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    <strong>The Crucifixion Of The Outcast</strong>

    A MAN, with thin brown hair and a pale

    face, half ran, half walked, along the road

    that wound from the south to the Town

    of the Shelly River. Many called him Cum-

    Hal, the son of ad many called

    him the Swift, Wild Horse; and he was

    a glee man, and he wore a short parti-

    coloured doublet, and had pointed shoes,

    and a bulging wallet. Also he was of the

    blood of the Ernaans, and his birth-place

    was the ~ield of Gold; but his eating and

    sleeping places were the four provinces of

    Eri, and his abiding place was not upon

    the ridge of the earth. His eyes strayed

    from the Abbey tower of the White Friars

    and the town battlements to a row of

    crosses which stood out against the sky

    upon a hill a little to the eastward of the

    town, and he ched his fist, and shook

    it at the crosses. He khey were

    y, for the birds were fluttering

    36

    about them; ahought how, as like

    as not, just suabond as

    himself was hanged on one of them; and

    he muttered;  If it were hanging or bow-

    stringing, or stoning or beheading, it would

    be bad enough. But to have the birds

    peg your eyes and the wolves eating

    your feet ! I would that the red wind

    of the Druids had withered in his cradle

    the soldier of Dathi, whht the

    tree of death out of barbarous lands, or

    that the lightning, when it smote Dathi

    at the foot of the mountain, had smitten

    him also, or that his grave had been dug

    by the green-haired and green-toothed

    merrows deep at the roots of the deep

    sea.

    While he spoke, he shivered from head

    to foot, and the sweat came out upon

    his face, and he knew not why, for

    he had looked upon many crosses. He

    passed over two hills and uhe battle-

    ment Ed gate, and then round by a left-

    27

    was studded with great nails, and whenhe k it, he roused the lay brother

    who was the porter, and of him he asked

    a pla the guest-house. Then the lay

    brother took a glowing turf on a shovel,

    ahe way to a big and naked out-

    house strewn with very dirty rushes; and

    t lighted a rush-dle fixed between two

    of the stones of the wall, ahe glow-

    ing turf upon the hearth and gave him

    two unlighted sods and a wisp of straw,

    and showed him a bla hanging from a

    nail, and a shelf with a loaf of bread and

    a jug of water, and a tub in a far

    er. Then the lay brother left him

    a back to his place by the door.

    And Cumhal the son of ac began

    to blow upon the glowing turf, that he

    might light the two sods and the wisp

    of straw; but his blowing profited him

    nothing, for the sods and the straw were

    damp. So he took off his pointed shoes,

    and drew the tub out of the er with

    the thought of washing the dust of the

    highway from his feet; but the water was

    so dirty that he could not see the bottom

    He was very hungry, for he had en

    all that day; so he did not waste much

    anger upoub, but took up the black

    Ioaf, and bit into it, and then spat out the

    bite, for the bread was hard and mouldy.

    Still he did not give way to his wrath, for

    he had not druhese many hours;

    having a hope of heath beer or wi his

    days end, he had left the brooks untasted,

    to make his supper the more delightful.

    Now he put the jug to his lips, but he

    flung it from him straight way, for the

    water was bitter and ill-smelling. Then

    he gave the jug a kick, so that it broke

    against the opposite wall, aook

    down the blao  it about him for

    the night. But no sooner did he touch it

    than it was alive with skipping fleas. At

    this, beside himself with anger, he rushed

    to the door of the guest-house, but the lay

    brother, being well aced to such

    outcries, had locked it oside; so

    Cumhal emptied the tub and began to

    beat the door with it, till the lay brother

    e to the door, and asked what ailed

    him, and why he woke him out of sleep.

    What ails me ! shouted Cumhal,  are

    not the sods as wet as the sands of

    the Three Headlands ? and are not the

    fleas in the bla as many as the waves

    of the sea and as lively ? and is not the

    bread as hard as the heart of a lay brother

    who has fotten God ? and is not the

    water in the j<bdi>.</bdi>ug as bitter and as ill-smelling

    as his soul ? and is not the foot-water the

    colour that shall be upon him when he has

    been charred in the Undying Fires ?  The

    lay brother saw that the lock was fast, and

    went back to his niche, for he was too

    sleepy to talk with fort. And Cum-

    Hal went oing at the door, and

    presently he heard the lay brothers foot

    once more, and cried out at him, ~ O

    cowardly and tyrannous race of friars, per-

    secutors of the bard and the glee man, haters

    of life and joy ! O race that does not draw

    the sword ahe truth ! O race

    that melts the bones of the people with

    cowardid with deceit !

    Gleeman, said the lay brother,  I also

    make rhymes; I make many while I sit

    in my niche by the door, and I sorrow to

    hear the bards railing upon the friars.

    Brother, I would sleep, and therefore I

    make known to you that it is the head of

    the monastery, racious Coarb, who

    orders all things ing the lodging of

    travellers.

