<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE TOWN OF THE RED CASTLE </h2>
<p>I</p>
<p>Flann was the name that the Old Woman of Beare gave to Gilly of the
Goatskin when he came back to tell her that the Swan of Endless Tales had
been hatched out of the Crystal Egg. He went from her house then and came
to where the King of Ireland's Son waited for him. The two comrades went
along a well-traveled road. As they went on they fell in with men driving
herds of ponies, men carrying packs on their backs, men with tools for
working gold and silver, bronze and iron. Every man whom they asked said,
"We are going to the Town of the Red Castle, and to the great fair that
will be held there." The King's Son and Flann thought they should go to
the Town of the Red Castle too, for where so many people would be, there
was a chance of hearing what went before and what came after the Unique
Tale. So they went on.</p>
<p>And when they had come to a well that was under a great rock those whom
they were with halted. They said it was the custom for the merchants and
sellers to wait there for a day and to go into the Town of the Red Castle
the day following. "On this day," they said, "the people of the Town
celebrate the Festival of Midsummer, and they do not like a great company
of people to go into their Town until the Festival is over."</p>
<p>The King of Ireland's Son and Flann went on, and they were let into the
town. The people had lighted great fires in their market-place and they
were driving their cattle through the fires: "If there be evil on you, may
it burn, may it burn," they were crying. They were afraid that witches and
enchanters might come into the town with the merchants and the sellers,
and that was the reason they did not permit a great company to enter.</p>
<p>The fires in all their houses had been quenched that day, and they might
not be lighted except from the fires the cattle had gone through. The
fires were left blazing high and the King's Son and Flann spent hours
watching them, and watching the crowds that were around.</p>
<p>Then the time came to take fire to the houses. They who came for fire were
all young maidens. Each came into the light of one of the great fires,
took coals from a fire that had burnt low, placed them in a new earthen
vessel and went away. Flann thought that all the maidens were beautiful
and wonderful, although the King's Son told him that some were
black-faced, and some crop-headed and some hunchbacked. Then a maiden
came, who was so high above the rest that Flann had no words to speak of
her.</p>
<p>She had silver on her head and silver on her arms, and the people around
the fires all bowed to her. She had black, black hair and she had a
smiling face—not happily smiling, but proudly smiling. Flann thought
that a star had bent down with her. And when she had taken the fire and
had gone away, Flann said, "She is surely the King's daughter!"</p>
<p>"She is," said the King of Ireland's Son. "The people here have spoken her
name." "What is her name?" asked Flann. "It is Lassarina," said the King's
Son, "Flame-of-Wine."</p>
<p>"Shall we see her again?" said Flann.</p>
<p>"That I do not know," said the King's Son. "Come now, and let us ask the
people here if they have knowledge of the Unique Tale."</p>
<p>"Wait," said Flann, "they are talking about Princess Flame-of-Wine." He
did not move, but listened to what was said. All said that the King's
daughter was proud. Some said she was beautiful, but others answered that
her lips were thin, and her eyes were mocking. No other maidens came for
fire. Flann stood before the one that still blazed, and thought and
thought. The King's Son asked many if they had knowledge of the Unique
Tale, but no one had heard of it. Some told him that there would be
merchants and sellers from many parts of the world at the fair that would
be held on the morrow, and that there would be a chance of meeting one who
had knowledge of it. Then the King's Son went with one who brought him to
a Brufir's—that is, to a House of Hospitality maintained by the King
for strangers. As for Flann, he sat looking into the fire until it died
down, and then he slept before it.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>Flann was wakened by a gander and his flock of geese that stood round him;
shook their wings and set up their goose-gabble. It was day then, although
there was still a star in the sky. He threw furze-roots where there was a
glow, and made a fire blaze up again. Then the dogs of the town came down
to look at him, and then stole away.</p>
<p>Horns were blown outside, and the watchman opened the gates. Flann shook
himself and stood up to see the folk that were coming in. First came the
men who drove the mountain ponies that had lately fed with the deer in
wild places. Then came men in leathern jerkins who led wide-horned bulls—a
black bull and a white bull, and a white bull and a black bull, one after
the other. Then there were men who brought in high, swift hounds, three to
each leash they held. Women in brown cloaks carried cages of birds. Men
carried on their shoulders and in their belts tools for working gold and
silver, bronze and iron. And there were calves and sheep, and great horses
and weighty chariots, and colored cloths, and things closed in packs that
merchants carried on their shoulders. The famous bards, and story-tellers
and harpists would not come until noon-time when the business of the fair
would have abated, but with the crowd of beggars came ballad-singers, and
the tellers of the stories that were called "Go-by-the-Market-Stake,"
because they were told around the stake in the market place and were very
common.</p>
<p>And at the tail of the comers whom did Flann see but Mogue, the Captain of
the Robbers!</p>
<p>Mogue wore a hare-skin cap, his left eye protruded as usual, and he walked
limpingly. He had a pack on his back, and he led a small, swift looking
horse of a reddish color. Flann called to him as he passed and Mogue gave
a great start. He grinned when he saw it was Flann and walked up to him.</p>
<p>"Mogue," said Flann, "what are you doing in the Town of the Red Castle?"</p>
<p>"I'm here to sell a few things," said Mogue, "this little horse," said he,
"and a few things I have in my pack."</p>
<p>"And where are your friends?" asked Flann. "My band, do you mean?" said
Mogue. "Sure, they all left me when you proved you were the better robber.
