The Fate of the Children
of Lir
-From "Irish Fairy & Folk Tales", ed W. B. Yeats
-W. B. Yeats
.
It happened that the five Kings of Ireland met to determine who should
have the head kingship over them, and King Lir of the Hill of the White
Field expected surely he would be elected. When the nobles went into
council together they chose for head king, Dearg, son of Daghda, because
his father had been so great a Druid and he was the eldest of his father's
sons. But Lir left the assembly of the Kings and went home to the
Hill of the White Field. The other kings would have followed after
Lir to give him wounds of spear and wounds of sword for not yielding obedience
to the man to whom they had given the over-lordship. But Dearg the
king would not hear of it and said: "Rather let us bind him to us by the
bonds of kinship, so that peace may dwell in the land. Send over
to him for wife the choice of the three maidens of the fairest form and
best repute in Erin, the three daughters of Oilell of Aran, my own three
bosom-nurslings."
.
So the messengers brought word to Lir that Dearg the king would give him
a foster-child of his foster-children. Lir thought well of it, and
set out next day with fifty chariots from the Hill of the White Field.
And when Lir saw the three daughters of Oilell, Dearg the king said to
him: "Take thy choice of the maidens, Lir." "I know not," said Lir,
"which is the choicest of them all; but the eldest of them is the noblest,
it is she that i had best take." "If so," said Dearg the king, "Ove is
the eldest, and she shall be given to thee, if thou willest." So Lir and
Ove were married and went back to the Hill of the White Field.
.
And after this
there came to them twins, a son and a daughter, and they gave them for
names Fingula and Aod. And two more sons came to them, Finchra and
Conn. When they came Ove died, and Lir mourned bitterly for her,
and but for his great love for his children he would have died of his grief.
And Dearg the king grieved for Lir and sent to him and said: 'We grieve
for Ove for thy sake; but, that our friendship may not be rent asunder,
I will give unto thee her sister, Oifa, for a wife." So Lir agreed,
and they were united, and he took her with him to his own house.
And at first Oifa felt affection and honor for the children of Lir and
her sister, and indeed every one who saw the four children could not help
giving them the love of his soul. Lir doted upon the children, and
they always slept in beds in front of their father, who used to rise at
early dawn every morning and lie down among his children. But there-upon
the dart of jealousy passed into Oifa on account of this and she came to
regard the children with hatred and enmity. One day her chariot was
yoked for her and she took with her the four children of Lir in it.
Fingula was not willing to go with her on the journey. for she had dreamed
a dream in the night warning her against Oifa: but she was not to avoid
her fate. And when the chariot came to the Lake of the Oaks, Oifa
said to the people: "Kill the four children of Lir and I will give you
your own reward of every kind in the world." But they refused and
told her it was an evil thought she had. Then she would have raised
a sword herself to kill and destroy the children, but her own womanhood
and her weakness prevented her; so she drove the children of Lir into the
lake to bathe, and they did as Oifa told them. As soon as they were
upon the lake she struck them with a Druid's wand of spells and wizardry
and put them into the forms of four beautiful, perfectly white swans, and
she sang this song over them:
.
"Out with you upon the wild waves,
children of the king!
Henceforth your cries shall be
with the flocks of birds."
.
And Fingula answered:
.
"Thou witch! we know thee by
thy right name!
Thou mayest drive us from wave
to wave,
But sometimes we shall rest on
the headlands;
We shall receive relief, but
thou punishment.
Though our bodies may be upon
the lake,
Our minds at least shall fly
homewards."
.
And again she
spoke: "Assign an end for the ruin and woe which thou hast brought upon
us."
Oifa laughed and
said: "Never shall ye be free until the woman from the south be united
to the man from the north, until Lairgnen of Connaught wed Deoch of Munster;
nor shall any have power to bring you out of these forms. Nine hundred
years shall you wander over the lakes and streams of Erin. This only
I will grant unto you: that you retain your own speech, and there shall
be no music in the world equal to yours, the plaintive music you shall
sing." This she said because repentance seized her for the evil she
had done.
.
And then she spake
this lay:
.
"Away from me, ye children of
Lir,
Henceforth the sport of the wild
winds
Until Lairgnen and Deoch come
together,
Until ye are on the north west
of Red Erin.
.
"A sword of treachery is through
the heart of Lir,
Of Lir the mighty champion,
Yet though I have driven a sword.
