The Little Brawl at Almhain
It was a
pleasantly sonorous banquet on the greatest scale that by
Finn son of Cumall son of Trenmor was convoked in
Leinster’s spacious Almhain: which feast being now prepared
and all ready for the eating, the good men and great
gentles of the Fianna came to enjoy it. Now they that apart
from Finn were the noblest of these, and the most
honourable, were: the mighty Goll mac Morna; Ossian son of
Finn, Oscar son of Ossian; mac Lugach of the terrible hand,
Dermot of the light some face, and Caeilte son of Ronan;
the vigorous children of Dubhdíorma,
the children of Smól,
and Dubhdádboirenn’s
people; Goll gulban,
the swift-footed Corr and his sons: Conn, Donn, Aedh and
Anacan; Ivor son of the valorous and victorious Crimthann,
and two that were sons to the king of Leinster (they both
also standing to Finn in the relation of alumni), with
Coirell grandson of Conbran. To the feast came likewise two
that were sons to the king of Scotland, and along with them
divers bold impetuous scions from among the sons of the
whole world’s kings and chiefest nobles.
Thither came moreover the Fianna of all Ireland; then Finn
sat in the chief captain’s seat at the fort’s one mid-side,
the mirthful Goll mac Morna at the other, and under either
of them the chieftains of his own folk; after which every
man of the company, according to his degree and patrimony,
sat in his own appointed and befitting place, even as
everywhere and at all times previous had been their use and
wont.
Altogether marvelously then the servitors rose to serve and
to supply the hail: they laid hold on jewelled drinking
horns, studded (every flashing and elaborate goblet of
them) with fair crystalline gems and wrought with cunning
workmanship in shining patterns, and to those good warriors
all were poured strong fermented draughts of smooth
luscious liquors: then merriment waxed fast in their
youths, audacity and spirit in their heroes; in their
women, kindness and gentleness; in their poets, knowledge
and the gift of prophecy.
Straight and promptly now a crier stood up and, for the
inhibition of serfs and pilferers, rattled a coarse iron
chain; a long one of antique silver he shook to check the
gentles and chief nobles of the Fianna, likewise their
erudite by profession, and all listened hushed in silence.
Fergus Truelips, Finn’s poet and the Fianna’s, rose and
before Finn son of Cumall sang the songs and lays and sweet
poems of his ancestors and forbears. With the rarest of all
rich and costly things Finn and Ossian, Oscar and mac
Lughach, rewarded the bard wondrously; whereat he went on
to Goll mac Momna and in front of him recited the
bruidhne
or
‘Forts,’ the toghla
or
‘Destructions,’ the tána
or
‘Cattle-liftings,’ the tochmarca
or
‘Wooings,’ of his elders and progenitors: by operation of
which artistic efforts the sons of Morna grew jovial and of
good cheer.
Here Goll said: “where is my runner?” and: “here am I,
royal captain,” she made answer. “Hast thou brought me from
the Danes my ‘hand-tribute’?” “Surely I have,” she said
and, so soon as she had spoken, rose promptly and on the
hail’s floor before Goll deposited as it were the bulk of
some huge swine, or a stalwart warrior’s full load, of the
beautiful twice-molten [i.e. double refined] gold. He
loosed the covering that confined this tribute and, in
presence of the concourse, spilt on the ground those noble
treasures of great beauty. Goll paid Fergus accord ing to
his wont; nor of all who that night were in Almhain’s fort
was there knowledgeable, keen-worded poet, skilled rhymer
accustomed to rich guerdons, sweetly melodious harper, well
instructed neatly expressive antiquary or other man of
science whatsoever, whether of the Eirennachs or Albanachs,
but Goll gave him largesse of gold, or of silver, or of
divers costly things.
Finn spoke then, saying: “how long, Goll, hast thou this
tribute on them of Lochlann: my own rent too being upon
them, and a warrior there safeguarding my rent and tribute,
my hunting and rights of venery? Ciaran son of Lathairne he
is: a hard-bitten hero in the fight, and in his own
household are ten hundred that are valiant.”
Goll (for he perceived that Finn was moved by anger and by
envy at him) spoke to Cumall’s son, saying: “a long time
now, Finn, I have that tribute on the Lochlannachs: even
from the hour in which thy father forced on me war and
contention, and the monarch of Ireland with his provincials
joined Cu mall against me, and I perforce must quit Ireland
for them. I went my ways into Britain: which country I
took, killed the king himself, and made massacre of his
people; but Cumall expelled me out of it. Thence I
progressed to Finnlochlann, the king of which, with his
household, fell by me; but again Cumall ejected me. On I
went, into Scotland: the king of the land fell by my deed,
and still Cumall drove me out. I entered into Saxonland:
the king of Saxons with his whole household perished by me,
yet Cumall put me out of that. But [at last] I came to the
battle of Cnucha, and there thy father fell by me; at which
very time it was that I acquired this rent upon the
Lochlannachs and, when I had pene trated to the king of
Danes’ hold, brought away thyself and thy fifteen men along
with thee: the king’s wife being enamoured of thee, and
thou therefore after lying for a whole year captive in an
underground dungeon, while they had a day fixed on which to
put both thee and thy party to death. And by thy hand,
Finn, I assaulted the Danish king’s hold: himself, Eoghan
More, I slew, and cut off his people, taking from them
their gold and their silver. I left a king over the
Lochlannachs: Tine son of Trioscall; imposed on them a
tribute to myself, and there it is. Now, Finn,” continued
Goll, “no ‘tribute of the hand’ [i.e. won by the strong
hand] it is that thou hast on them: but in their country
enjoyest simple stipend of Fian-command-in-chief and
stewardship of vigilance, which I will not to thy detriment
impair. Moreover, Finn, in regard of this rent be not
jealous of me: for though I had more than that, ‘tis to
thee and to all Ireland I would give it!”
