The Death of Cu Chulainn
When Cu
Chulainn’s foes came for the last time against him, his
land was filled with smoke and flame, the weapons fell from
their racks, and the day of his death drew nigh. The evil
tidings were brought to him, and the maiden Leborcham bade
him arise, though he was worn out with fighting in defence
of the plain of Muirthemne, and Niam, wife of Conall the
Victorious, also spoke to him; so he sprang to his arms,
and flung his mantle around him; but the brooch fell and
pierced his foot, forewarning him. Then he took his shield
and ordered his charioteer Loeg to harness his horse, the
Gray of Macha.
“I swear by the gods by whom my people swear,” said Loeg,
“though the men of Conchobar’s province were around the
Gray of Macha, they could not bring him to the chariot. I
never refused thee till today. If thou wilt, come thou, and
speak with the Gray himself.”
Cu Chulainn went to him. And thrice did the horse turn his
left side to his master. On the night before, the Morrigu
had broken the chariot, for she liked not Cu Chulainn’s
going to the battle, for she knew that he would not come
again to Emain, Macha. Then Cu Chulainn reproached his
horse, saying that he was not wont to deal thus with his
master.
Thereat the Gray of Macha came and let his big round tears
of blood fall on Cu Chulainn’s feet. And then Cu Chulainn
leaped into the chariot, and drove it suddenly southwards
along the Road of Midluachar.
And Leborcham met him and besought him not to leave them;
and the thrice fifty queens who were in Emain Macha and who
loved him cried to him with a great cry. And when he turned
his chariot to the right, they gave a scream of wailing and
lamentation, and smote their hands, for they knew that he
would not come to them again.
The house of his nurse that had fostered him was before him
on the road. He used to go to it whenever he went driving
past her southwards and from the south. And she kept for
him always a vessel with drink therein. Now he drank a
drink and fared forth, bidding his nurse farewell. Then he
saw three Crones, blind of the left eye, before him on the
road. They had cooked on spits of rowantree a dog with
poisons and spells. And one of the things that Cu Chulainn
was bound not to do, was going to a cooking-hearth and
consuming the food. And another of the things that he must
not do, was eating his namesake’s flesh. He sped on and was
about to pass them, for he knew that they were not there
for his good.
Then said a Crone to him: “Visit us, O Cu Chulainn.”
“I will not visit you in sooth,” said Cu Chulainn.
“The food is only a hound,” said she. “Were this a great
cooking-hearth thou wouldst have visited us. But because
what is here is little, thou comest not. Unseemly are the
great who endure not the little and poor.”
Then he drew nigh to her, and the Crone gave him the
shoulder blade of the hound out of her left hand. And then
Cu Chulainn ate it out of his left hand, and put it under
his left thigh. The hand that took it and the thigh under
which he put it were seized from trunk to end, so that the
normal strength abode not in them.
Then he drove along the Road of Midluachar around Sliab
Fuait; and his enemy Erc son of Cairbre saw him in his
chariot, with his sword shining redly in his hand, and the
light of valor hovering over him, and his three-hued hair
like strings of golden thread over the edge of the anvil of
some cunning craftsman.
“That man is coming towards us, O men of Erin!” said Erc;
“await him.” So they made a fence of their linked shields,
and at each corner Erc made them place two of their bravest
feigning to fight each other, and a satirist with each of
these pairs, and he told the satirists to ask Cu Chulainn
for his spear, for the sons of Calatin had prophesied of
his spear that a king would be slain by it, unless it were
given when demanded. And he made the men of Erin utter a
great cry. And Cu Chulainn rushed against them in his
chariot, performing his three thunder-feats; and he plied
his spear and sword; so that the halves of their heads and
skulls and hands and feet, and their red bones were
scattered broadcast throughout the plain of Muirthemne, in
number like to the sands of the sea and stars of heaven and
dewdrops of May, flakes of snow, hailstones, leaves in the
forest, buttercups on Mag Breg, and grass under the hoofs
of herds on a day in summer. And gray was the field with
their brains after that onslaught and plying of weapons
which Cu Chulainn dealt unto them.
Then he saw one of the pairs of warriors contending
together, and the satirist called on him to intervene, and
Cu Chulainn leaped at them, and with two blows of his fist
dashed out their brains.
“That spear to me!” said the satirist.
“I swear what my people swear,” said Cu Chulainn, “thou
dost not need it more than I do. The men of Erin are upon
me here and I am attacking them.”
“I will revile thee if thou givest it not,” said the
satirist.
“I have never yet been reviled because of my niggardliness
or my churlishness.”
With that Cu Chulainn flung the spear at him with its
handle foremost, and it passed through his head and killed
nine on the other side of him.
