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+Project Gutenberg's Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by Standish O'Grady
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Early Bardic Literature, Ireland
+
+Author: Standish O'Grady
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8109]
+Release Date: August 4, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ar dTeanga Fein
+
+
+
+
+
+EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND.
+
+
+By Standish O'Grady
+
+11 Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
+
+
+
+Scattered over the surface of every country in Europe may be found
+sepulchral monuments, the remains of pre-historic times and nations, and
+of a phase of life will civilisation which has long since passed away.
+No country in Europe is without its cromlechs and dolmens, huge earthen
+tumuli, great flagged sepulchres, and enclosures of tall pillar-stones.
+The men by whom these works were made, so interesting in themselves, and
+so different from anything of the kind erected since, were not strangers
+and aliens, but our own ancestors, and out of their rude civilisation
+our own has slowly grown. Of that elder phase of European civilisation
+no record or tradition has been anywhere bequeathed to us. Of its
+nature, and the ideas and sentiments whereby it was sustained, nought
+may now be learned save by an examination of those tombs themselves, and
+of the dumb remnants, from time to time exhumed out of their soil--rude
+instruments of clay, flint, brass, and gold, and by speculations and
+reasonings founded upon these archaeological gleanings, meagre and
+sapless.
+
+For after the explorer has broken up, certainly desecrated, and perhaps
+destroyed, those noble sepulchral raths; after he has disinterred
+the bones laid there once by pious hands, and the urn with its
+unrecognisable ashes of king or warrior, and by the industrious labour
+of years hoarded his fruitless treasure of stone celt and arrow-head, of
+brazen sword and gold fibula and torque; and after the savant has rammed
+many skulls with sawdust, measuring their capacity, and has adorned them
+with some obscure label, and has tabulated and arranged the implements
+and decorations of flint and metal in the glazed cases of the cold gaunt
+museum, the imagination, unsatisfied and revolted, shrinks back from all
+that he has done. Still we continue to inquire, receiving from him no
+adequate response, Who were those ancient chieftains and warriors for
+whom an affectionate people raised those strange tombs? What life did
+they lead? What deeds perform? How did their personality affect the
+minds of their people and posterity? How did our ancestors look upon
+those great tombs, certainly not reared to be forgotten, and how did
+they--those huge monumental pebbles and swelling raths--enter into and
+affect the civilisation or religion of the times?
+
+We see the cromlech with its massive slab and immense supporting
+pillars, but we vainly endeavour to imagine for whom it was first
+erected, and how that greater than cyclopean house affected the minds
+of those who made it, or those who were reared in its neighbourhood
+or within reach of its influence. We see the stone cist with its great
+smooth flags, the rocky cairn, and huge barrow and massive walled
+cathair, but the interest which they invariably excite is only
+aroused to subside again unsatisfied. From this department of European
+antiquities the historian retires baffled, and the dry savant is alone
+master of the field, but a field which, as cultivated by him alone,
+remains barren or fertile only in things the reverse of exhilarating. An
+antiquarian museum is more melancholy than a tomb.
+
+But there is one country in Europe in which, by virtue of a marvellous
+strength and tenacity of the historical intellect, and of filial
+devotedness to the memory of their ancestors, there have been preserved
+down into the early phases of mediaeval civilisation, and then committed
+to the sure guardianship of manuscript, the hymns, ballads, stories, and
+chronicles, the names, pedigrees, achievements, and even characters, of
+those ancient kings and warriors over whom those massive cromlechs were
+erected and great cairns piled. There is not a conspicuous sepulchral
+monument in Ireland, the traditional history of which is not recorded
+in our ancient literature, and of the heroes in whose honour they were
+raised. In the rest of Europe there is not a single barrow, dolmen, or
+cist of which the ancient traditional history is recorded; in Ireland
+there is hardly one of which it is not. And these histories are in many
+cases as rich and circumstantial as that of men of the greatest eminence
+who have lived in modern times. Granted that the imagination which for
+centuries followed with eager interest the lives of these heroes, beheld
+as gigantic what was not so, as romantic and heroic what was neither one
+nor the other, still the great fact remains, that it was beside and in
+connection with the mounds and cairns that this history was elaborated,
+and elaborated concerning them and concerning the heroes to whom they
+were sacred.