What are you doing here?"</p>
<p>"I have no business at all," said Flann.</p>
<p>"By the Hazel! that's what I like to hear you say. Join me then. You and
me would do well together."</p>
<p>"I won't join you," said Flann.</p>
<p>"I'd rather have you with me than the whole of the band. What were they
anyway? Cabbage-heads!" Mogue winked with his protruding eye. "Wait till
you see me again," said he. "I've the grandest things in my pack." He went
on leading the little horse. Then Flann set out to look for the King's
Son.</p>
<p>He found him at the door of the Brufir's, and they drank bowls of milk and
ate oaten bread together, and then went to the gate of the town to watch
the notable people who were coming in.</p>
<p>And with the bards and harpers and Kings' envoys who came in, the King's
Son saw his two half-brothers, Dermott and Downal. He hailed them and they
knew him and came up to him gladly. The King's Son made Flann known to
them, saying that he too was the son of a King.</p>
<p>They looked fine youths, Downal and Dermott, in their red cloaks, with
their heads held high, and a brag in their walk and their words. They left
their horses with the grooms and walked with Flann and the King's Son.
They were tall and ruddy; the King's Son was more brown in the hair and
more hawk-like in the face: the three were different from the dark-haired,
dark-eyed, red-lipped lad to whom the Old Woman of Beare had given the
name of Flann.</p>
<p>No one had seen the King who lived in the Red Castle, Dermott and Downal
told the other two. He was called the Wry-faced King, and, on account of
his disfigurement, he let no one but his Councilors see him.</p>
<p>"We are to go to his Castle to-day," said Dermott and Downal. "You come
too, brother," said he to the King's Son.</p>
<p>"And you too, comrade," said Downal to Flann. "Why should we not all go?
By Ogma! Are we not all sons of Kings?"</p>
<p>Flann wondered if he would see the King's daughter, Flame-of-Wine. He
would surely go to the Castle.</p>
<p>They drank ale, played chess and talked until it was afternoon. Then the
grooms who were with Downal and Dermott brought the four youths new red
cloaks. They put them on and went towards the King's Castle.</p>
<p>"Brother," said Dermott to the King's Son, "I want to tell you that we are
not going back to our father's Castle nor to his Kingdom. We have taken
the world for our pillow. We are going to leave the grooms asleep one fine
morning, and go as the salmon goes down the river."</p>
<p>"Why do you want to leave our father's Kingdom?"</p>
<p>"Because we don't want to rule nor to learn to rule. We'll let you,
brother, do all that. We're going to learn the trade of a sword-smith. We
would make fine swords. And with the King of Senlabor there is a famous
sword-smith, and we are going to learn the trade from him."</p>
<p>The four went to the Red Castle, and they were brought in and they went
and sat on the benches to wait for the King's Steward who would receive
them. And while they waited they watched the play of a pet fox in the
courtyard. Flann was wondering all the time if the Princess Flame-of-Wine
would pass through the court-yard or come into the hall where they waited.</p>
<p>Then he saw her come up the courtyard. She saw the youths in the hall and
she turned round to watch the pet fox for a while. Then she came into the
chamber and stood near the door.</p>
<p>She wore a mask across her face, but her brow and mouth and chin were
shown. The youths saluted her, and she bent her head to them. One of the
women who had brought birds to the Fair followed her, bringing a cage.
