The Aran Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 179 pages of information about The Aran Islands.
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The Aran Islands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 179 pages of information about The Aran Islands.

The man came out before him and said he had missed the greatest wonder ever was, and that a noble person was after coming down with a fine suit on him and cutting off one of the wings from the great fish.

‘And there’ll be the same necessity on her for two mornings more,’ said the farmer, ‘and you’d do right to come and look on it.’

But the young man said he would not come.

The next morning he went out with his cows, and he took the sword and the suit and the black horse out of the rock, and he rode faster than the wind till he came where the king’s daughter was sitting on the shore.  When the people saw him coming there was great wonder on them to know if it was the same man they had seen the day before.  The king’s daughter called out to him to come and kneel before her, and when he kneeled down she took her scissors and cut off a lock of hair from the back of his head and hid it in her clothes.

Then the great worm came in from the sea, and he went down into the surf and cut the other wing off from it.  All the sea turned red with the bleeding out of it, till it swam away and left them.

That evening the farmer came out before him and told him of the great wonder he had missed, and asked him would he go the next day and look on it.  The young man said he would not go.

The third day he came again on the black horse to where the king’s daughter was sitting on a golden chair waiting for the great worm.  When it came in from the sea the young man went down before it, and every time it opened its mouth to eat him, he struck into its mouth, till his sword went out through its neck, and it rolled back and died.

Then he rode off faster than the wind, and he put the suit and the sword and the black horse into the rock, and drove home the cows.

The farmer was there before him and he told him that there was to be a great marriage feast held for three days, and on the third day the king’s daughter would be married to the man that killed the great worm, if they were able to find him.

A great feast was held, and men of great strength came and said it was themselves were after killing the great worm.

But on the third day the young man put on the suit, and strapped the sword to his side like an officer, and got on the black horse and rode faster than the wind, till he came to the palace.

The king’s daughter saw him, and she brought him in and made him kneel down before her.  Then she looked at the back of his head and saw the place where she had cut off the lock with her own hand.  She led him in to the king, and they were married, and the young man was given all the estate.

That is my story.

Two recent attempts to carry out evictions on the island came to nothing, for each time a sudden storm rose, by, it is said, the power of a native witch, when the steamer was approaching, and made it impossible to land.

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Project Gutenberg
The Aran Islands from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.