+
+On the plain of Tara, beside the little stream Nemanna, itself famous
+as that which first turned a mill-wheel in Ireland, there lies a barrow,
+not itself very conspicuous in the midst of others, all named and
+illustrious in the ancient literature of the country. The ancient hero
+there interred is to the student of the Irish bardic literature a
+figure as familiar and clearly seen as any personage in the Biographia
+Britannica. We know the name he bore as a boy and the name he bore as
+a man. We know the names of his father and his grandfather, and of the
+father of his grandfather, of his mother, and the father and mother of
+his mother, and the pedigrees and histories of each of these. We know
+the name of his nurse, and of his children, and of his wife, and the
+character of his wife, and of the father and mother of his wife, and
+where they lived and were buried. We know all the striking events of his
+boyhood and manhood, the names of his horses and his weapons, his own
+character and his friends, male and female. We know his battles, and the
+names of those whom he slew in battle, and how he was himself slain, and
+by whose hands. We know his physical and spiritual characteristics,
+the device upon his shield, and how that was originated, carved, and
+painted, by whom. We know the colour of his hair, the date of his birth
+and of his death, and his relations, in time and otherwise, with the
+remainder of the princes and warriors with whom, in that mound-raising
+period of our history, he was connected, in hostility or friendship; and
+all this enshrined in ancient song, the transmitted traditions of the
+people who raised that barrow, and who laid within it sorrowing their
+brave ruler and, defender. That mound is the tomb of Cuculain, once king
+of the district in which Dundalk stands to-day, and the ruins of whose
+earthen fortification may still be seen two miles from that town.
+
+This is a single instance, and used merely as an example, but one out
+of a multitude almost as striking. There is not a king of Ireland,
+described as such in the ancient annals, whose barrow is not mentioned
+in these or other compositions, and every one of which may at the
+present day be identified where the ignorant plebeian or the ignorant
+patrician has not destroyed them. The early History of Ireland clings
+around and grows out of the Irish barrows until, with almost the
+universality of that primeval forest from which Ireland took one of
+its ancient names, the whole isle and all within it was clothed with
+a nobler raiment, invisible, but not the less real, of a full and
+luxuriant history, from whose presence, all-embracing, no part was free.
+Of the many poetical and rhetorical titles lavished upon this country,
+none is truer than that which calls her the Isle of Song. Her ancient
+history passed unceasingly into the realm of artistic representation;
+the history of one generation became the poetry of the next, until the
+whole island was illuminated and coloured by the poetry of the bards.
+Productions of mere fancy and imagination these songs are not,
+though fancy and imagination may have coloured and shaped all their
+subject-matter, but the names are names of men and women who once lived
+and died in Ireland, and over whom their people raised the swelling rath
+and reared the rocky cromlech. In the sepulchral monuments their names
+were preserved, and in the performance of sacred rites, and the holding
+of games, fairs, and assemblies in their honour, the memory of their
+achievements kept fresh, till the traditions that clung around these
+places were inshrined in tales which were finally incorporated in the
+Leabhar na Huidhré and the Book of Leinster.
+
+Pre-historic narrative is of two kinds--in one the imagination is at
+work consciously, in the other unconsciously. Legends of the former
+class are the product of a lettered and learned age. The story floats
+loosely in a world of imagination. The other sort of pre-historic
+narrative clings close to the soil, and to visible and tangible
+objects. It may be legend, but it is legend believed in as history never
+consciously invented, and growing out of certain spots of the earth's
+surface, and supported by and drawing its life from the soil like a
+natural growth.
+
+Such are the early Irish tales that cling around the mounds and
+cromlechs as that by which they are sustained, which was originally
+their source, and sustained them afterwards in a strong enduring life.
+It is evident that these cannot be classed with stories that float
+vaguely in an ideal world, which may happen in one place as well as
+another, and in which the names might be disarrayed without changing
+the character and consistency of the tale, and its relations, in time or
+otherwise, with other tales.
+
+Foreigners are surprised to find the Irish claim for their own country
+an antiquity and a history prior to that of the neighbouring countries.
+Herein lie the proof and the explanation. The traditions and history of
+the mound-raising period have in other countries passed away. Foreign
+conquest, or less intrinsic force of imagination, and pious sentiment
+have suffered them to fall into oblivion; but in Ireland they have been
+all preserved in their original fulness and vigour, hardly a hue has
+faded, hardly a minute circumstance or articulation been suffered to
+decay.