And Cu Chulainn drove through the host, but Lugaid son of
Cu Roi the spear.
“What will fall by this spear, O sons of Calatin?” asked
Lugaid. “A king will fall by that spear,” said the sons of
Calatin. Then Lugaid flung the spear at Cu Chulainn’s
chariot, and it reached the charioteer, Loeg mac Riangabra,
and all his bowels came forth on the cushion of the
chariot.
Then said Loeg, “Bitterly have I been wounded,” etc.
Thereafter Cu Chulainn drew out the spear, and Loeg bade
him farewell. Then said Cu Chulainn: “Today I shall be
warrior and I shall be charioteer also.”
Then he saw the second pair contending, and one of them
said it was a shame for him not to intervene. And Cu
Chulainn sprang upon them and dashed them into pieces
against a rock.
“That spear to me, O Cu Chulainn!” said the satirist.
“I swear what my people swear, thou dost not need the spear
more than I do. On my hand and my valor and my weapons it
rests today to sweep the four provinces of Erin today from
the plain of Muirthemne.”
“I will revile thee,” said the satirist.
“I am not bound to grant more than one request this day,
and, moreover, I have already paid for my honor.”
“I will revile Ulster for thy default,” said the satirist.
“Never yet has Ulster been reviled for my refusal nor for
my churlishness. Though little of my life remains to me,
Ulster shall not be reviled this day.”
Then Cu Chulainn cast his spear at him by the handle and it
went through his head and killed nine behind him, and Cu
Chulainn drove through the host even as he had done before.
Then Erc son of Cairbre took the spear. “What shall fall by
this spear, O sons of Calatin?” said Erc son of Cairbre
“Not hard to say: a king falls by that spear,” said the
sons of Calatin.
“I heard you say that a king would fall by the spear which
Lugaid long since cast.”
“And that is true,” said the sons of Calatin. “Thereby fell
the king of the charioteers of Erin, namely Cu Chulainn’s
charioteer, Loeg mac Riangabra.”
Now Erc cast the spear at Cu Chulainn, and it lighted on
his horse, the Gray of Macha. Cu Chulainn snatched out the
spear. And each of them bade the other farewell. Thereat
the Gray of
Macha left him with half the yoke under his neck and went
into the Gray’s Linn in Sliab Fuait.
Thereupon Cu Chulainn again drove through the host and saw
the third pair contending, and he intervened as he had done
before, and the satirist demanded his spear and Cu Chulainn
at first refused it.
“I will revile thee,” said the satirist.
“I have paid for my honor today. I am not bound to grant
more than one request this day.”
“I will revile Ulster for thy fault.”
“I have paid for Ulster’s honor,” said Cu Chulainn.
“I will revile thy race,” said the satirist.
“Tidings that I have been defamed shall never reach the
land I have not reached. For little there is of my life
remaining.~~
So Cu Chulainn flung the spear to him, handle foremost, and
it went through his head and through thrice nine other men.
“‘Tie grace with wrath, O Cu Chulainn,” said the satirist.
Then Cu Chulainn for the last time drove through the host,
and Lugaid took the spear, and said:
“What will fall by this spear, O sons of Calatin?”
“I heard you say that a king would fall by the spear that
Erc cast this morning.”
“That is true,” said they, “the king of the steeds of Erin
fell by it, namely the Gray of Macha.”
Then Lugaid flung the spear and struck Cu Chulainn, and his
bowels came forth on the cushion of the chariot, and his
only horse, the Black Sainglenn, fled away, with half the
yoke hanging to him, and left the chariot and his master,
the king of the heroes of Erin, dying alone on the plain.
Then said Cu Chulainn, “I would fain go as far as that loch
to drink a drink thereout.”
“We give thee leave,” said they, “provided that thou come
to us again.”
“I will bid you come for me,” said Cu Chulainn, “if I
cannot come myself.”
Then he gathered his bowels into his breast, and went forth
to the loch.
And there he drank his drink, and washed himself, and came
forth to die, calling on his foes to come to meet him.
Now a great mearing went westwards from the loch and his
eye lit upon it, and he went to a pillar-stone which is in
the plain, and he put his breast-girdle round it that he
might not die seated nor lying down, but that he might die
standing up. Then came the men all around him, but they
durst not go to him, for they thought he was alive.
“It is a shame for you,” said Erc son of Cairbre, “not to
take that man’s head in revenge for my father’s head which
was taken by him.”
Then came the Gray of Macha to Cu Chulainn to protect him
so long as his soul was in him and the “hero’s light” out
of his forehead remained. And the Gray of Macha wrought
three red route all around him. And fifty fell by his teeth
and thirty by each of his hoofs. This is what he slew of
the host. And hence is the saying, “Not keener were the
victorious courses of the Gray of Macha after Cu Chulainn’s
slaughter.”