    You may sleep, said Cumhal, ~ I will

    sing a bards curse on the Coarb. And

    he set the tub upside down uh~

    window, and stood upon it, and began to

    sing in a very loud voice. The singing

    awoke the Coarb, so that he sat up in bed

    and blew a silver whistle until the lay

    brother came to him.  I ot get a

    wink of sleep with that noise, said the

    Coarb.  What is happening ?

    It is a glee man, said the lay brother,

    who plains of the sods, of the bread,

    of the water in the jug, of the foot-water,

    and of the bla. And now he is singing

    a bards curse upon you, O brother Coarb,

    and upon your father and your mother,

    and yrandfather and yrand-

    mother, and upon all your relations.

    Is he cursing in rhyme ?

    He is cursing in rhyme, and with

    two assonances in every line of his

    curse.

    The Coarb pulled his night-cap off and

    crumpled it in his hands, and the circular

    brown patch of hair in the middle of his

    bald head looked like an island in the

    midst of a pond, for in aught they

    had not yet abahe aon sure

    for the style then ing into use.  If we

    do not somewhat, he said,  he will teach

    his curses to the children ireet, and

    the girls spinning at the doors, and to the

    robbers on the mountain of Gulben.

    Shall I go then, said the other, and

    give him dry sods, a fresh loaf,  water

    in a jug,  foot-water, and a new

    bla, and make him swear by the

    blessed St. Benign us, and by the sun and

    moon, that no bond be lag, not to tell

    his rhymes to the children ireet,

    and the girls spinning at the doors, and

    the robbers on the mountain of Gulben ?

    her our blessed Patron nor the sun

    and the moon would avail at all, said the

    Coarb: for to-morrow or the  day

    the mood to curse would e upon him,

    or a pride in those rhymes would move

    him, and he would teach his lio the

    children, and the girls, and the robbers.

    Or else he would tell another of his craft

    how he fared in the guest-house, and he

    in his turn would begin. to curse, and my

    name would wither. For learn there is no

    steadfastness of purpose upon the roads,

    but only under roofs, aween four

    walls. Therefore I bid you go and awaken

    Brother Kevin, Brother Dove, Brother

    Little Wolf, Brother Bald Patrick, Brother

    Bald Brandon, Brother James and Brother

    Peter. And they shall take the man, and

    43

    bind him with ropes, and dip him in the

    river that he may cease to sing. And in

    the m, lest this but make him curse

    the louder, we will crucify him.

    The crosses are all full, said the lay

    brother.

    Then we must make another cross. If

    we do not make an end of him another

    will, for who  eat and sleep in peace

    while men like<bdo></bdo> him are going about the

    world ? Ill should we stand before blessed

    St. Benign us, and sour would be his face

    when he es to judge us at the Last

    Day, were we to spare an enemy of his

    when we had him under our thumb !

    Brother, the bards and the glee men are

    an evil race, ever cursing and ever stirring

    up the people, and immoral and im-

    moderate in all things, ahen in

    their hearts, always longing after the Son

    of Lir, and Angus, and Bridget, and the

    Dagda, and Dana the Mother, and all the

    false gods of the old days; always making

    poems in praise of those kings and queens

    44

    of the demons, Finvaragh of the Hill in

    the Plain, and Red Aodh of the Hill of

    the Shee, and a of the Wave, and

    Eiveen of the Grey Rock, and him they

    call Don of the Vats of the Sea; and

    railing against God and Christ and the

    blessed Saints. While he eaking

    he crossed himself, and when he had

    finished he drew the nightcap over his

    ears, to shut out the noise, and closed

    his eyes, and posed himself to

    sleep.

    The lay brother found Brother Kevin,

    Brother Dove, Brother Little Wolf, Brother

    Bald Patrick, Brother Bald Brandon,

    Brother James and Brother Peter sitting

    up in bed, and he made them get up.

    Then they bound Cumhal, and they

    dragged him to the river, and they dipped

    him in it at the place which was afterwards

    called Buckleys Ford.

    Gleeman, said the lay brother, as they

    led him back to the guest-house,  why do

    you ever use the wit which God has given

    45

    you to make blasphemous and immoral tales

    and verses ? For such is the way of your

    craft. I have, indeed, many such tales and

    verses well nigh by rote, and so I know

    that I speak true ! And why do you praise

    with rhyme those demons, Finvaragh, Red

    Aodh, a, Eiveen and Don? 1, too,

    am a man of great wit and learning, but

    I ever glo.rify racious Coarb, and

    Benignus our Patron, and the princes of

    the province. My soul is det and

    orderly, but yours is like the wind among

    the salley gardens. I said what I could for

    you, being also a man of many thoughts,

    but who could help such a one as you ?

    My soul, friend, answered the glee man,

    is indeed like the wind, and it blows me

    to and fro, and up and down, a lid puts

    many things into my mind and out of my

    mind, and therefore am I called the Swift,

    Wild Horse. And he spoke no more

    that night, for his teeth were chattering

    with the cold.