+
+The enthusiasm with which the Irish intellect seized upon the grand
+moral life of Christianity, and ideals so different from, and so hostile
+to, those of the heroic age, did not consume the traditions or destroy
+the pious and reverent spirit in which men still looked back upon those
+monuments of their own pagan teachers and kings, and the deep spirit
+of patriotism and affection with which the mind still clung to the
+old heroic age, whose types were warlike prowess, physical beauty,
+generosity, hospitality, love of family and nation, and all those noble
+attributes which constituted the heroic character as distinguished from
+the saintly. The Danish conquest, with its profound modification of
+Irish society, and consequent disruption of old habits and conditions
+of life, did not dissipate it; nor the more dangerous conquest of the
+Normans, with their own innate nobility of character, chivalrous daring,
+and continental grace and civilisation; nor the Elizabethan convulsions
+and systematic repression and destruction of all native phases of
+thought and feeling. Through all these storms, which successively
+assailed the heroic literature of ancient Ireland, it still held itself
+undestroyed. There were still found generous minds to shelter and shield
+the old tales and ballads, to feel the nobleness of that life of which
+they were the outcome, and to resolve that the soil of Ireland should
+not, so far as they had the power to prevent it, be denuded of its
+raiment of history and historic romance, or reduced again to primeval
+nakedness. The fruit of this persistency and unquenched love of country
+and its ancient traditions, is left to be enjoyed by us. There is not
+through the length and breadth of the country a conspicuous rath or
+barrow of which we cannot find the traditional history preserved in
+this ancient literature. The mounds of Tara, the great barrows along
+the shores of the Boyne, the raths of Slieve Mish, and Rathcrogan, and
+Teltown, the stone caiseals of Aran and Innishowen, and those that alone
+or in smaller groups stud the country over, are all, or nearly all,
+mentioned in this ancient literature, with the names and traditional
+histories of those over whom they were raised.
+
+There is one thing to be learned from all this, which is, that we, at
+least, should not suffer these ancient monuments to be destroyed, whose
+history has been thus so astonishingly preserved. The English farmer may
+tear down the barrow which is unfortunate enough to be situated within
+his bounds. Neither he nor his neighbours know or can tell anything
+about its ancient history; the removed earth will help to make his
+cattle fatter and improve his crops, the stones will be useful to pave
+his roads and build his fences, and the savant can enjoy the rest; but
+the Irish farmer and landlord should not do or suffer this.
+
+The instinctive reverence of the peasantry has hitherto been a great
+preservative; but the spread of education has to a considerable extent
+impaired this kindly sentiment, and the progress of scientific farming,
+and the anxiety of the Royal Irish Academy to collect antiquarian
+trifles, have already led to the reckless destruction of too many. I
+think that no one who reads the first two volumes of this history would
+greatly care to bear a hand in the destruction of that tomb at Tara,
+in which long since his people laid the bones of Cuculain; and I think,
+too, that they would not like to destroy any other monument of the same
+age, when they know that the history of its occupant and its own name
+are preserved in the ancient literature, and that they may one day learn
+all that is to be known concerning it. I am sure that if the case were
+put fairly to the Irish landlords and country gentlemen, they would
+neither inflict nor permit this outrage upon the antiquities of their
+country. The Irish country gentleman prides himself on his love of
+trees, and entertains a very wholesome contempt for the mercantile boor
+who, on purchasing an old place, chops down the best timber for the
+market. And yet a tree, though cut down, may be replaced. One elm tree
+is as good as another, and the thinned wood, by proper treatment, will
+be as dense as ever; but the ancient mound, once carted away, can never
+be replaced any more. When the study of the Irish literary records is
+revived, as it certainly will be revived, the old history of each of
+these raths and cromlechs will be brought again into the light, and
+one new interest of a beautiful and edifying nature attached to the
+landscape, and affecting wholly for good the minds of our people.
+
+Irishmen are often taunted with the fact that their history is yet
+unwritten, but that the Irish, as a nation, have been careless of their
+past is refuted by the facts which I have mentioned. A people who alone
+in Europe preserved, not in dry chronicles alone, but illuminated and
+adorned with all that fancy could suggest in ballad, and tale, and rude
+epic, the history of the mound-raising period, are not justly liable
+to this taunt. Until very modern times, history was the one absorbing
+pursuit of the Irish secular intellect, the delight of the noble, and
+the solace of the vile.
+
+At present, indeed, the apathy on this subject is, I believe, without
+parallel in the world. It would seem as if the Irish, extreme in all
+things, at one time thought of nothing but their history, and, at
+another, thought of everything but it. Unlike those who write on
+other subjects, the author of a work on Irish history has to labour
+simultaneously at a two-fold task--he has to create the interest to
+which he intends to address himself.