Flame-of-Wine talked to this woman in a strange language.</p>
<p>Although she talked to the woman, Flann saw that she watched his three
companions. Him she did not notice, because the bench on which he sat was
behind the others. Flame-of-Wine looked at the King's Son first, and then
turned her eyes from him. She bent her head to listen to what Downal and
Dermott were saying. Flann she did not look at at all, and he became sick
at heart of the Red Castle.</p>
<p>The King's Steward came into the Hall and when he announced who the youths
were—three sons of the King of Ireland traveling with their
foster-brother—Flame-of-Wine went over and spoke to them. "May we
see you to-morrow, Kings' Sons," she said. "To-morrow is our feast of the
Gathering of Apples. It might be pleasant for you to hear music in the
King's garden."</p>
<p>She smiled on Downal and Dermott and on the King's Son and went out of the
Chamber. The King's Steward feasted the four youths and afterwards made
them presents. But Flann did not heed what he ate nor what he heard said,
nor what present was given him.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>The four youths left the Castle and Downal and Dermott took their own way
when they came to the foot-bridge that was across the river. Then when
they were crossing it the King's Son and Flann saw two figures—a
middle-aged, sturdy man and an old, broken-looking woman—meet before
the Bull's Field. "It is the Gobaun Saor," said the King's Son. "It is the
Spae-Woman," said Flann. They went to them, each wishing to greet his
friend and helper.</p>
<p>There they saw a sturdy, middle-aged man and a broken-looking old woman.
But the woman looking on the man saw one who had full wisdom to plan and
full strength to build, whose wisdom and whose strength could neither grow
nor diminish. And the man looking on the woman saw one whose brow had all
quiet, whose heart had all benignity. "Hail, Gobaun, Builder for the
Gods," said the woman. "Hail, Grania Oi, Reconciler for the Gods," said
the man.</p>
<p>Then the two youths came swiftly up to them, and the King's Son greeted
the middle-aged man, and Flann kissed the hands of the old woman.</p>
<p>"What of your search, King's Son?" said the Gobaun Saor.</p>
<p>"I have found the Unique Tale, but not what went before nor what comes
after it," said the King's Son.</p>
<p>"I will clear the Sword of Light of its stain when you bring me the whole
of the Unique Tale," said the Gobaun Saor.</p>
<p>"I would search the whole world for it," said the King's Son. "But now the
time is becoming short for me." "Be quick and active," said the Gobaun
Saor. "I have set up my forge," said he, "outside the town between two
high stones. When you bring the whole of the Tale to me I shall clear your
sword."</p>
<p>"Will you not tell him, Gobaun Saor," said the Spae-Woman, "where he may
find the one who will tell him the rest of the story?"</p>
<p>"If he sees one he knows in this town," said the Gobaun Saor, "let him
mount a horse he has mounted before and pursue that one and force him to
tell what went before and what comes after the Unique Tale."</p>
<p>Saying this the Gobaun Saor turned away and walked along the road that
went out of the town.</p>
<p>The Spae-Woman had brought besoms to the town to sell. She showed the two
youths the little house she lived in while she was there. It was filled
with the heather-stalks which she bound together for besoms.</p>
<p>They left the Spae-Woman and went through the town, the King of Ireland's
Son searching every place for a man he knew or a horse he had mounted
before, while Flann thought about the Princess Flame-of-Wine, and how
little she considered him beside the King's Son and Dermott and Downal.
They came to where a crowd was standing before a conjurer's booth. They
halted and stood waiting for the conjurer to appear. He came out and put a
ladder standing upright with nothing to lean against and began climbing
up. Up, up, up, he went, and the ladder grew higher and higher as he
climbed. Flann thought he would climb into the sky. Then the ladder got
smaller and smaller and Flann saw the conjurer coming down on the other
side. "He has come here to take that horse," said a voice behind the King
of Ireland's Son.</p>
<p>The King's Son looked round, and on the outskirts of the crowd he saw a
man with a hare-skin cap and a protruding eye who was holding a reddish
horse, while he watched the conjuror. The King of Ireland's Son knew the
horse—it was the Slight Red Steed that had carried him and Fedelma
from the Enchanter's house and had brought him to the Cave where he had
found the Sword of Light. He looked at the conjuror again and he saw he
was no other than the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands. Then it crossed
his mind what the Gobaun Saor had said to him.</p>
<p>He had seen a man he knew and a horse he had mounted before. He was to
mount that horse, follow the man, and force him to tell the rest of the
Unique Tale.</p>
<p>The King's Son drew back to the outskirts of the crowd. He snatched the
bridle from the hands of Mogue, the man who held it, and jumped up on the
back of the Slight Red Steed.</p>
<p>As soon as he did this the ladder that was standing upright fell on the
ground. The people shouted and broke away. And then the King's Son saw the
Enchanter jump across a house and make for the gate of the town.</p>
<p>But if he could jump across a house so could the Slight Red Steed. The
King's Son turned its head, plucked at its rein, and over the same house
it sprang too. The more he ran the more swift the Enchanter became. He
jumped over the gate of the town, the Slight Red Steed after him. He went
swiftly across the country, making high springs over ditches and hedges.
