Neighbourhood of Dublin 410-11: In another poem called "The Chase of Lough Lean" (Killarney), Oisin, who had travelled to Killarney to visit St. Patrick, recounts to him at great length the mighty deeds of the Fena and their hounds, and being indignant at the inhospitable treatment he received from the saint's housekeeper, says:– "I have often slept abroad on the hills, under the grey dew [frost] on the foliage of the trees, and I was not accustomed to a supperless bed while there was a stag on "yonder hill." St. Patrick replies:–"Thou hast not a bed without food, for thou gettest seven cakes of bread, a large roll of butter [miscaun], and a quarter of beef every day." To which Oisin rejoins:– "I saw a berry on the rowan tree [mountain ash] larger twice than thy roll, and I saw an ivy leaf larger and wider than thy cake of bread, and I saw a quarter of a blackbird which was larger than thy quarter of beef. It is this that fills my soul with sadness to be in thy house, poor-hearted wretch that thou art !"