3/24/2023 0 Comments Goban artest![]() ![]() She held the king’s son, and ransomed him for her own husband and son. Unwilling to let them go, the King sent his son to fetch it, not realising that the name of this implement was actually a coded message for Gobán’s wife. He told the king that he could not complete the work without his “crooked and more crooked”, a tool he had left at home. One look at the king, and the Gobán sussed out his intention. ![]() He decided to kill them so that his fort would go unrivalled. The Gobán and his son built a fort of a foreign king that was of such exquisite quality that the king grew jealous. The monks swiftly returned the ladder, and paid him in full. The Gobán started to remove stones from the structure and toss them on the ground, jovially saying that it was as good a way to reach the ground as any. To force him to agree they removed the ladder from the tower he was working on, trapping him. While building a monastery for a group of monks the monks demanded that he lower his price. He could fashion a throwing spear while you counted to five, and shape a spearhead with three strokes of a hammer. As a craftsman he had such skill, finesse, deftness and accuracy that he could hammer a nail into a high beam by tossing both nail and hammer into the air. Many of the stories of the Gobán are about outwitting people who try to cheat him out of a fair payment. He had no airs or graces about himself, always creating objects of beauty and craftsmanship, no matter how little the person was able to pay him for the work, but he hated any sign of meanness. He was as famous for his quick witted responses as he was for his great skill. The Gobán Saor was a famous craftsman of Irish legend, being a rather more homely version of the smith god Giobhnú.
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