+
+The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties from
+which the corresponding period in the histories of other countries is
+free. The surrounding nations escape the difficulty by having nothing to
+record. The Irish historian is immersed in perplexity on account of the
+mass of material ready to his hand. The English have lost utterly all
+record of those centuries before which the Irish historian stands with
+dismay and hesitation, not through deficiency of materials, but through
+their excess. Had nought but the chronicles been preserved the task
+would have been simple. We would then have had merely to determine
+approximately the date of the introduction of letters, and allowing a
+margin on account of the bardic system and the commission of family and
+national history to the keeping of rhymed and alliterated verse, fix
+upon some reasonable point, and set down in order, the old successions
+of kings and the battles and other remarkable events. But in Irish
+history there remains, demanding treatment, that other immense mass of
+literature of an imaginative nature, illuminating with anecdote and tale
+the events and personages mentioned simply and without comment by
+the chronicler. It is this poetic literature which constitutes the
+stumbling-block, as it constitutes also the glory, of early Irish
+history, for it cannot be rejected and it cannot be retained. It cannot
+be rejected, because it contains historical matter which is consonant
+with and illuminates the dry lists of the chronologist, and it cannot
+be retained, for popular poetry is not history; and the task of
+distinguishing In such literature the fact from the fiction--where there
+is certainly fact and certainly fiction--is one of the most difficult to
+which the intellect can apply itself. That this difficulty has not been
+hitherto surmounted by Irish writers is no just reproach. For the last
+century, intellects of the highest attainments, trained and educated
+to the last degree, have been vainly endeavouring to solve a similar
+question in the far less copious and less varied heroic literature of
+Greece. Yet the labours of Wolfe, Grote, Mahaffy, Geddes, and Gladstone,
+have not been sufficient to set at rest the small question, whether it
+was one man or two or many who composed the Iliad and Odyssey, while the
+reality of the achievements of Achilles and even his existence might be
+denied or asserted by a scholar without general reproach. When this is
+the case with regard to the great heroes of the Iliad, I fancy it will
+be some time before the same problem will have been solved for the minor
+characters, and as it affects Thersites, or that eminent artist who
+dwelt at home in Hyla, being by far the most excellent of leather
+cutters. When, therefore, Greek still meets Greek in an interminable and
+apparently bloodless contest over the disputed body of the Iliad, and
+still no end appears, surely it would be madness for any one to sit down
+and gaily distinguish true from false in the immense and complex mass
+of the Irish bardic literature, having in his ears this century-lasting
+struggle over a single Greek poem and a single small phase of the
+pre-historic life of Hellas.
+
+In the Irish heroic literature, the presence or absence of the
+marvellous supplies _no test whatsoever_ as to the general truth or
+falsehood of the tale in which they appear. The marvellous is supplied
+with greater abundance in the account of the battle of Clontarf, and
+the wars of the O'Briens with the Normans, than in the tale in which
+is described the foundation of Emain Macha by Kimbay. Exact-thinking,
+scientific France has not hesitated to paint the battles of Louis XIV.
+with similar hues; and England, though by no means fertile in angelic
+interpositions, delights to adorn the barren tracts of her more popular
+histories with apocryphal anecdotes.
+
+How then should this heroic literature of Ireland be treated in
+connection with the history of the country? The true method would
+certainly be to print it exactly as it is without excision or
+condensation. Immense it is, and immense it must remain. No men living,
+and no men to live, will ever so exhaust the meaning of any single tale
+as to render its publication unnecessary for the study of others. The
+order adopted should be that which the bards themselves deter mined, any
+other would be premature, and I think no other will ever take its place.
+At the commencement should stand the passage from the Book of Invasions,
+describing the occupation of the isle by Queen Keasair and her
+companions, and along with it every discoverable tale or poem dealing
+with this event and those characters. After that, all that remains of
+the cycle of which Partholan was the protagonist. Thirdly, all
+that relates to Nemeth and his sons, their wars with curt Kical the
+bow-legged, and all that relates to the Fomoroh of the Nemedian epoch,
+then first moving dimly in the forefront of our history. After that, the
+great Fir-bolgic cycle, a cycle janus-faced, looking on one side to the
+mythological period and the wars of the gods, and on the other, to the
+heroic, and more particularly to the Ultonian cycle. In the next place,
+the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of the Irish gods
+who, having conquered the Fir-bolgs, like the Greek gods of the age of
+gold dwelt visibly in the island until the coming of the Clan Milith,
+out of Spain. In the sixth, the Milesian invasion, and every accessible
+statement concerning the sons and kindred of Milesius. In the seventh,
+the disconnected tales dealing with those local heroes whose history
+is not connected with the great cycles, but who in the _fasti_ fill
+the spaces between the divine period and the heroic. In the eighth, the
+heroic cycles, the Ultonian, the Temairian, and the Fenian, and after
+these the historic tales that, without forming cycles, accompany the
+course of history down to the extinction of Irish independence, and
+the transference to aliens of all the great sources of authority in the
+island.