No other steed but the Slight Red Steed could have kept its rider in sight
of him.</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>Up hill and down dale the Enchanter went, but, mounted on the Slight Red
Steed, the King of Ireland's Son was in hot pursuit. The Enchanter raced
up the side of the seventh hill, and when the King's Son came to the top
of it he found no one in sight.</p>
<p>He raced on, however, and he passed a dead man hanging from a tree. He
raced on and on, but still the Enchanter was not to be seen. Then the
thought came into his mind that the man who was hanging from the tree and
who he thought was dead was the crafty old Enchanter. He turned the Slight
Red Steed round and raced back. The man that had been hanging from the
tree was there no longer.</p>
<p>The King's Son turned his horse amongst the trees and began to search for
the Enchanter. He found no trace of him. "I have lost again," he said.
Then he threw the bridle on the neck of the horse and he said, "Go your
own way now, my Slight Red Steed."</p>
<p>When he said that the Slight Red Steed twitched its ears and galloped
towards the West. It went through woods and across streams, and when the
crows were flying home and the kites were flying abroad it brought the
King's Son to a stone house standing in the middle of a bog. "It may be
the Enchanter is in this house," said the King's Son. He jumped off the
Slight Red Steed, pushed the door of the house open, and there, seated on
a chair in the middle of the floor with a woman sitting beside him, was
the Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands. "So," said the Enchanter, "my
Slight Red Steed has brought you to me."</p>
<p>"So," said the King's Son, "I have found you, my crafty old Enchanter."</p>
<p>"And now that you have found me, what do you want of me?" said the
Enchanter.</p>
<p>"Your head," said the King's Son, drawing the tarnished Sword of Light.</p>
<p>"Will nothing less than my head content you?" said the Enchanter.</p>
<p>"Nothing less—unless it be what went before, and what comes after
the Unique Tale."</p>
<p>"The Unique Tale," said the Enchanter. "I will tell you what I know of
it." Thereupon he began</p>
<p>I was a Druid and the Son of a Druid, and I had learned the language of
the birds. And one morning, as I walked abroad, I heard a blackbird and a
robin talking, and when I heard what they said I smiled to myself.</p>
<p>"Now the woman I had just married noticed that I kept smiling, and she
questioned me. 'Why do you keep smiling to yourself?' I would not tell
her. 'Is that not the truth? '" said the Enchanter to a woman who sat
beside him. "It is the truth," said she.</p>
<p>"On the third day I was still smiling to myself, and my wife questioned
me, and when I did not answer threw dish-water into my face. 'May
blindness come upon you if you do not tell me why you are smiling,' said
she. Then I told her why I smiled to myself. I had heard what the birds
said. The blackbird said to the robin, 'Do you know that just under where
we are sitting are three rods of enchantment, and if one were to take one
of them and strike a man with it, he would be changed to any creature one
named?' That is what I had heard the birds say and I smiled because I was
the only creature who knew about the rods of enchantment.</p>
<p>"My wife made me show her where the rods were. She cut one of them when I
went away. That evening she came behind me and struck me with a rod. 'Go
out now and roam as a wolf,' she said, and there and then I was changed
into a wolf. 'Is that not true?'" said he to the woman. "It is true," she
said.</p>
<p>"And being changed into a wolf, I went through the woods seeking wolf's
meat. And now you must ask my wife to tell you more of the story." The
King of Ireland's Son turned to the woman who sat on the seat next the
Enchanter, and asked her to tell him more of the story. And thereupon she
began</p>
<p>Before all that happened I was known as the Maid of the Green Mantle. One
day a King rode up a mountain with five score followers and a mist came on
them as they rode. The King saw his followers no more. He called out after
a while and four score answered him. And he called out again after another
while and two score answered him. And after another while he called out
again and only a score answered him through the mist, and when he called
out again no one answered him at all.</p>
<p>"The King went up the mountain until he came to the place where I lived
with the Druids who reared me. He stayed long in that place. The King
loved me for a while and I loved the King, and when he went away I
followed him.</p>
<p>"Because he would not come back to me I enchanted him so that there were
times when he was left between life and death. Once when he was seemingly
dead a girl watched by him, and she followed his spirit into many terrible
places and so broke my enchantment."</p>
<p>"Sheen was the girl's name," said the King of Ireland's Son.</p>
<p>"Sheen was her name," said the woman. "He brought her to his Kingdom, and
made her his queen. After that I married the man who is here now—the
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands, the Son of the Druid of the Gray Rock.
