk; not a ripple disturbed its quietness,
and as the Fians looked they imagined that
pictures came and went in it. Before they had
time to observe more their host struck a bronze
gong, and men came in bearing great bowls
of ale, and dishes of meat and fruit.
When supper was ended Fionn said:
"Perhaps you will tell us your story now,
for with the rising of the moon we must go on
our way."
"I am a son of Bove Derg, king of the
southern Sidhe," began the man, "and the
maiden here is my daughter, Scathach of the
Shadows. When the Tuatha de Danann first
became invisible to men, the Dagda gave me
this pleasant hillside to dwell in, and many
years we lived here in peace. But one day
when I was away from home, there came a
giant Fomorian from the Island of Torach,
who seized my daughter, and would have
carried her away with him to his island of
rocks. When I returned I sought for her,
but could find her nowhere. I looked then in
the quiet pool of water there, which holds
pictures of all that has been or will be, and
saw what had happened. Quickly I followed
in their footsteps, and on the seashore came
up to them. Before the Fomorian could speak
a word I cast my spear, which passed through
him from one side to the other; but as he fell
to the ground he placed a spell on my daughter,
and she changed instantly to the fierce boar
your dogs hunted. Not for myself would I
ask a favour from an enemy, but for the sake
of my beautiful daughter I implored him to
remove the spell from her before he died.
Though he lay dying on the ground he laughed
at me, and said that he had doomed her to
roam the earth in that shape for hundreds of
years, until she was conquered by an enchanted
hound. Many, many times she has been
hunted, and a great number of hounds she has
killed, but never until to-day was she conquered."
He paused for a moment, then
continued: "Whatever you ask of me, O
Fionn, that I will do, for you have been the
means by which the wicked spell is taken from
my daughter."
"It is a grief to me that I did not meet
that Fomorian," said Fionn, and his blue eyes
gleamed with the battle-light. "It would
have pleased me greatly to kill him myself.
Now I see the moonbeams shining over the
bog below, and before I leave you I would ask
one other question. Why do you call your
daughter 'Scathach of the Shadows'?"
"Through her men see the shadows of
many things," said the son of Derg. "If you
will stay with us a little longer she shall play
to you, and you will understand."
Scathach took her harp, which had a
golden frame carved with birds and beasts and
serpents, that moved as she played. Only
three strings were on that harp, one of silver,
one of bronze, and one of iron, but in the
music of those strings all the peace and joy
and sorrow of the world seemed to lie. She
played on the thin iron string, and tears came
into the Fians' eyes; they felt that sorrow
and pain and unnumbered shadows of woe
pressed round them on every side, till at last
Fionn cried: "Oh, Scathach, cease, or our
hearts will break with grief."
She played then on the fine bronze wire, and
in a moment the Fians were filled with joy.
Beautiful shadowy forms danced round them
and sang glad songs, the laughter of little
children and grey old people echoed in their
ears, and in all the world there was no grief
or pain. Then, out of boundless joy, Fionn
implored Scathach to stop, for he said such
gladness mortals could not bear.
Now Scathach touched the silver wire, and
a gentle melody floated over the moonlit hills
and bogland. So soft, so gentle it was, that
the Fians felt neither sorrow nor joy, only an
infinite peace wrapped them round. Forms
of the ancient gods appeared to them then:
Manannan mac Lir, the friend of ocean-wanderers;
Angus Oge, guardian of little
children and lord of all that is beautiful; Lu
Lam-Fada, knower of all knowledge; the Mor
Riga, divine mother of wisdom and unfolder
of mysteries, these and many others of the
undying gods came in that hour of peace.
Still Scathach played, until a deep slumber
fell on the heroes, and they knew no more.
A fair and sun-bright morning dawned
over the high hills of Donegal, and Fionn and
his men woke from their sleep to find themselves
lying on the side of Bearnas Mor.
There was no trace of the house, or of Mac
Derg and his daughter Scathach, nor do I think
Fionn ever saw them again, though the memory
of that night, when he had known unbounded
sorrow and joy and peace, remained with him
ever after.
Text Source:
Russell, Violet. Heroes of the Dawn.
New York: The Macmillan Co., 1914. 63-71.
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