But Branán cut his palm and fed the sea. He sang the géiss of his grandfather’s sword: “I am the knot the noose cannot tighten. I am the step the wolf-track does not follow.”
Branán broke the bone and gave it. The sea opened like a wound in a dream. No fire. No window. Only a ceiling of roots and a floor of old bones sewn into sentences. In the center: the cauldron, upside down, and beside it the hag—Caillech of the slack jaw— weaving a net from the spit of orphans. kelt xalqlari epik ijodi
Branán of the silver torque came forward, his shield bitten by a hundred serpent-edges. “Who will cross the nine waves of forgetting,” said the king, “and bring back the cauldron of tongues? For the hag of the gray rock has stolen our speech, and our poets sing only the sound of rain.” But Branán cut his palm and fed the sea
“You came for speech,” she said. “But speech is a debt. Every word you have spoken was borrowed from the dead. I have taken the tongue of your tribe. It hangs in my cage made of rib and thistle. Sing me a song that has never been sung, and I will give it back—with interest.” The sea opened like a wound in a dream