"Lord," said he, "Heaven reward thee."
"And I will enhance the atonement," said Bendigeid Vran; "for I will give unto thee a caldron, the property of which is, that if one of thy men be slain to-day, and be cast therein, to-morrow he will be as well as ever he was at the best, except that he will not regain his speech."
And thereupon he gave him great thanks, and very joyful was he for that cause.
And the next morning they paid Matholwch the horses as long as the trained horses lasted. And then they journeyed into another commot, where they paid him with colts until the whole had been paid; and from thenceforth that commot was called Talebolion.
And a second night sat they together. "My lord," said Matholwch, "whence hadst thou the caldron which thou hast given me?"
"I had it of a man who had been in thy land," said he, "and I would not give it except to one from there."
"Who was it?" asked he.
"Llassar Llaesgyvnewid. He came here from Ireland with Kymideu Kymeinvoll, his wife, who escaped from the Iron House in Ireland when it was made red hot around them, and fled hither. And it is a marvel to me that thou shouldst know nothing concerning the matter."
"Something I do know," said he, "and as much as I know I will tell thee. One day I was hunting in Ireland, and I came to the mound at the head of the lake, which is called the Lake of the Caldron. And I beheld a huge yellow-haired man coming from the lake, with a caldron upon his back. And he was a man of vast size and of horrid aspect, and a woman followed after him. And if the man was tall, twice as large as he was the woman; and they came towards me and greeted me. So I took them with me, and maintained them. And they were with me for a year. And that year I had them with me not grudgingly. But thenceforth was there murmuring because that they were with me. For from the beginning of the fourth month they had begun to make themselves hated, and to be disorderly in the land, committing outrages, and molesting and harassing the nobles and ladies. And thenceforward my people rose up and besought me to part with them, and they bade me to choose between them and my dominions. And I applied to the council of my country to know what should be done concerning them; for of their own free will they would not go, neither could they be compelled against their will, through fighting. And [the people of the country] being in this strait, they caused a chamber to be made all of iron. Now, when the chamber was ready, there came there every smith that was in Ireland, and every one who owned tongs and hammer. And they caused coals to be piled up as high as the top of the chamber. And they had the man, and the woman, and the children, served with plenty of meat and drink; but when it was known that they were drunk, they began to put fire to the coals about the chamber, and they blew it with bellows until the house was red hot all around them. Then was there a council held in the centre of the floor of the chamber. And the man tarried until the plates of iron were all of a white-heat; and then, by reason of the great heat, the man dashed against the plates with his shoulder and struck them out, and his wife followed him; but, except him and his wife, none escaped thence. And then I suppose, lord," said Matholwch, unto Bendigeid Vran, "that he came over unto thee."
"Doubtless he came here," said he, "and gave unto me the caldron."