Ask him now to tell you the rest of the story."</p>
<p>When she changed me into a gray wolf," said the Enchanter, "I went through
the woods searching for what a wolf might eat, but could find nothing to
stay my hunger. Then I came back and stood outside my house and the woman
who had been called the Maid of the Green Mantle came to me. 'I will give
you back your human form,' she said, 'if you do as I bid you.'</p>
<p>"I promised her I would do as she bade.</p>
<p>"She bade me go to a King's house where a child had been born. She bade me
steal the child away. I went to the King's house. I went into the chamber
and I stole the child from the mother's side. Then I ran through the
woods. But in the end I fell into a trap that the Giant Crom Duv had set
for the wolves that chased his stray cattle.</p>
<p>"For a night I lay in the trap with the child beside me. Then Crom Duv
came and lifted out wolf and child. Three Hags with Long Teeth were there
when he took us out of the trap, and he gave the child to one of them,
telling her to rear it so that the child might be a servant for him.</p>
<p>"He put me into a sack, promising himself that he would give me a good
beating. He left me on the floor of his house. But while he was gone for
his club I bit my way out of the sack and made my escape. I came back to
my own house, and my wife struck me with the wand of enchantment, and
changed me from a wolf into a man again. 'Is that not true?'" said he to
the woman.</p>
<p>"It is true," said she.</p>
<p>"That is all of the Unique Tale that I know," said the Enchanter of the
Black Back-Lands, "and now that I have told it to you, put up your sword."</p>
<p>"I will put up no sword," said the King of Ireland's Son, "until you tell
me what King and Queen were the father and mother of the child that was
reared by the Hags of the Long Teeth."</p>
<p>"I made no promise to tell you that," said the En-chanter of the Black
Back-Lands. "You have got the story you asked for, and now let me see your
back going through my door."</p>
<p>"Yes, you have got the story, and be off with you now," said the woman who
sat by the fire.</p>
<p>He put up his sword; he went to the door; he left the house of the
Enchanter of the Black Back-Lands. He mounted the Slight Red Steed and
rode off. He knew now what went before and what came after the Unique
Tale. The Gobaun Saor would clean the blemish of the blade of the Sword of
Light and would show him how to come to the Land of Mist. Then he would
win back his love Fedelma.</p>
<p>He thought too on the tidings he had for his comrade Flann—Flann was
the Son of the King who was called the Hunter-King and of Sheen whose
brothers had been changed into seven wild geese. He shook his horse's
reins and went back towards the Town of the Red Castle.</p>
<p>V</p>
<p>Flann thought upon the Princess Flame-of-Wine. He walked through the town
after the King's Son had ridden after the Enchanter, without noticing
anyone until he heard a call and saw Mogue standing beside a little tent
that he had set up before the Bull's Field.</p>
<p>Flann went to Mogue and found him very disconsolate on account of the loss
of the horse he had brought into the town. "This is a bad town to be in,"
said Mogue, "and unless I persuade yourself to become partners with me I
shall have done badly in it. Join with me now and we'll do some fine feats
together."</p>
<p>"It would not become a King's Son to join with a robber-captain," said
Flann.</p>
<p>"Fine talk, fine talk," said Mogue. He thought that Flann was jesting with
him when he spoke of himself as a King's Son.</p>
<p>"I want to sell three treasures I have with me," said Mogue. "I have the
most wonderful things that were ever brought into this town."</p>
<p>"Show them to me," said Flann.</p>
<p>Mogue opened one of his packs and took out a box. When he opened this box
a fragrance came such as Flann had never felt before. "What is that that
smells like a garden of sweet flowers?" said Flann.</p>
<p>"It is the Rose of Sweet Smells," said Mogue, and he took a little rose
out of the box. "It never withers and its fragrance is never any less. It
is a treasure for a King's daughter. But I will not show it in this town."</p>
<p>"And what is that shining thing in the box?"</p>
<p>"It is the Comb of Magnificence. That is another treasure for a King's
daughter. The maiden who would wear it would look the most queenly woman
in the Kingdom. But I won't show that either."</p>
<p>"What else have you, Mogue?"</p>
<p>"A girdle. The woman who wears it would have to speak the truth." The Town
of</p>
<p>Flann thought he would do much to get the Rose of Sweet Smells or the Comb
of Magnificence and bring them as presents to the Princess Flame-of-Wine.</p>
<p>He slept in Mogue's tent, and at the peep of day, he rose up and went to
the House of Hospitality where Dermott and Downal were. With them he would
go to the King's orchard, and he would see, and perhaps he would speak to,
Flame-of-Wine. But Dermott and Downal were not in the Brufir's. Flann
wakened their grooms and he and they made search for the two youths. But
there was no trace of Dermott and Downal. It seemed they had left before
daybreak with their horses. Flann went with the grooms to the gate of the
town. There they heard from the watchman that the two youths had gone
through the gate and that they had told the watchman to tell the grooms
that they had gone to take the world for their pillow.</p>
<p>The grooms were dismayed to hear this, and so indeed was Flann. Without
the King's Son and without Downal and Dermott how would he go to the
King's Garden? He went back to Mogue's tent to consider what he should do.