Angrily and fiercely Finn retorted, saying: “in this
narrative, Goll, thou hast confessed that from the city of
Beirbhe thou camest to Cnucha, and there slewest my father;
and a bold thing it is for thee to tell me so.” “By thine
own hand,” quoth Goll, “wert thou to do me dishonour as did
thy father, the very same treatment that I gave Cumall is
that which I would mete to thee.” “Goll,” answered Finn,
“my power were good not to ‘let that go with thee’: for as
against every one man in thy household, I have a hundred
warriors.” “So too thy father was,” said Goll, “and I
avenged my dishonour on him; in like wise also would I do
to thee, didst thou but deserve it of me.”
Cairell Whiteskin, grandson of Baeiscne, spoke [mockingly],
saying: “many a man, Goll, thou hast quelled in Finn mac
Cumall’s household!” Conan mae? (or ‘the bald’) mac Morna,
man of imprecations, spoke and said: “by my weapons I swear
that, however few he might have with him, Goll never yet
was without having in his household a hundred and one men
each one of whom would have quelled thee!" “And is it of
them that thou art, thou crooked-spoken, sconce-peeled
Conan?" asked Cairell. “Of them just, thou comb-wearing,
nail-scratch ing, rugged-skinned Cairell of little
strength; and I would undertake to prove on thy person that
Finn [when he spoke] was in the wrong."
With that, Cairell stood up and upon Conan discharged a
furious buffet; not tamely was this responded to by the
patient, but right in among his forehead and his teeth
[i.e. over his whole face] he dealt Cairell another. At all
events, they then administered each to the other’s skin and
entire body a series of rapid and spiteful stabs, so that
from that great struggle these good men’s breasts and
chests were well mangled.
Then rose two sons of Ossian’s son Oscar: Echtach and
Illann; of their shields they made as it had been close
dense bulwarks round about them, and in the mêlée inflicted
upon Conan deep thrusts, hardly to be healed. Which when
Goll mac Morna’s two sons saw, that Conan was in that
extremity namely,. they too stood up and in the fight
wounded Oscar’s progeny.
Then the strong lion, Oscar of the great deeds, son of
Ossian, rose and in his sumptuous gold-adorned battle-gear
harnessed his comely body: assuming upon his neck a fine,
artfully wrought. tippet of proof; his great shield on his
left arm and, in the other, hand, his hard straight-bladed
sword; in which guise, impetuously. and with high courage
he went to relieve his sons and Cairell his kinsman. He
never bared his sword however, but betook him to lay on
sledging-blows: that is to say, in this sudden outbreak he
used in either hand a sledge-hammer; and Conan said to him:
“the gods I thank for it that thou, Oscar, in fair fight
comest in my way, for I will e’en snip thy life’s thread!"
Then Oscar and Conan encountered, and their meeting’s
upshot was that Conan was worsted and that Oscar forced
from him a groan of distress. Conan looked at Art Oge mac
Morna, that powerful champion stood up, and by him Oscar
was wounded. This might not be endured by Finn’s son,
Ossian, and by him Art Oge was hurt. Garbfoltach or
‘Rough-hair’ mac Morna rose, and by him Ossian was wounded.
The bold mac Lugach rising invested himself in his fighting
garb, and Garbfoltach was hurt by him. The broadchested
Garadh mac Morna stood up, and by him mac Lugach was
wounded.
At this point Finn’s son Faelan, having with him his three
hundred kinsmen, rose and resolutely entered the press; by
whom all the sons of Morna were put from their places.
Then rose that hardfighting pillar of battle, Goll mac
Morna, and took on him his vesture of battle: about his
neck, his hand- some tippet of the best; upon his smooth
skin, his white-bordered hempen jack; in his pinknailed
fist, his sharp-pointed sword, solid, well-balanced for the
stroke; his ample bossy shield on his left arm.
Irresistibly he burst into the fray, and neither flaming
taper nor flaring all-illuminating torch in the great hail
he left unextinguished, nor a single table but he made
small disinte grated fragments of it.
Triumphantly now Finn vented his battle-cry or
‘forest-shout,’ and on all Ireland’s Fianna enjoined to
utterly quench and unsparingly to kill the sons of Morna
[i.e. all clan-Morna].