+
+This great work when completed will be of that kind of which no other
+European nation can supply an example. Every public library in the world
+will find it necessary to procure a copy. The chronicles will then
+cease to be so closely and exclusively studied. Every history of ancient
+Ireland will consist of more or less intelligent comments upon and
+theories formed in connection with this great series--theories which, in
+general, will only be formed in order to be destroyed. What the present
+age demands upon the subject of antique Irish history--an exact
+and scientific treatment of the facts supplied by our native
+authorities--will be demanded for ever. It will never be supplied. The
+history of Ireland will be contained in this huge publication. In it the
+poet will find endless themes of song, the philosopher strange workings
+of the human mind, the archeologist a mass of information, marvellous in
+amount and quality, with regard to primitive ideas and habits of life,
+and the rationalist materials for framing a scientific history of
+Ireland, which will be acceptable in proportion to the readableness
+of his style, and the mode in which his views may harmonize with the
+prevailing humour and complexion of his contemporaries.
+
+Such a work it is evident could not be effected by a single individual.
+It must be a public and national undertaking, carried out under the
+supervision of the Royal Irish Academy, at the expense of the country.
+
+The publication of the Irish bardic remains in the way that I have
+mentioned, is the only true and valuable method of presenting the
+history of Ireland to the notice of the world. The mode which I have
+myself adopted, that other being out of the question, is open to many
+obvious objections; but in the existing state of the Irish mind on the
+subject, no other is possible to an individual writer. I desire to
+make this heroic period once again a portion of the imagination of the
+country, and its chief characters as familiar in the minds of our people
+as they once were. As mere history, and treated in the method in which
+history is generally written at the present day, a work dealing with
+the early Irish kings and heroes would certainly not secure an audience.
+Those who demand such a treatment forget that there is not in the
+country an interest on the subject to which to appeal. A work treating
+of early Irish kings, in the same way in which the historians of
+neighbouring countries treat of their own early kings, would be, to the
+Irish public generally, unreadable. It might enjoy the reputation
+of being well written, and as such receive an honourable place in
+half-a-dozen public libraries, but it would be otherwise left severely
+alone. It would never make its way through that frozen zone which, on
+this subject, surrounds the Irish mind.
+
+On the other hand, Irishmen are as ready as others to feel an interest
+in a human character, having themselves the ordinary instincts,
+passions, and curiosities of human nature. If I can awake an interest
+in the career of even a single ancient Irish king, I shall establish a
+train of thoughts, which will advance easily from thence to the state
+of society in which he lived, and the kings and heroes who surrounded,
+preceded, or followed him. Attention and interest once fully aroused,
+concerning even one feature of this landscape of ancient history, could
+be easily widened and extended in its scope.
+
+Now, if nothing remained of early Irish history save the dry _fasti_ of
+the chronicles and the Brehon laws, this would, I think, be a perfectly
+legitimate object of ambition, and would be consonant with my ideal
+of what the perfect flower of historical literature should be, to
+illuminate a tale embodying the former by hues derived from the Senchus
+Mor.
+
+But in Irish literature there has been preserved, along with the _fasti_
+and the laws, this immense mass of ancient ballad, tale, and epic, whose
+origin is lost in the mists of extreme antiquity, and in which have been
+preserved the characters, relationships, adventures, and achievements of
+the vast majority of the personages whose names, in a gaunt nakedness,
+fill the books of the chroniclers. Around each of the greater heroes
+there groups itself a mass of bardic literature, varying in tone
+and statement, but preserving a substantial unity as to the general
+character and the more important achievements of the hero, and also,
+a fact upon which their general historical accuracy may be based with
+confidence, exhibiting a knowledge of that same prior and subsequent
+history recorded in the _fasti_. The literature which groups
+itself around a hero exhibits not only an unity with itself, but an
+acquaintance with the general course of the history of the country, and
+with preceding and succeeding kings.
