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Chapter 3  
     
1.
Tara noblest of hills,  
2.
under which is Ireland of the furrows,  
3.
the lofty city of Cormac son of Art,  
4.
son of mighty Conn of the hundred fights.  
5.
Cormac, constant was his prosperity,  
6.
he was sage, he was poet, he was prince;  
7.
he was a true judge of the men of Fene.  
8.
he was a friend, he was a comrade.  
9.
Cormac, who gained fifty fights,  
10.
published and distributed the Psalter of Tara;  
11.
in this Psalter there is all the best we have of history.  
12.
It is this Psalter that tells of seven warlike high kings of Ireland;  
13.
five kings of the provinces it makes,  
14.
the king of Ireland and her viceroy.  
15.
In it is set down on every hand what is the right of every king of a province,
 
16.
what is the right of the king of Tara eastward  
17.
from the king of every songful province;  
18.
The correlation, the synchronising of every man,  
19.
of each king one with another together;  
20.
the boundary of every province marked by a stone-wall,
 
21.
from the foot to the full barony.  
22.
Baronies thirty in number it finds in the baronies of each province;  
23.
in each province of them there are seven noble score of chief fortresses.  
24.
Cormac knew the number being king;  
25.
he made the circuit of Ireland three times;  
26.
he brought away a representative for every walled town, and showed them in Tara.
 
27.
Duma na Giall (purity of palms), is called from the representatives Cormac brought together;
 
28.
to Cormac was revealed in their house every marvel that is in Tara.
 
29.
There was revealed to Fergus, as it is, the place in which is Fergus' Cross;
 
30.
the Slope of the Chariots marks the limits between it and the Crooked Trenches.
 
31.
The Crooked Trenches where they slew the maidens,
 
32.
The Crooked Trenches of the crooked dealings west from Rath Grainde below,
 
33.
they remain free from decay both of them.
 
34.
Eastward from Rath Grainde in the glen is the Marsh of strong Tara;
 
35.
east of the Marsh there are Rath Nessa and Rath Conchobair.
 
36.
The Measure of the Head of grim Cuchullin lies north-east from Rath Conchobair;
 
37.
the dimension of his Shield under its Boss is wonderful and huge.
 
38.
The Grave of Mal and Midna is in Tara since their slaying:
 
39.
thence is their grave and their sepulchre, on account of the head they boasted.
 
40.
Let us consider too the Hall of the Heroes which is called the Palace of Vain Women;
 
41.
the House of the Warriors, it was no mean hall, with fourteen doors.
 
42.
The Mound of the Women after their betrayal was hard by the upper structure;
 
43.
south of it are Dall and Dorcha,
 
44.
they were bowed down both alike.
 
45.
Dall is south-west of sad Dorcha,
 
46.
from them was called Duma Dall-Bodra;
 
47.
each of them killed the other in fighting over their alms.
 
48.
The dwarf came, to his sorrow, to interpose between them,
 
49.
so they killed the dwarf under their feet, through their dimness of sight.
 
50.
Westward from the Grave of this dwarf are Mael, Bloc, and Bluicne—foolish their wisdom!
 
51.
over them are the three stones that the Prince of great Macha flung.
 
52.
The secret Rampart of the three Whispers is between the Hall and the Heroes' Well;
 
53.
the Stone of the Warriors is east of the road, over against the Rath of the Synod.
 
54.
The Rath of the Synods, noble excellence, lies north of the Precinct of Tara;
 
55.
eastward from the Rath beside the Stone is the house from where Beniat escaped.
 
56.
The Synod of Patrick was at the noble Rath,
 
57.
The Synod of Brendan and of Ruadan,
 
58.
The Synod of Adamnan thereafter, assembled to curse Irgalach.
 
59.
Below from the Rath of the Kings (it is not false) are the Grave of Cu, the Grave of Cethen, the hill of the Ox;
 
60.
east of the Rath is the grave of Maine son of Munremar.  
61.
There remains south of the Rath of the King the Rath of Loegaire and his Keep and his Grave on the floor of his Keep;
 
62.
the righteous one of the Lord overcame him.
 
