AND after a while Finn
bade his people to make his ship ready, and to put a store of food and drink
in it. They did that, and he himself and a thousand of his men went into the
ship; and they were nine days between sailing and rowing till they came to
harbour in the north of Alban.
They bound the ship to the posts of the
harbour then, and Finn with five of his people went to the dun of the King of
Alban, and Finn struck a blow with the hand-wood on the door, and the doorkeeper
asked who was in it, and they told him it was Finn, son of Cumhal. "Let him
in," said the king.
Then Finn and his people went in, and the
king made them welcome, and he bade Finn to sit down in his own place, and they
were given strong pleasant drinks, and the king sent for the rest of Finn’s
people and bade them welcome to the dun.
Then Finn told what it was brought him
there, and that it was to ask help and advice against the grandson of Duibhne he
was come.
"And you have a right to give me your
help," he said, "for it was he that killed your father and your two
brothers, and many of the best men along with them."
"That is true," said the king;
"and I will give you my own two sons and a thousand men with each of
them." Finn was glad when he heard that, and he and his men took leave of
the king and of his household, and left wishes for life and health with them,
and the king did the same by them.
And it was near Brugh
na Boinne Finn and his people came to land, and Finn sent messengers to the
house of Angus
to give out a challenge of battle against Diarmuid,
grandson of Duibhne.
"What should I do about this, Osgar?"
said Diarmuid.
"We will both go out and make a stand
against them, and we will not let a serving-man of them escape, but we will make
an end of them all," said Osgar.
So they rose up on the morning of the morrow
and they put their suits of battle on their comely bodies; and it would be a
pity for those, be they many or few, that would meet those two men, and their
anger on them. And they bound the rims of their shields together the way they
would not be parted from one another in the fight. And the sons of the King of
Alban said that they themselves and their people would go first to meet them. So
they came to shore, and made a rush to meet Diarmuid and Osgar. But the two
fought so well that they beat them back and scattered them, and made a great
slaughter, and put great terror on them, so that at the last there was not a man
left to stand against them.
And after that, Finn went out again on the
sea, and his people with him, and there is no word of them till they came to the
Land of Promise where
Finn’s nurse was. And when she saw Finn coming she was very joyful before him.
And Finn told her the whole story from beginning to end, and the cause of his
quarrel with Diarmuid; and he said it was to ask an advice from her he was come,
and that it was not possible to put him down by any strength of an army, unless
enchantment would put him down. "I will go with you," said the old
woman, "and I will do enchantment on him." Finn was very glad when be
heard that, and he stopped there that night, and they set out for Ireland on the
morrow.
And when they came to Brugh na Boinne, the
nurse put a Druid
mist around Finn and the Fianna,
the way no one could know they were there. Now the day before that, Osgar had
parted from Diarmuid, and Diarmuid was out hunting by himself. That was shown to
the hag, and she took a drowned leaf having a hole in it, like the quern of a
mill, and she rose with that by her enchantments on a blast of Druid wind over
Diarmuid, and began to aim at him through the hole with deadly spears, till she
had done him great harm, for all his arms and his clothing, and he could not
make away he was so hard pressed. And every danger he was ever in was little
beside that danger. And it is what he thought, that unless he could strike the
old woman through the hole that was in the leaf, she would give him his death
there and then. And he lay down on his back, and the Gae Dearg, the Red Spear,
in his hand, and he made a great cast of the spear, that it went through the
hole, and the hag fell dead on the spot. And he struck off her head and he
brought it back with him to Angus Og.
And the next morning early, Angus rose up,
and he went where Finn was, and he asked would he make peace with Diarmuid, and
Finn said he would. And then he went to the King of Ireland to ask peace for
Diarmuid, and he said he would agree to it.
And then he went back to where Diarmuid and Grania
were, and asked him would he make peace with the High
King and with Finn. "I am willing," said Diarmuid, "if they
will give the conditions I will ask." "What conditions are
those?" said Angus.
"The district my father had," said
Diarmuid, "that is, the district of Ui Duibhne, without right of hunting to
Finn, and without rent or tribute to the King of Ireland, and with that the
district of Dumhais in Leinster, for they are the best in Ireland, and the
district of Ceis Corainn from the King of Ireland as a marriage portion with his
daughter; and those are the conditions on which I will make peace with
them." "Would you be peaceable if you got those conditions?" said
Angus. "It would go easier with me to make peace if I got them," said
Diarmuid.
Then Angus went with that news to where the
King of Ireland was with Finn. And they gave him all those conditions, and they
forgave him all he had done through the whole of the time he had been in his
hiding, that was sixteen years.
And the place Diarmuid and Grania settled in
was Rath Grania, in the district of Ceis Corainn, far away from Finn and from
Teamhair. And Grania bore him children there, four sons and one daughter. And
they lived there in peace, and the people used to be saying there was not a man
living at the same time was richer as to gold and to silver, as to cattle and to
sheep, than Diarmuid.