And first he thought he would not go to the Festival of the Gathering of
the Apples, as he knew that Flame-of-Wine had only asked him with his
comrades. And then he thought that whatever else happened he would go to
the King's orchard and see Flame-of-Wine.</p>
<p>If he had one of the wonderful things that Mogue had shown him—the
Rose of Sweet Smells or the Comb of Magnificence! These would show her
that he was of some consequence. If he had either of these wonderful
things and offered it to her she might be pleased with him!</p>
<p>He sat outside the tent and waited for Mogue to return. When he came Flann
said to him, "I will go with you as a servant, and I will serve you well
although I am a King's Son, if you will give me something now."</p>
<p>"What do you want from me?" said Mogue.</p>
<p>"Give me the Rose of Sweet Smells," said Flann.</p>
<p>"Sure that's the finest thing I have. I couldn't give you that."</p>
<p>"I will serve you for two years if you will give it to me," said Flann.</p>
<p>"No," said Mogue.</p>
<p>"I will serve you for three years if you will give it to me," said Flann.</p>
<p>"I will give it to you if you will serve me for three years." Thereupon
Mogue opened his pack and took the box out. He opened it and put the Rose
of Sweet Smells into Flann's hand.</p>
<p>At once Flann started off for the King's orchard. The Steward who had seen
him the day before signed to the servants to let him pass through the
gate. He went into the King's orchard.</p>
<p>Maidens were singing the "Song for the Time of the Blossoming of the
Apple-trees" and all that day and night Flann held their song in his mind</p>
<p>The touch of hands that drew it down<br/>
Kindled to blossom all the bough<br/>
O breathe the wonder of the branch,<br/>
And let it through the darkness go!<br/></p>
<p>Youths were gathering apples, and the Princess Flame-of-Wine walked by
herself on the orchard paths.</p>
<p>At last she came to where Flann stood and lifting her eyes she looked at
him. "I had companions," said Flann, "but they have gone away."</p>
<p>"They are unmannerly," said Flame-of-Wine with anger, and she turned away.</p>
<p>Flann took the rose from under his cloak. Its fragrance came to
Flame-of-Wine and she turned to him again.</p>
<p>"This is the Rose of Sweet Smells," said Flann. "Will you take it from me,
Princess?"</p>
<p>She came back to him and took the rose in her hand, and there was wonder
in her face.</p>
<p>"It will never wither, and its fragrance will never fail," said Flann. "It
is the Rose of Sweet Smells. A King's daughter should have it."</p>
<p>Flame-of-Wine held the rose in her hand, and smiled on Flann. "What is
your name, King's Son?" said she, with bright and friendly eyes.</p>
<p>"Flann," he said.</p>
<p>"Walk with me, Flann," said she. They walked along the orchard paths, and
the youths and maidens turned towards the fragrance that the Rose of Sweet
Smells gave. Flame-of-Wine laughed, and said, "They all wonder at the
treasure you have brought me, Flann. If you could hear what I shall tell
them about you! I shall tell them that you are the son of a King of Arabia—no
less. They will believe me because you have brought me such a treasure! I
suppose there is nothing more wonderful than this rose!"</p>
<p>Then Flann told her about the other wonderful thing he had seen—the
Comb of Magnificence. "A King's daughter should have such a treasure,"
said Flame-of-Wine. "Oh, how jealous I should be if someone brought the
Comb of Magnificence to either of my two sisters—to Bloom-of-Youth
or Breast-of-Light. I should think then that this rose was not such a
treasure after all."</p>
<p>When he was leaving the orchard she plucked a flower and gave it to him.