+
+The students of Irish literature do not require to be told this; for
+those who are not, I would give a single instance as an illustration.
+
+In the battle of Gabra, fought in the third century, and in which Oscar,
+perhaps the greatest of all the Irish heroes heading the Fianna Eireen,
+contended against Cairbry of the Liffey, King of Ireland, and his
+troops, Cairbry on his side announces to his warriors that he would
+rather perish in this battle than suffer one of the Fianna to survive;
+but while he spoke--
+
+ "Barran suddenly exclaimed--
+ 'Remember Mall Mucreema, remember Art.
+
+ "'Our ancestors fell there
+ By force of the treachery of the Fians;
+ Remember the hard tributes,
+ Remember the extraordinary pride.'"
+
+Here the poet, singing only of the events of the battle of Gabra, shows
+that he was well-acquainted with all the relations subsisting for a long
+time between the Fians and the Royal family. The battle of Mucreema
+was fought by Cairbry's grandfather, Art, against Lewy Mac Conn and the
+Fianna Eireen.
+
+Again, in the tale of the battle of Moy Leana, in which Conn of
+the Hundred Battles, the father of this same Art, is the principal
+character, the author of the tale mentions many times circumstances
+relating to his father, Felimy Rectmar, and his grandfather, Tuhall
+Tectmar. Such is the whole of the Irish literature, not vague, nebulous,
+and shifting, but following the course of the _fasti_, and regulated and
+determined by them. This argument has been used by Mr. Gladstone
+with great confidence, in order to show the substantial historical
+truthfulness of the Iliad, and that it is in fact a portion of a
+continuous historic sequence.
+
+Now this being admitted, that the course of Irish history, as laid down
+by the chroniclers, was familiar to the authors of the tales and heroic
+ballads, one of two things must be admitted, either that the events and
+kings did succeed one another in the order mentioned by the chroniclers,
+or that what the chroniclers laid down was then taken as the theme of
+song by the bards, and illuminated and adorned according to their wont.
+
+The second of these suppositions is one which I think few will adopt.
+Can we believe it possible that the bards, who actually supported
+themselves by the amount of pleasure which they gave their audiences,
+would have forsaken those subjects which were already popular, and those
+kings and heroes whose splendour and achievements must have affected,
+profoundly, the popular imagination, in order to invent stories to
+illuminate fabricated names. The thing is quite impossible. A practice
+which we can trace to the edge of that period whose historical character
+may be proved to demonstration, we may conclude to have extended on
+into the period immediately preceding that. When bards illuminated with
+stories and marvellous circumstances the battle of Clontarf and the
+battle of Moyrath, we may believe their predecessors to have done the
+same for the earlier centuries. The absence of an imaginative literature
+other than historical shows also that the literature must have followed,
+regularly, the course of the history, and was not an archaeological
+attempt to create an interest in names and events which were found
+in the chronicles. It is, therefore, a reasonable conclusion that the
+bardic literature, where it reveals a clear sequence in the order of
+events, and where there is no antecedent improbability, supplies a
+trustworthy guide to the general course of our history.
+
+So far as the clear light of history reaches, so far may these tales be
+proved to be historical. It is, therefore, reasonable to suppose that
+the same consonance between them and the actual course of events which
+subsisted during the period which lies in clear light, marked also that
+other preceding period of which the light is no longer dry.
+
+The earliest manuscript of these tales is the Leabhar [Note: Leabar na
+Heera.] na Huidhré, a work of the eleventh century, so that we may
+feel sure that we have them in a condition unimpaired by the revival of
+learning, or any archaeological restoration or improvement. Now, of some
+of these there have been preserved copies in other later MSS., which
+differ very little from the copies preserved in the Leabhar na Huidhré,
+from which we may conclude that these tales had arrived at a fixed
+state, and a point at which it was considered wrong to interfere with
+the text.
+
+The feast of Bricrind is one of the tales preserved in this manuscript.
+The author of the tale in its present form, whenever he lived, composed
+it, having before him original books which he collated, using his
+judgment at times upon the materials to his hand. At one stage he
+observes that the books are at variance on a certain point, namely, that
+at which Cuculain, Conal the Victorious, and Laery Buada go to the lake
+of Uath in order to be judged by him. Some of the books, according
+to the author, stated that on this occasion the two latter behaved
+unfairly, but he agreed with those books which did not state this.
