[This version of the death of Uail is not correct. Also Cnocha is not in
Lochlann but in Ireland.]
The wonderful gift-giving of Goll continued, and an uneasiness and
embarrassment began to creep through the great banqueting hall.
Gentlemen looked at each other questioningly, and then spoke again on
indifferent matters, but only with half of their minds. The singers, the
harpers, and jugglers submitted to that constraint, so that every person
felt awkward and no one knew what should be done or what would happen, and
from that doubt dulness came, with silence following on its heels.
There is nothing more terrible than silence. Shame grows in that blank, or
anger gathers there, and we must choose which of these is to be our
master.
That choice lay before Fionn, who never knew shame.
“Goll,” said he, “how long have you been taking tribute from the people of
Lochlann?”
“A long time now,” said Goll.
And he looked into an eye that was stern and unfriendly.
“I thought that my rent was the only one those people had to pay,” Fionn
continued.
“Your memory is at fault,” said Goll.
“Let it be so,” said Fionn. “How did your tribute arise?”
“Long ago, Fionn, in the days when your father forced war on me.”
“Ah!” said Fionn.
“When he raised the High King against me and banished me from Ireland.”
“Continue,” said Fionn, and he held Goll’s eye under the great beetle of
his brow.
“I went into Britain,” said Goll, “and your father followed me there. I
went into White Lochlann (Norway) and took it. Your father banished me
thence also.”
“I know it,” said Fionn.
“I went into the land of the Saxons and your father chased me out of that
land. And then, in Lochlann, at the battle of Cnocha your father and I met
at last, foot to foot, eye to eye, and there, Fionn!”
“And there, Goll?”
“And there I killed your father.”
Fionn sat rigid and unmoving, his face stony and terrible as the face of a
monument carved on the side of a cliff.
“Tell all your tale,” said he.
“At that battle I beat the Lochlannachs. I penetrated to the hold of the
Danish king, and I took out of his dungeon the men who had lain there for
a year and were awaiting their deaths. I liberated fifteen prisoners, and
one of them was Fionn.”
“It is true,” said Fionn.
Goll’s anger fled at the word.
“Do not be jealous of me, dear heart, for if I had twice the tribute I
would give it to you and to Ireland.”
But at the word jealous the Chief’s anger revived.
“It is an impertinence,” he cried, “to boast at this table that you killed
my father.”
“By my hand,” Goll replied, “if Fionn were to treat me as his father did I
would treat Fionn the way I treated Fionn’s father.”
Fionn closed his eyes and beat away the anger that was rising within him.
He smiled grimly.
“If I were so minded, I would not let that last word go with you, Goll,
for I have here an hundred men for every man of yours.”
Goll laughed aloud.
“So had your father,” he said.
Fionn’s brother, Cairell Whiteskin, broke into the conversation with a
harsh laugh.
“How many of Fionn’s household has the wonderful Goll put down?” he cried.
But Goll’s brother, bald Cona’n the Swearer, turned a savage eye on
Cairell.
“By my weapons,” said he, “there were never less than an hundred-and-one
men with Goll, and the least of them could have put you down easily
enough.”
“Ah?” cried Cairell. “And are you one of the hundred-and-one, old
scaldhead?”
“One indeed, my thick-witted, thin-livered Cairell, and I undertake to
prove on your hide that what my brother said was true and that what your
brother said was false.”
“You undertake that,” growled Cairell, and on the word he loosed a furious
buffet at Con’an, which Cona’n returned with a fist so big that every part
of Cairell’s face was hit with the one blow. The two then fell into grips,
and went lurching and punching about the great hall. Two of Oscar’s sons
could not bear to see their uncle being worsted, and they leaped at
Cona’n, and two of Goll’s sons rushed at them. Then Oscar himself leaped
up, and with a hammer in either hand he went battering into the melee.
“I thank the gods,” said Cona’n, “for the chance of killing yourself,
Oscar.”
These two encountered then, and Oscar knocked a groan of distress out of
Cona’n. He looked appealingly at his brother Art og mac Morna, and that
powerful champion flew to his aid and wounded Oscar. Oisi’n, Oscar’s
father, could not abide that; he dashed in and quelled Art Og. Then Rough
Hair mac Morna wounded Oisin and was himself tumbled by mac Lugac, who was
again wounded by Gara mac Morna.
The banqueting hall was in tumult. In every part of it men were giving and
taking blows. Here two champions with their arms round each other’s necks
were stamping round and round in a slow, sad dance. Here were two
crouching against each other, looking for a soft place to hit. Yonder a
big-shouldered person lifted another man in his arms and threw him at a
small group that charged him. In a retired corner a gentleman stood in a
thoughtful attitude while he tried to pull out a tooth that had been
knocked loose.
“You can’t fight,” he mumbled, “with a loose shoe or a loose tooth.”
“Hurry up with that tooth,” the man in front of him grum-bled, “for I want
to knock out another one.”
Pressed against the wall was a bevy of ladies, some of whom were screaming
and some laughing and all of whom were calling on the men to go back to
their seats.
Only two people remained seated in the hall.
