Page:The Allies Fairy Book.djvu/77

 followed them into the rath. It’s there he heard the Irish fulparnee and the folpornee, the rap-lay-hoota and the rollya-boolya that they had there, and every man of them crying out as loud as he could: “My horse and bridle and saddle! My horse and bridle and saddle!”

“By my hand,” said Guleesh, “my boy, that’s not bad. I’ll imitate ye,” and he cried out as well as they: “My horse and bridle and saddle! My horse and bridle and saddle!” And on the moment there was a fine horse, with a bridle of gold and a saddle of silver, standing before him. He leaped up on it, and the moment he was on its back he saw clearly that the rath was full of horses, and of little people going riding on them.

Said a man of them to him: “Are you coming with us to-night, Guleesh?”

“I am surely,” said Guleesh.

“If you are, come along,” said the little man, and out with them altogether, riding like the wind, faster than the fastest horse ever you saw a-hunting, and faster than the fox and the hounds at his tail.

The cold winter’s wind that was before them, they overtook her, and the cold winter’s wind that was behind them, she did not overtake them. And stop nor stay of that full race did they make none until they came to the brink of the sea.

Then every one of them said: “Hie over cap! Hie over cap!” and that moment they were up in the air, and before Guleesh had time to remember where he was they were down on dry land again, and were going like the wind. At last they stood, and a man of them said to Guleesh: “Guleesh, do you know where you are now?”

“Not a know,” said Guleesh.

“You’re in Rome, Guleesh,” said he; “but we’re going farther than that. The daughter of the King of