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184 Gaelic Society of Inverness.<br />

friends with the kiiii:? of Alba and took sei-vice under him. But<br />

the king came to hear of Deirdre's beauty and he must have her.<br />

The men of Alba gat<strong>here</strong>d against the brothers and they had to<br />

fly. Their flight was heard of in Erin, and Conchobar was pressed<br />

to receive them back. Fergus Mac Roich, Conchobar's stepfather,<br />

and Cormac, Conchobar's son, took the sons of Uisnech under<br />

their protection, and brought them to Ulster. Conchobar got some<br />

of his minions to draw Fergus and Cormac away from them, and<br />

then the sons of Uisnech were attacked, defenceless as they were,<br />

and were slain. Conchobar took Deirdre as his wife, but a year<br />

afterwards she killed herself, by striking her head against a rock,<br />

from gi"ief for Nois and from Conchobar's cruelty.<br />

The Scotch version of the tale differs from the Irish only in<br />

the ending. Deirdre and the sons of Uisnech were sailing on<br />

the sea ; a fog came on and they accidentally put in under the<br />

walls of Conchobar's town. The three landed and left Deirdre<br />

on board ; they met Conchobar and he slew them. Then Conchobar<br />

came down to the sea and invited Deirdre to land. She refused,<br />

unless he allowed her to go to the bodies of the sons of Uisnech:<br />

" Gun taibhi'inn mo thri poga meala<br />

Do na ti'i corpa caomh geala."<br />

On her way she met a carpenter slicing with a knife. She gave<br />

him her ring for the knife, went to the bodies, stretched herself<br />

beside them, and killed herself with the knife.<br />

Macpherson's poem of Darthula opens with an invocation to<br />

the moon, and then we are introduced to the sons of Uisnech<br />

and Darthula, on the sea near Cairbar'sc?im\>, driven t<strong>here</strong> by a<br />

storm, the night before their death. This brings us in meclias res,<br />

as all true epics should do, and the foregoing part of the story<br />

is told in the speeches of Darthula and Nathos, a somewhat confusing<br />

dialogue, but doubtless "epic." These previous facts are,<br />

that Darthula is daughter of Colla. Cairbar, who usurped the<br />

Irish throne on the death of Cuchulinn, regent for young Cormac,<br />

and put Cormac to death, was in love with Darthula. Cuchulinn<br />

was uncle to the sons of Uisnech, and Nathos took command on<br />

his death, but had to fly, for the Irish army deserted him for<br />

Cairbar. On his way to Scotland he fell in with Darthula, and<br />

rescued her from Cairl)ar ; they put out for Scotland, but were<br />

driven back. Cairbar met them and killed them with arrows,<br />

one of which pierced Darthula. Macplier.son naively says: "The<br />

poem relates the death of Darthula difl'erently from the connnon<br />

tradition. This account is the n)ost probable, as suicide seems to

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