to take what he wanted from the haggard; and he went and put his back to the haggard, and pulled out some of the straw, and the straw ran after him to the door to smother him, but he ran from the haggard. He went again to the criers of the kitchen, and they asked him what he was looking for. He said he was looking for water.
“There is a well outside, and take what you want of it.”
He went to the well and put his hands into the water, and took up some of it with him, and the water was running after him in the hope of drowning him, but he ran from it. Then again he knocked for the criers of the kitchen, and they asked him, “What are you looking for now?”
“Fire,” said he, “and a pot.”
“Go to the house of the owas, Oramach;[1] there is fire and a pot there, and take them with you.”
He went into the house of the owas, Oramach, and the owas gave a laugh, and said the boiler was not cooking the meat for want of fire, and he would boil it with his head. And the two caught hold of each other in the keen, close clutches of wrestling. If you were to go seeking for fun from the west of the world to the fresh-
- ↑ Possibly identical with the Amhas (pron. owas), Ormanach of Campbell's “Connal Gulban.”