My victory cuts me to the heart."
.
Then she turned
her steeds and went on to the Hall of Dearg the king. The nobles
of the court asked her where were the children of Lir, and Oifa said: "Lir
will not trust them to Dearg the king." But Dearg thought in his
own mind that the woman had played some treachery upon them, and he accordingly
sent messengers to the Hall of the White Field.
.
Lir asked the
messengers: "Wherefore are ye come?"
.
"To fetch thy
children, Lir," said they.
.
"Have they not
reached you with Oifa?" said Lir.
.
"They have not,"
said the messengers; "and Oifa said it was you would not let the children
go with her."
.
Then was Lir melancholy
and sad at heart, hearing these things, for he knew that Oifa had done
wrong upon his children, and he set out towards the Lake of the Red Eye.
And when the children of Lir saw him coming Fingula sang the lay:
.
"Welcome the cavalcade of steeds
Approaching the Lake of the Red
Eye,
Accompany dread and magical
Surely seek after us.
.
"Let us move to the shore, O
Aod.
Fiachra and comely Conn,
No host under heaven can those
horsemen be
But King Lir with his mighty
household."
.
Now as she said
this King Lir had come to the shores of the lake and heard the swans speaking
with human voices. And he spake to the swans and asked them who they
were. Fingula answered and said: "We are thy own children, ruined
by thy wife, sister of our own mother, through her ill mind and her jealousy."
"For how long is the spell to be upon you?" said Lir. "None can relieve
us till the woman from the south and the man from the north come together,
till Lairgnen of Connaught wed Deoch of Munster."
.
Then Lir and his
people raised their shouts of grief, crying, and lamentation, and they
stayed by the shore of the lake listening to the wild music of the swans
until the swans flew away, and King Lir went on to the Hall of Dearg the
king. He told Dearg the king what Oifa had done to his children.
And Dearg put his power upon Oifa and bade her say what shape on earth
she would think the worst of all. She said it would be in the form
of an air-demon. "It is into that form I shall put you," said Dearg
the king, and he struck her with a Druid's wand of spells and wizardry
and put her in the form of an air-demon, and shall be forever.
.
But the children
of Lir continued to delight the Milesian clans with the very sweet fairy
music of their songs, so that no delight was ever heard in Erin to compare
with their music until the time came appointed for the leaving the Lake
of the Red Eye.
.
Then Fingula sang
this parting lay:
.
"Farewell to thee, Dearg the
king,
Master of all Druid's lore!
Farewell to thee, our father
dear,
Lir of the Hill of the White
Field!
.
"We go to pass the appointed
time
Away and apart from the haunts
of men
In the current of the Moyle,
Our garb shall be bitter and
briny,
.
"Until Deoch come to Lairgnen.
So come, ye brothers of once
ruddy cheeks;
Let us depart from this Lake
of the Red Eye,
Let us separate in sorrow from
the tribe that has loved us."
.
And after they took to flight, flying
highly, lightly, aerially till they reached the Moyle, between Erin and
Albain.
.
The men of Erin
were grieved at their leaving, and it was proclaimed throughout Erin that
henceforth no swan should be killed. Then they stayed all solitary,
all alone, filled with cold and grief and regret, until a thick tempest
came upon them and Fingula said: "Brothers, let us appoint a place to meet
again if the power of the winds separate us." And they said: "Let
us appoint to meet, O sister, at the Rock of the Seals," Then the
waves rose up and the thunder roared, the lightning flashed, the sweeping
tempest passed over the sea, so that the children of Lir were scattered
from each other over the great sea. There came, however, a placid
calm after the great tempest and Fingula found herself alone, and she said
this lay.
.
"Woe upon me that I am alive!
My wings are frozen to my sides.
O beloved three, O brothers three,
Who hid under the shelter
of my feathers,
Until the dead come back to the
living
I and the three shall never meet
again!"
.
And she flew to
the Lake of the Seals and soon saw Conn coming towards her with heavy step
and drenched feathers, and Fiachra also, cold and wet and faint, and no
word could they tell, so cold and faint were they: but she nestled them
under her wings and said: "If Aod could come to us now our happiness
would be complete." But soon they saw Aod coming towards them with
dry head and preened feathers: Fingula put him under the feathers of her
breast and Fiachra under her right wing, and Conn under her left: and they
made this lay:
.
