My mum Xena gave birth to
a blue dog which my human parents had called Fionn mac Cumhail. Xena and Fionn
both fought very hard for 3 days to keep him alive but in the end he passed
away. I was the strongest pup of the
litter and always managed to get what I wanted so my human mum and dad decided
to call me Fionn to carry on my brothers fight to live.
Fionn mac
Cumhail
Fionn mac Cumhail is
a celebrated hero in Irish literature, with stories concerning him continuous in
the literature for well over a thousand years. Fionn is always portrayed as a
great warrior and seer. As a seven-year-old boy, he met on the banks of the
Boyne with a seer called Finneigeas. Finneigeas had dedicated the past seven
years of his life to catching the Salmon of Knowledge, which swam in the river
and would impart the knowledge of the world on the first person to taste it.
While Fionn was
there, Finneigeas caught the salmon, and with much joy put it on the spit to
cook, entrusting the cooking to Fionn but warning him not to taste it. After a
time, Fionn went to see if the fish was cooked, however, he touched it with his
thumb and burnt himself, leaving a blister. To ease the pain, he put his thumb
in his mouth, and thus became the first person to taste the salmon. When
Finneigeas looked at the boy's face, he saw the wisdom shining in it, and knew
that the salmon was no good to him. Ever after that, if Fionn needed to know
something, he put his thumb into his mouth and the knowledge came to him.
When Fionn was ten
years old, he went to the court of Conn Ceadchathach at Tara for the November
feast. The king was desolate, for every other year on that night the citadel was
burned down by an otherworld being called Aillen, who lulled everyone to sleep
with his magical music. Fionn offered to stand guard, and was given a spear by
Fiacha. When he heard the magical harp-music, he pressed the point of the spear
into his forehead, and the pain kept him awake. He jumped up to face Aillen, who
released a blaze of fire from his mouth, but Fionn quenched the blaze with his
cloak and put Aillen to flight. Chasing him to Sliabh Fuaidh in Co. Armagh,
Fionn cast his spear at Aillen and slew him. He then returned to Tara, and Conn
Ceadchathach was so grateful that he installed Fionn as leader of all the Fianna
in Ireland.
Fionn is portrayed as
a great hunter of deer and wild pigs, and had many hounds, including two
especially great hounds, Bran and Sceolaing. The king of the Dal nAraidhe, in
Co.Antrim and Co.Down, desired Fionn's aunt Uirne as a wife, and Fionn agreed to
the marriage. However, the king's first wife was jealous and turned Uirne into a
hound. The warrior Luaghaidh Lagha slew the king as a result, and Uirne regained
her shape and married Luaghaidh. She bore him triplets, but at the same time
brought forth two pups. They were the cousins of Fionn, and became Bran and
Sceolaing, his two hunting dogs.
Bran was Fionn's
favourite, and he loved it intensely. Bran and Fionn made great noise together
at feasts, and whenever any of the Fianna were hungry Bran would go into the
forest and bring their meal to them. However, once Bran was yelping impatiently,
and in anger Fionn struck it on the head with his whip. Bran stared at its
master with tear-filled eyes, then wrenched itself free and raced to a lake
where it drowned itself. Every time after that when Fionn heard the baying of a
hunting hound, his heart nearly broke.