And then came the battle goddess Morrigu and her sisters in
the form of scald-crows and sat on his shoulder. “That
pillar Is not wont to be under birds,” said Erc son of
Cairbre.
Then Lugaid arranged Cu Chulainn’s hair over his shoulder,
and cut off his head. And then fell the sword from Cu
Chulainn’s hand, and smote off Lugaid’s right hand, which
fell on the ground. And Cu Chulainn’s right hand was cut
off in revenge for this. Lugaid and the hosts then marched
away, carrying with them Cu Chulainn’s bead and his right
hand, and they came to Tara, and there is the “Sick-bed” of
his head and his right hand, and the full of the cover of
his shield of mould.
From Tara they marched southwards to the river Liffey. But
meanwhile the hosts of Ulster were hurrying to attack their
foes, and Conall the Victorious, driving in front of them,
met the Gray of Macha streaming with blood. Then Conall
knew that Cu Chulainn had been slain. And he and the Gray
of Macha sought Cu Chulainn’s body. They saw Cu Chulainn at
the pillar-stone. Then went the Gray of Macha and laid his
head on Cu Chulalnn’s breast And Conall said, “A heavy care
to the Gray of Macha is that corpse.”
And Conall followed the hosts meditating vengeance, for he
was bound to avenge Cu Chulainn. For there was a comrades’
covenant between Cu Chulainn and Conall the Victorious,
namely, that whichever of them was first killed should be
avenged by the other. “And if I be the first killed,” Cu
Chulainn had said, “how soon wilt thou avenge me?”
“The day on which thou shalt be slain,” said Conall, “I
will avenge thee before that evening. And if I be slain,”
said Conall, “how soon wilt thou avenge me?”
“Thy blood will not be cold on earth,” said Cu Chulainn,
“before I shall avenge thee.” So Conall pursued Lugaid to
the Liffey.
Then was Lugaid bathing. “Keep a lookout over the plain,”
said he to his charioteer, “that no one come to us without
being seen."
The charioteer looked. “One horseman is here coming to us,”
said he, “and great are the speed and swiftness with which
he comes. Thou wouldst deem that all the ravens of Erin
were above him. Thou wouldst deem that flakes of snow were
specking the plain before him.”
“Unbeloved is the horseman that comes there,” said Lugaid.
“It is Conall the Victorious, mounted on the Dewy-Red. The
birds thou sawest above him are the sods from that horse’s
hoofs. The snow-flakes thou sawest specking the plain
before him are the foam from that horse’s lips and from the
curbs of his bridle. Look again,” said Lugaid, “what road
is he coming?”
“He is coming to the ford,” said the charioteer, “the path
that the hosts have taken.”
“Let that horse pass us,” said Lugaid. “We desire not to
fight against him.” But when Conall reached the middle of
the ford be spied Lugaid and his charioteer and went to
them.
“Welcome is a debtor’s face!” said Conall. “He to whom he
oweth debts demands them of him. I am thy creditor for the
slaying of my comrade Cu Chulainn, and here I am suing thee
for this.”
They then agreed to fight on the plain of Argetros, and
there Conall wounded Lugaid with his javelin. Thence they
went to a place called Ferta Lugdach.
“I wish,” said Lugaid, “to have the truth of men from
thee.”
“What is that?” asked ConaIl the Victorious.
“That thou shouldst use only one hand against me, for one
hand only have I."
“Thou shalt have it,” said Conall the Victorious.
So Conall’s hand was bound to his side with ropes. There
for the space between two of the watches of the day they
fought, and neither of them prevailed over the other. When
Conall found that he prevailed not, he saw his steed the
Dewy-Red by Lugaid. And the steed came to Lugaid and tore a
piece out of his side.
“Woe is met” said Lugaid, “that is not the truth of men, O
Conall.”
“I gave it only on my own behalf,” said Conall. “I gave it
not on behalf of savage beasts and senseless things.”
“I know now,” said Lugaid, “that thou wilt not go till thou
takest my head with thee, since we took Cu Chulainn’s head
from him. So take,” said he, “my head in addition to thine
own, and add my realm to thy realm, and my valor to thy
valor. For I prefer that thou shouldst be the best hero in
Erin.”
Thereat Conall the Victorious cut off Lugaid’s head. And
Conall and his Ulstermen then returned to Emain Macha. That
week they entered it not in triumph. But the soul of Cu
Chulainn ap peared there to the thrice fifty queens who had
loved him, and they saw him floating in his phantom chariot
over Emain Macha, and they heard him chant a mystic song of
the coming of Christ and the Day of Doom.