Then around themselves the Fianna made of their shields --
close, solid palisades; Finn put himself at the head of
those men of might, and the two parties fell unrelentingly
to bone-splitting of each other. A fermentation of anger
took Goll, and to shelter his people he turned himself into
a shield, massive, infrangible the various bands and their
chieftains waxed furious; the chain pions, reckless; the
combatants increased and, from the tough unloving battle
which they fought together, the martial men were full of
hurts. Plentiful there the blood was, a-flowing in streams
down the sides of free-born offsprings; gashes deep and
incurable covered those destructive and not-to-be-parted
phalanxes. An ill place it had been for feeble invalid, or
delicate taper-fingered woman, or aged senior of long date,
to be in: the little brawl at Almhain on that night,
a-listening to groans of young and old, of high and low, as
they lay maimed, faint and infirm, or were stricken down
and cut up. At this game then they endured from the first
of night to rising of the morrow’s sun, nor ever gave each
other quarter.
Then rose the sapient trenchant-worded poet--the
richly-rewarded good man of verse--Fergus Truelips and,
together with him, the Fianna’s men of science all, and to
those corn panies of men-at-arms chanted their duans, their
skilled rhymes and eloquent panegyrics, with a view to
check and to assuage them.
Thereupon, with the poets’ music, they ceased from their
hacking and hewing, and suffered their weapons to fall on
the ground; these arms the poets picked up, and between
their owners they effected a reconciliation. Finn however
affirmed that with clan-Morna he would not make peace until
he should have had the king of Ireland’s judgment in the
matter, that of Aillbhe, daughter of said king Cormac son
of Art son of Conn of the Hundred Battles, of Cairbre
Lifechair [his son and] Ireland’s heir, of Fithal and of
Flathri; the crowning judgment to lie with Fintan son of
Bóchna: all which Goll said that he would concede to him.
They bound themselves (the poets going security for them)
to abide by that peace, and appointed a certain day: one
fortnight from that present, upon Tara’s green.
The Fianna’s losses were examined now, and those of Finn’s
people were eleven hundred men and women: for many a most
noble and hitherto fortunate lady, and lovely woman of many
charms, and gentle maid of sweet discourse, and gallant
warrior, were fallen there; while many a slashed nose, many
an eye ruptured and ear lopped, many a leg shorn through
the bone, arm chopped, carcass mangled, and side bored in
holes, had such of Finn mac Cumall’s people as still lived.
As for Goll and his good folk, the clan-Morna, of them were
wanting none but eleven men and fifty women; it was not
that the women were slain however, but that with fear they
simply died. Every one of them that was curable was put to
be treated and, for as many as on either side were slain,
very deep and broad-sodded graves were dug.
Then that great house of Almhain was cleansed, and again
every one of them seated himself in order of nobility and
patri mony: in which guise they pass fourteen days, and at
such period’s end repair to Tara. Cormac and Cairbre,
Aillbe and Fithal, Flathri and Fintan mac Bochna, sat in
the place of judgment, and first of all Finn addressed
himself to tell his tale; but Goll objected: “it is not to
thee, Finn, that willingly we would assign the recital of
any such matters that should be betwixt us, seeing that as
against me thou wouldst turn a he into truth, and of truth
make a lie; wherefore to Fergus Truelips entrust we either
one of us the statement of his case, and let him by his
gods swear to do justice between us.”
Finn consented, and Fergus guaranteed to deal equitably;
then he told how it was Cairell first that had lent Conan a
buffet; that Goll’s two sons came to Conan’s aid, and Oscar
to succour his own; that with that the Fianna in general
and clan Morna rose at each other, and from night’s
beginning to sunrise on the morrow ruthlessly engaged in
mutual bone-hewing; that Finn’s losses during the time
consisted in eleven hundreds of men and women, clan-Morna’s
being eleven men and fifty women; over and above which, in
virtue of this onfall a great number of them on both sides
were badly hurt.
Cormac said: “considering the numbers that were against
them, I wonder at the smallness of clan-Morna’s loss;" to
which Eergus answered that it was Goll had interposed to
cover his own people: “and such, O king of Ireland, is the
history of this broil,” he ended. Then Flathri pronounced:
“damages to clan Morna; for in this cause it was upon them
that the aggression was committed.” “That is no decision of
a jurist’s son,” said Cormac: “for to his lord every simple
warrior owes obedience.” “That,” said Flathri, “holds good
for the ‘white-striking’ [i.e. for the fisticuffs]; not so
for the bloodshed.” Fithal pronounced: "inasmuch as they
were the first aggrieved, we hold clan-Mama exempt from
payment of all damage; farther: Finn also we exempt, in
consideration of his copious loss.” Fintan son of Bochna
assented: “that is the award of a jurist’s son;" Cormac
likewise, and Cairbre, commended the same.
This done, the Fianna were summoned to the spot, the
judgment was imparted to them, and on this wise peace was
made between the parties. So far then ‘the Little Brawl at
Almhain.’