63.
Behold the noble House of Mairise chief for beauty in Ireland;  
64.
it is high to the west, very high to the north, level eastward of it,  
65.
it was a triumph of the mason  
66.
It is there was situated the house, on the margin of Nemnach;  
67.
about this house away across Meath were scattered the houses of Tara.  
68.
Tara, from where Hill of Tara is named,  
69.
Rampart of Tea wife of the son of Miled,  
70.
Nemnach is east of it, a stream through the glen on which Cormac set the first mill.
 
71.
Ciarnait, hand-maid of upright Cormac,
 
72.
used to feed from her quern many hundreds,  
73.
ten measures a day she had to grind,  
74.
it was no task for an idler.  
75.
The noble king came upon her at her task all alone in her house,  
76.
and got her with child privily;  
77.
presently she was unable for heavy grinding.  
78.
Thereupon the grandson of Conn took pity on her,  
79.
he brought a mill-wright over the wide sea;  
80.
the first mill of Cormac mac Art  
81.
was a help to Ciarnait.  
82.
The Caprach of Cormac is in the Rath of the Kings;  
83.
eastward from the Rath of the Kings (that is the truth of it) is the Well of the Numbering of the Clans,
 
84.
which is called by the three names: Liaig Dail Duib Duirb, Tuath Linde, and Tipra Bo Finne,  
85.
three names to designate it,  
86.
to make known the well of Tara.  
87.
Another spring (mighty force), which flows south-west from Tara;  
88.
Calf is its name, though it never sucked a cow;  
89.
Cormac's Kitchen is on its margin.  
90.
There rise north of Tara Adlaic and Diadlaic of the host;  
91.
two springs flow diverse thence down to the Carn of the Boys.  
92.
Between the two Carns of the Lads is the Deisel of Tara south of Crinna,  
93.
a sward that brings luck before going to death,  
94.
where men used to make a turn right-hand-wise.  
95.
North of the great hill is the Rath of Colman, the brown Domnan;  
96.
the Grave of Caelchu under a like heap of stones,  
97.
lies north-east from the Hall of the Women of Tara.  
98.
Caelchu son of Loarn son of Ruad, son of Cormac Cas, who loved victory,  
99.
was the first representative out of the men of Munster;  
100.
from him descend the princes of Ros Temrach.  
101.
The House of Tara, round which is the rath,  
102.
from it was given to each his due;  
103.
honour still continues to such as them  
104.
at the courts of kings and princes.  
105.
King and Chief of the Poets,  
106.
sage, farmer, they received their due,  
107.
couches that torches burn not,  
108.
the thighs and the chine-steaks.  
109.
Leech and spencer, stout smith, steward, portly butler,  
110.
the heads of the beasts to all of them in the house of the yellow-haired king.  
111.
Engraver, famed architect, shield-maker, and keen soldier,  
112.
in the king's house they drank a cup;  
113.
this was their proper due ... a fist.  
114.
Jester, Chess-player, sprawling buffoon, piper, cheating juggler,  
115.
the shank was their share of meat in truth,  
116.
when they came into the king's house.  
117.
The shins were the share of the noble musician,  
118.
the flute-player and rhymester both,  
119.
the horn-blower, the piper, both consumed the broken meats.  
120.
A charge on the prince of Meath, were the cobblers and comb-makers,  
121.
the due of the strong skilled folk was the fat underside of the shoulder.  
122.
The backs, the chines in every dwelling were given to druids and doorkeepers.  
123.
the uruscla belonged without question to the maidens after serving the house of Tara.  
124.
Colum Cille, who used to set slaves free,,  
125.
broke the battle against Diarmait;  
126.
before he went away over-sea the lords of Tara gave him obedience.  
127.
The faith of Christ who suffered in the flesh has brought all strength to nothing;  
128.
because of the sorrow of the people of God in its house  
129.
He gave not protection to Tara.  

 
 
 

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