    The Coarb and the friars came to him

    46

    in the m, and bade him get ready to

    be crucified, and led him out of the guest-

    house. And while he still stood upon the

    step a flock of great grass-barnacles passed

    high above him with king cries. He

    lifted his arms to them and said, ~ O great

    grass-bararry a little, and may hap

    my soul will travel with you to the waste

    places of the shore and to the ungovern- 1

    able sea !  At the gate a crowd of beggars

    gathered about them, being e there to

    beg from any traveller or pilgrim who

    might have spent the night in the guest-

    house. The Coarb and the friars led

    the glee man to a pla the woods at

    some distance, where many straight young

    trees were growing, and they made him

    cut one down and fashion it to the right

    length, while the beggars stood round them

    in a ring, talking aiculating. The

    Coarb then bade him cut off another and

    shorter piece of wood, and nail it upon

    the first. So there was his cross for him;

    and they put it upon his shoulder, for

    47

    his crucifixion was to be oop of the

    hill where the others were. A half-mile

    on the way he asked them to stop and

    see him juggle for them: for he knew,

    he said, all the tricks of Angus the

    Subtle-Hearted. The old friars were for

    pressing on, but the young friars would

    see him: so he did many wonders for

    them, even to the drawing of live frogs out

    of his ears. But after a while they turned

    on him, and said his tricks were dull and

    a shade unholy, ahe cross on his

    shoulders again. Another half-mile on the

    way, and he asked them to stop and hear

    him jest for them, for he knew, he said, all

    the jests of  the Bald, upon whose

    back a sheeps wool grew. And the young

    friars, when they had heard his merry tales,

    again bade him take up his cross, for it

    i ll became them to listen to such follies.

    Another half-mile on the way, he asked

    them to stop and hear him sing the story

    of White-Breasted Deirdre, and how she

    endured many sorrows, and how the sons

    of Usna died to serve her. And the young

    friars were mad to hear him, but when he

    had ehey grew angry, a him

    for waking fotten longings in their

    hearts. So they set the cross upon his

    back, and hurried him to the hill.

    When he was e to the top, they took

    the cross from him, and began to dig a hole

    to stand it in, while the beggars gathered

    round, and talked among themselves. ~ I

    ask a favour before I d<var></var>ie, says Cum Hal.

    We will grant you no more delays, says

    the Coarb.

    I ask no more delays, for I have drawn

    the sword, and told the ?99lib?ruth, and lived my

    vision, and am tent.

    Would you then fess ?

    By sun and moon, not l; I ask but to

    6e let eat the food I carry in my wallet.

    I carry food in my wallet whenever I go

    upon a journey, but I do not taste of it

    unless I am well-nigh starved. I have

    en now these two days.

    You may eat, then, says the Coarb,

    ùIq E

    auro help the friars dig the

    hole.

    The glee man took a loaf and some strips

    of cold fried ba out of his wallet and laid

    them upon the ground.  I will give a tithe

    to the poor, says he, a a tenth

    part from the loaf and the ba.  Who

    among you is the poorest ? And there-

    upon was a great clam our, for the beggars

    began the history of their sorrows and their

    poverty, and their yellow faces swayed like

    the Shelly ~iver when the floods have filled

    it with water from the bogs.

    He listened for a little, and, says he,

    I am myself the poorest, for I have

    travel led the bare road, and by the glitter-ing footsteps of the sea; and the tattered

    doublet of particoloured cloth upon my

    bad the torn pointed shoes upon my

    feet have ever irked me, because of the

    towered city full of noble raiment *hich

    was in my heart. And I have been the more

    alone upon the roads and by the sea, be-

    cause I heard in my heart the rustling of

    the rose-bordered dress of her who is more

    subtle than Angus, the Subtle-Hearted,

    and more full of the beauty of laughter than

    the Bald, and more full of the wisdom

    of tears than White-Breasted Deirdre, and

    more lovely than a bursting dawn to them

    that are lost in the darkness. Therefore, I l

    award the tithe to myself; but yet, because

    I am doh all things, I give it unto you.

    So he flung the bread and the strips of

    baong the beggars, and they fought

    with many cries until the last scrap was

    eaten. But meanwhile the friars he

    glee man to his cross, a upright in

    the hole, and shovel led the earth in at the

    foot, and trampled it level and hard. So

    then they went away, but the beggars stared

    on, sitting round the cross. But when the

    sun was sinking, they also got up to go, for

    the air was getting chilly. And as soon as

    they had gone a little way, the wolves, who

    had been showing themselves on the edge

    of a neighb coppice, came nearer,

    and the birds wheeled closer and closer.

    5 1

    Stay, outcasts, yet a little while, the cruci-

    fied one called in a weak voice to the beg-

    gars, ahe beasts and the birds

    from me. But the beggars were angry

    because he had called them outcasts, so

    they threw stones and mud at him, and

    went their w;~y. Then the wolves gathered

    at the foot of the cross, and the birds flew

    lower and lower. And presently the birds

    lighted all at once upon his head and arms

    and shoulders, and began to peck at him,

    and the wolves began to eat his feet.  Out-

    casts, he moaned,  have you also turned

    against the outcast ?

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