+
+We have, therefore, a tale penned in the eleventh century, composed at
+some time prior to this, and itself collected, not from oral tradition,
+but from books. These considerations would, therefore, render it
+extremely probable that the tales of the Ultonian period, with which the
+Leabhar na Huidhré is principally concerned, were committed to writing
+at a very early period.
+
+To strengthen still further the general historic credibility of these
+tales, and to show how close to the events and heroes described must
+have been the bards who originally composed them, I would urge the
+following considerations.
+
+With the advent of Christianity the mound-raising period passed away.
+The Irish heroic tales have their source in, and draw their interest
+from, the mounds and those laid in them. It would, therefore, be
+extremely improbable that the bards of the Christian period, when the
+days of rath and cairn had departed, would modify, to any considerable
+extent, the literature produced in conditions of society which had
+passed away.
+
+Again, with the advent of Christianity, and the hold which the new faith
+took upon the finest and boldest minds in the country, it is plain that
+the golden age of bardic composition ended. The loss to the bards was
+direct, by the withdrawal of so much intellect from their ranks, and
+indirect, by the general substitution of other ideas for those whose
+ministers they themselves were. It is, therefore, probable that the age
+of production and creation, with regard to the ethnic history, ceased
+about the fifth and sixth centuries, and that, about that time, men
+began to gather up into a collected form the floating literature
+connected with the pagan period. The general current of mediaeval
+opinion attributes the collection of tales and ballads now known as the
+Tân-Bo-Cooalney to St. Ciaran, the great founder of the monastery of
+Clonmacnoise.
+
+But if this be the case, we are enabled to take another step in the
+history of this most valuable literature. The tales of the Leabhar na
+Huidhré are in prose, but prose whose source and original is poetry. The
+author, from time to time, as if quoting an authority, breaks out with
+verse; and I think there is no Irish tale in existence without these
+rudimentary traces of a prior metrical cycle. The style and language
+are quite different, and indicate two distinct epochs. The prose tale is
+founded upon a metrical original, and composed in the meretricious style
+then in fashion, while the old metrical excerpts are pure and simple.
+This is sufficient, in a country like Ireland in those primitive times,
+to necessitate a considerable step into the past, if we desire to get at
+the originals upon which the prose tales were founded.
+
+For in ancient Ireland the conservatism of the people was very great. It
+is the case in all primitive societies. Individual, initiative,
+personal enterprise are content to work within a very small sphere. In
+agriculture, laws, customs, and modes of literary composition, primitive
+and simple societies are very adverse to change.
+
+When we see how closely the Christian compilers followed the early
+authorities, we can well believe that in the ethnic times no mind would
+have been sufficiently daring or sacrilegious to alter or pervert those
+epics which were in their eyes at the same time true and sacred.
+
+In the perusal of the Irish literature, we see that the strength of
+this conservative instinct has been of the greatest service in the
+preservation of the early monuments in their purity. So much is this the
+case, that in many tales the most flagrant contradictions appear, the
+author or scribe being unwilling to depart at all from that which he
+found handed down. For instance, in the "Great Breach of Murthemney,"
+we find Laeg at one moment killed, and in the next riding black
+Shanglan off the field. From this conservatism and careful following of
+authority, and the _littera scripta_, or word once spoken, I conclude
+that the distance in time between the prose tale and the metrical
+originals was very great, and, unless under such exceptional
+circumstances as the revolution caused by the introduction of
+Christianity, could not have been brought about within hundreds of
+years. Moreover, this same conservatism would have caused the tales
+concerning heroes to grow very slowly once they were actually formed.
+All the noteworthy events of the hero's life and his characteristics
+must have formed the original of the tales concerning him, which would
+have been composed during his life, or not long after his death.
+
+I have not met a single tale, whether in verse or prose, in which it is
+not clearly seen that the author was not following authorities before
+him. Such traces of invention or decoration as may be met with are not
+suffered to interfere with the conduct of the tale and the statement of
+facts. They fill empty niches and adorn vacant places. For instance,
+if a king is represented as crossing the sea, we find that the causes
+leading to this, the place whence he set out, his companions, &c., are
+derived from the authorities, but the bard, at the same time, permits
+himself to give what seems to him to be an eloquent or beautiful
+description of the sea, and the appearance presented by the many-oared
+galleys. And yet the last transcription or recension of the majority of
+the tales was effected in Christian times, and in an age characterised
+by considerable classical attainments--a time when the imagination might
+have been expected to shake itself loose from old restraints, and freely
+invent. _A fortiori_, the more ancient bards, those of the ruder ethnic
+times, would have clung still closer to authority, deriving all their
+imaginative representations from preceding minstrels. There was no
+conscious invention at any time. Each cycle and tale grew from historic
+roots, and was developed from actual fact. So much may indeed be said
+for the more ancient tales, but the Ultonian cycle deals with events
+well within the historic period.