"Come and walk in the orchard with me to-morrow," she said.</p>
<p>"Surely I will come," said Flann.</p>
<p>"Bring the Comb of Magnificence to me too," said she. "I could not be
proud of this rose, and I could not love you so well for bringing it to me
if I thought that any other maiden had the Comb of Magnificence. Bring it
to me, Flann."</p>
<p>"I will bring it to you," said Flann.</p>
<p>VI</p>
<p>He was at the gate of the town when the King of Ireland's Son rode back on
the Slight Red Steed. The King's Son dismounted, put his arm about Flann
and told him that he now had the whole of the Unique Tale. They sat before
Mogue's tent, and the King's Son told Flann the whole of the story he had
searched for—how a King traveling through the mist had come to where
Druids and the Maid of the Green Mantle lived, how the King was enchanted,
and how the maiden Sheen released him from the enchantment. He told him,
too, how the Enchanter was changed into a wolf, and how the wolf carried
away Sheen's child. "And the Unique Tale is in part your own history,
Flann," said the King of Ireland's Son, "for the child that was left with
the Hags of the Long Teeth was no one else than yourself, for you, Flann,
have on your breast the stars that denote the Son of a King."</p>
<p>"It is so, it is so," said Flann, "and I will find out what King and Queen
were my father and my mother."</p>
<p>"Go to the Hags of the Long Teeth and force them to tell you," said the
King's Son.</p>
<p>"I will do that," said Flann, but in his own mind he said, "I will first
bring the Comb of Magnificence to Flame-of-Wine, and I will tell her that
I will have to be away for so many years with Mogue and I shall ask her to
remember me until I come back to her. Then I shall go to the Hags of the
Long Teeth and force them to tell me what King and Queen were my father
and mother."</p>
<p>The King of Ireland's Son left Flann to his thoughts and went to find the
Gobaun Saor who would clear for him the tarnished blade of the Sword of
Light and would show him the way to where the King of the Land of Mist had
his dominion.</p>
<p>Mogue spent his time with the ballad-singers and the story-tellers around
the market-stake, and when he came back to his tent he wanted to drink ale
and go to sleep, but Flann turned him from the ale-pot by saying to him,
"I want the Comb of Magnificence from you, Mogue."</p>
<p>"By my skin," said Mogue, "it's my blood you'll want next, my lad."</p>
<p>"If you give me the Comb of Magnificence, Mogue, I shall serve you for six
years—three years more than I said yesterday. I shall serve you
well, even though I am the son of a King and can find out who my father
and mother are."</p>
<p>"I won't give you the Comb of Magnificence."</p>
<p>"I'll serve you seven years if you do, Mogue."</p>
<p>Mogue drank and drank out of the ale-pot, frowning to himself. He put the
ale-pot away and said, "I suppose your life won't be any good to you
unless I give you the Comb of Magnificence?"</p>
<p>"That is so, Mogue."</p>
<p>Mogue sighed heavily, but he went to his pack and took out the box that
the treasures were in. He let Flann take out the Comb of Magnificence.</p>
<p>"Seven years you will have to serve me," said Mogue, "and you will have to
begin your service now."</p>
<p>"I will begin it now," said Flann, but he stole out of the tent, put on
his red cloak and went to the King's orchard.</p>
<p>VII</p>
<p>"Oh, Flann, my treasure-bringer," said Flame-of-Wine, when she came to
him. "I have brought you the Comb of Magnificence," said he. Her hands
went out and her eyes became large and shining. He put the Comb of
Magnificence into her hands.</p>
<p>She put the comb into the back of her hair, and she became at once like
the tower that is builded—what broke its height and turned the full
sunlight from it has been taken away, and the tower stands, the pride of a
King and the delight of a people. When she put the Comb of Magnificence
into her hair she became of all Kings' daughters the most stately.</p>
<p>She walked with Flann along the paths of the orchard, but always she was
watching her shadow to see if it showed her added magnificence. Her shadow
showed nothing. She took Flann to the well in the orchard, and looked down
into it, but her image in the well did not show her added magnificence
either. Soon she became tired of walking on the orchard paths, and when
she came to the gate she walked no further but stood with Flann at the
gate. "A kiss for you, Flann, my treasure-bringer," said she, and she
kissed him and then went hurrying away. And as Flann watched her he
thought that although she had kissed him he was not now in her mind.</p>
<p>He went out of the orchard disconsolate, thinking that when he was on his
seven years' service with Mogue Princess Flame-of-Wine might forget him.
As he walked on he passed the little house where the Spae-Woman had her
besoms and heather-stalks. She ran to him when she saw him.</p>
<p>"Have you heard that the King's Son has found what went before, and what
comes after the Unique Tale?" said she.</p>
<p>"That I have. And I have to go to the Hags of the Long Teeth to find out
who my father and mother were, for surely I am the child who was taken
from Sheen."</p>
<p>"And do you remember that Sheen's seven brothers were changed into seven
wild geese?" said she.</p>
<p>"I remember that, mother."</p>
<p>"And seven wild geese they will be until a maiden who loves you will give
seven drops of her heart's blood to bring them back to their human
shapes."</p>
<p>"I remember that, mother." "Whatever maid you love, her you must ask if
she would give seven drops of her heart's blood. It may be that she would.
It may be that she would not and that you would still love her without
thought of her giving one drop of blood of her little finger."</p>
<p>"I cannot ask the maiden I love to give seven drops of her heart's blood."</p>
<p>"Who is the maiden you love?"</p>
<p>"The King's daughter, Flame-of-Wine."</p>
<p>He told the Spae-Woman about the presents he had given her—he told
the Spae-Woman too that he had bound himself to seven years' service to
Mogue on account of these presents. The Spae-Woman said, "What other
treasures are in Mogue's pack?"</p>
<p>"One treasure more the Girdle of Truth. Whoever puts it on can speak
nothing but the truth."</p>
<p>Said the Spae-Woman, "You are to take the Girdle of Truth and give it to
Flame-of-Wine. Tell Mogue that I said he is to give it to you without
adding one day to your years' service. When Flame-of-Wine has put the
girdle around her waist ask her for the seven drops of heart's blood that
will bring your mother's seven brothers back to their human shapes. She
may love you and yet refuse to give you the seven drops from her heart.
