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he has fulfilled the last condition; but before ever he had fulfilled a single one of them, my heart went out to the comely champion of the Feni. I was willing then, I am ready now, to become the bride of the huntsman's son." NOTES. I. _The Birds of the Mystic Lake._ The incident of the birds coming to the mystic lake is taken from "The Voyage of Maildun," a translation of which is given in Joyce's Old Celtic Romances. The operations of the birds were witnessed by Maildun and his companions, who, in the course of their wanderings, had arrived at the Isle of the Mystic Lake. One of Maildun's companions, Diuran, on seeing the wonder, said to the others: "Let us bathe in the lake, and we shall obtain a renewal of our youth like the birds." But they said: "Not so, for the bird has left the poison of his old age and decay in the water." _Diuran_, however, plunged in, and swam about for some time; after which he took a little of the water and mixed it in his mouth, and in the end he swallowed a small quantity. He then came out perfectly sound and whole, and remained so ever after as long as he lived. But none of the others ventured in. The return of the birds in the character of the cormorants of the western seas and guardians of the lake does not occur in the old tale. The oldest copy of the voyage is in the book of "The Dun Cow" (about the year 1100). O'Curry says the voyage was undertaken about the year 700. It was made by Maildun in search of pirates who had slain his father. The story is full of fancy. II. _The House in the Lake._ In the Irish annals lake dwellings, which were formerly common in Ireland, are called _crannogs_, from crann, a tree, either because of the timber framework of which the island was formed or of the wooden huts erected thereon. Some _crannogs_ appear to have been veritable islands, the only means of communication with the land being canoes. Remains of these have been frequently found near the dwelling, in some instances alongside the landing stage, as if sunk at their moorings. "Favourite sites for _crannogs_ were marshes, small loughs surrounded by woods and large sheets of water. As providing good fishing grounds the entrance to or exit of a stream from a lake was eagerly selected."--"Lake Dwellings of Ireland," Col. Wood Martin, M.R.I.A. III. _Brian's Water-dress._ Brian, Ur, and Urcar, the three sons of Turenn, were Dedanaan chiefs. They slew
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