"Bad was our stepmother with
us,
She played her magic on us,
Sending us north on the sea
In the shape of magical swans.
.
"Our bath upon the shore's ridge
Is the foam of the brine-crested
tide,
Our share of the ale feast
Is in the brine of the blue-crested
sea."
.
One day they saw a splendid
cavalcade of pure white steeds coming towards them, and when they came
near they were the two sons of Dearg the king who had been seeking for
them to give them news of Dearg the king and Lit their father. "They
are well," they said, "and live together happy in all except that ye are
not with them, and for not knowing where ye have gone since the day ye
left the Lake of the Red Eye." "Happy are not we," said Fingula,
and she sang this song:
.
"Happy this night the household
of Lir,
Abundant their meat and their
wine.
But the children of Lir - what
is their lot?
For bed clothes we have our feathers,
And as for our food and our wine-
The white sand and the bitter
brine,
Fiachra's bed and Conn's place
Under the cover of my wings on
the Moyle,
Aod has the shelter of my breast,
And so side by side we rest."
.
So the sons of
Dearg the king came to the Hall of Lir and told the king the condition
of his children.
.
Then the time
came for the children of Lir to fulfill their lot, and they flew in the
current of the Moyle to the Bay of Erris, and remained there till the time
of their fate, and then they flew to the Hill of the White Field and found
all desolate and empty, with nothing but unroofed green raths and forests
of nettles - no house, no fire, no dwelling-place. The four came
close together, and they raised three shouts of lamentation aloud, and
Fingula sang this lay:
.
"Uchone! it is bitterness to
my heart
To see my father's place forlorn-
No hounds, no packs of dogs,
no women, and no valiant kings.
.
"No drinking horns, no cups of
wood,
No drinking in its lightsome
halls.
Uchone! I see the state of this
house
That its lord our father lives
no more.
.
"Much have we suffered in our
wandering years,
By winds buffeted, by cold frozen;
Now has come the greatest of
our pain-
There lives no man who knoweth
us in the house
where we were born."
.
So the children
of Lir flew away to the Glory Isle of Brandan the saint, and settled upon
the Lake of the Birds until holy Patrick came to Erin and the holy Mac
Howg came to Glory Isle.
.
And the first
night he came to the island the children of Lir heard the voice of his
bell ringing for matins, so that they started and leaped about in terror
at hearing it; and her brothers left Fingula alone. "What is it,
beloved brothers?" said she. "We know not what faint, fearful voice
it is we have heard." Then Fingula recited this lay:
.
"Listen to the Cleric's bell,
Poise your wings and raise
Thanks to God for his coming,
Be grateful that you hear him,
.
"He shall free you from pain,
And bring you from rocks and
stones.
Ye comely children of Lir
Listen to the bell of the Cleric."
.
And Mac Howg came
down to the brink of the shore and said to them: "Are ye the children of
Lir?" "We are indeed said they. "Thanks be to God!" said the
saint; "it is for your sakes I have come to this Isle beyond every other
island in Erin. Come ye to land now and put your trust in me."
So they came to land, and he made for them chains of bright white silver,
and put a chain between Aod and Fingula and a chain between Conn and Fiachra.
.
It happened at
this time that Lairgnen was prince of Connaught and he was to wed Deoch
the daughter of the king of Munster. She had heard the account of
the birds and she became filled with love and affection for them, and she
said she would not wed till she had the wondrous birds of Glory Isle.
Lairgnen sent for them to the Saint Mac Howg. But the saint would
not give them, and both Lairgnen and Deoch went to Glory Isle, And
Lairgnen went to seize the birds from the altar: but as soon as he had
laid hands on them their feathery coats fell off, and the three sons of
Lir became three withered bony old men, and Fingula, a lean withered old
woman without blood or flesh. Lairgnen started at this and left the
place hastily, but Fingula chanted this lay:
.
"Come and baptize us, O Cleric,
Clear away our stains!
This day I see our grave-
Fiachra and Conn on each side,
And in my lap, between my two
arms,
Place Aod, my beauteous brother."
.
After this lay,
the children of Lir were baptized. And they died, and were buried
as Fingula had said, Fiachra and Conn on either side, and Aod before her
face. A cairn was raised for them, and on it their names were written
in runes. And that is the fate of the children of Lir.