But tell her of this, and hear what she will say."</p>
<p>Flann left the Spae-Woman's and went back to Mogue's tent. The loss of his
treasures had overcome Mogue and he was drinking steadily and went from
one bad temper to another.</p>
<p>"Begin your service now by watching the tent while I sleep," said he.</p>
<p>"There is one thing more I want from you, Mogue," said Flann.</p>
<p>"By the Eye of Balor! you're a cuckoo in my nest. What do you want now?"</p>
<p>"The Girdle of Truth."</p>
<p>"Is it my last treasure you'd be taking on me?"</p>
<p>"The Spae-Woman bid me tell you that you're to give me the Girdle of
Truth."</p>
<p>"It's a pity of me, it's a pity of me," said Mogue. But he took the box
out of his pack, and let Flann take the girdle.</p>
<p>VIII</p>
<p>Flame-of-Wine saw him. She walked slowly down the orchard path so that all
might notice the stateliness of her appearance.</p>
<p>"I am glad to see you again, Flann," said she. "Have your comrades yet
come back to my father's town?"</p>
<p>Flann told her that one of them had returned.</p>
<p>"Bid him come see me," said Flame-of-Wine. Then she saw the girdle in his
hands.</p>
<p>"What is it you have?" said she.</p>
<p>"Something that went with the other treasures—a girdle."</p>
<p>"Will you not let me have it, Flann?" She took the girdle in her hands.
"Tell me, youth," she said, "how you got all these treasures?"</p>
<p>"I will have to give seven years' service for them," Flann said.</p>
<p>"Seven years," said she, "but you will remember—will you not—that
I loved you for bringing them to me?"</p>
<p>"Will you remember me until I come back from my seven years' service?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes," said Flame-of-Wine, and she put the girdle around her waist as
she spoke.</p>
<p>"Someone said to me," said Flann, "that I should ask the maiden who loved
me for seven drops of her heart's blood." The girdle was now round
Flame-of-Wine's waist. She laughed with mockery. "Seven drops of heart's
blood," said she. "I would not give this fellow seven eggs out of my
robin's nest. I tell him I love him for bringing me the three treasures
for a King's daughter. I tell him that, but I should be ashamed of myself
if I thought I could have any love for such a fellow."</p>
<p>"Do you tell me the truth now," said Flann.</p>
<p>"The truth, the truth," said she, "of course I tell you the truth. Oh, and
there are other truths. I shall be ashamed forever if I tell them. Oh, oh.
They are rising to my tongue, and every time I press them back this girdle
tightens and tightens until I think it will kill me."</p>
<p>"Farewell, then, Flame-of-Wine."</p>
<p>"Take off the girdle, take off the girdle! What truths are in my mind! I
shall speak them and I shall be ashamed. But I shall die in pain if I hold
them back. Loosen the girdle, loosen the girdle! Take the rose you gave me
and loosen the girdle." She let the rose fall on the ground.</p>
<p>"I will loosen the girdle for you," said Flann.</p>
<p>"But loosen it now. How I have to strive to keep truths back, and oh, what
pain I am in! Take the Comb of Magnificence, and loosen the girdle." She
threw the comb down on the ground.</p>
<p>He took up the Rose of Sweet Smells and the Comb of Magnificence and he
took the girdle off her waist. "Oh, what a terrible thing I put round my
waist," said Flame-of-Wine. "Take it away, Flann, take it away. But give
me back the Rose of Sweet Smells and the Comb of Magnificence,—give
them back to me and I shall love you always."</p>
<p>"You cannot love me. And why should I give seven years in service for your
sake? I will leave these treasures back in Mogue's pack."</p>
<p>"Oh, you are a peddler, a peddler. Go from me," said Flame-of-Wine. "And
do not be in the Town of the Red Castle to-morrow, or I shall have my
father's hunting dogs set upon you." She turned away angrily and went into
the Castle.</p>
<p>Flann went back to Mogue's tent and left the Rose of Sweet Smells, the
Comb of Magnificence and the Girdle of Truth upon Mogue's pack. He sat in
the corner and cried bitterly. Then the King of Ireland's Son came and
told him that his sword was bright once more—that the stains that
had blemished its blade had been cleared away by the Gobaun Saor who had
also shown him the way to the Land of the Mist. He put his arm about Flann
and told him that he was starting now to rescue his love Fedelma from the
Castle of the King of the Land of Mist.</p>
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