[3-3] Stowe and H. 1. 13.
[4-4] YBL. 48b, 16.
“Yet another company there came to the same hill in Slane of Meath,” said macRoth. “A large, noble, [5]fiery[5] man at the head of that company; foxy-red hair he had; huge, crimson-red eyes in his head; bulging as far as the bend of a warrior’s finger is either of the very large crimson, kingly eyes he had; a many-coloured cloak about him; [6]a wheel-shaped brooch of silver therein;[6] a grey shield he bore [7]on his left arm;[7] a slender, blue lance above him; [8]a bright, hooded shirt tucked around him that reached down to his knees;[8] [9]a sword with silver hilt at his hip; a spear remarkable for keenness in his revengeful right hand;[9] a blood-smeared, becrimsoned company [W.5414.] around him; himself covered with wounds and blood in their midst.”
[5-5] YBL. 48b, 47.
[6-6] YBL. 48b, 49-50.
[7-7] YBL. 48b, 51.
[8-8] YBL. 48b, 52-49a, 1.
[9-9] YBL. 48b, 51-52.
“Now who might he be?” asked Ailill of Fergus. “Well do we know him,” Fergus made answer. “He is the bold, the ruthless, [1]the swift-moving eagle;[1] the eager lance; the goring beast; [2]the torrent[2] of the Colbtha; [3]the border-gate of the north of Erin;[3] the triumphant hero from Baile; he is the shaft (?); [a] he is the bellowing hero from Bernas (’the Gap’); the furious bull; Menn son of Salcholga, from Rena (’the Waterways’) of the Boyne [4]in the north; he hath come to take vengeance on ye for his bloody wounds and his sores which ye inflicted on him afore."[4]
[1-1] Translating from Stowe and H. 1. 13.
[2-2] Stowe and H. 1. 13.
[3-3] YBL. 49a, 7.
[a] A word has fallen out in the MS.
[4-4] Stowe and H. 1. 13.
“Yet another company came thither to the same mound in Slane of Meath,” continued macRoth. [5]"High spirited and worthy of one another.[5] A long-jawed, sallow-faced warrior, [6]huge, broad, and tall,[6] at the head of that company; black hair on his head; long limbs are his legs; a cloak of red curly wool about him; a brooch of white silver in the cloak over his breast; an [7]all-white,[7] linen shirt next to his skin; a gory-red shield with a boss [8]of gold[8] he bore; a sword with hilt of [9]white[9] silver on his left side; a sharp-cornered, gold-socketed spear he held over him; [10]a broad, grey, interwoven spear-head, fairly set on an ashen shaft, in his hand."[10] “But, who might he be?” Ailill asked of Fergus. “Truly, we know him,” Fergus made answer. [11]"The man of three stout blows has come;[11] the man of three highways is he; the man of three roads, the man of three paths, the man of three [W.5431.] ways; the man of three victories, the man of three triumphs; [1]the man of three shouts; the man that breaks battles on foes in another province;[1] Fergna son of Findchoem, king of Burach, [2]from Coronn,[2] [3]royal hospitaller[3] of Ulster in the north, has come thither.”