+
+The era of Concobar Mac Nessa and the Red Branch knights of Ulster was
+long subsequent to the floruerunt of the Irish gods and their Titan-like
+opponents of this latter period, the names alone can be fairly held to
+be historic. What swells out the Irish chronicles to such portentous
+dimensions is the history of the gods and giants rationalised by
+mediaeval historians. Unable to ignore or excide what filled so much of
+the imagination of the country, and unable, as Christians, to believe
+in the divinity of the Tuátha De Danan and their predecessors, they
+rationalised all the pre-Milesian record. But the disappearance of the
+gods does not yet bring us within the penumbra of history. After the
+death of the sons of Milesius we find a long roll of kings. These were
+all topical heroes, founders of nations, and believed, by the tribes and
+tribal confederacies which they founded, to have been in their day
+the chief kings of Ireland. The point fixed upon by the accurate and
+sceptical Tiherna as the starting-point of trustworthy Irish history,
+was one long subsequent to the floruerunt of the gods; and the age of
+Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights was more than two centuries later
+than that of Kimbay and the foundation of Emain Macha. The floruit of
+Cuculain, therefore, falls completely within the historical penumbra,
+and the more carefully the enormous, and in the main mutually consistent
+and self-supporting, historical remains dealing with this period are
+studied, the more will this be believed. The minuteness, accuracy,
+extent, and verisimilitude of the literature, chronicles, pedigrees,
+&c., relating to this period, will cause the student to wonder more and
+more as he examines and collates, seeing the marvellous self-consistency
+and consentaneity of such a mass of varied recorded matter. The age,
+indeed, breathes sublimity, and abounds with the marvellous, the
+romantic, and the grotesque. But as I have already stated, the presence
+or absence of these qualities has no crucial significance. Love and
+reverence and the poetic imagination always effect such changes in
+the object of their passion. They are the essential condition of the
+transference of the real into the world of art. AEval, of Carriglea, the
+fairy queen of Munster, is one of the most important characters in the
+history of the battle of Clontarf, the character of which, and of the
+events that preceded and followed its occurrence, and the chieftains and
+warriors who fought on one side and the other, are identical, whether
+described by the bard singing, or by the monkish chronicler jotting down
+in plain prose the fasti for the year. The reader of these volumes can
+make such deductions as he pleases, on this account, from the bardic
+history of the Red Branch, and clip the wings of the tale, so that it
+may with him travel pedestrian. I know there are others, like myself,
+who will not hesitate for once to let the fancy roam and luxuriate in
+the larger spaces and freer airs of ancient song, nor fear that their
+sanity will be imperilled by the shouting of semi-divine heroes, and the
+sight of Cuculain entering battles with the Tuátha De Danan around him.
+
+I hope on some future occasion to examine more minutely the character
+and place in literature of the Irish bardic remains, and put forward
+here these general considerations, from which the reader may presume
+that the Ultonian cycle, dealing as it does with Cuculain and his
+contemporaries, is in the main true to the facts of the time, and that
+his history, and that of the other heroes who figure in these volumes,
+is, on the whole, and omitting the marvellous, sufficiently reliable.
+I would ask the reader, who may be inclined to think that the principal
+character is too chivalrous and refined for the age, to peruse for
+himself the tale named the "Great Breach of Murthemney." He will there,
+and in many other tales and poems besides, see that the noble and
+pathetic interest which attaches to his character is substantially the
+same as I have represented in these volumes. But unless the student
+has read the whole of the Ultonian cycle, he should be cautious in
+condemning a departure in my work from any particular version of an
+event which he may have himself met. Of many minor events there are more
+than one version, and many scenes and assertions which he may think
+of importance would yet, by being related, cause inconsistency and
+contradiction. Of the nature of the work in which all should be
+introduced I have already given my opinion.
+
+For the rest, I have related one or two great events in the life of
+Cuculain in such a way as to give a description as clear and correct as
+possible of his own character and history as related by the bards, of
+those celebrated men and women who were his contemporaries and of his
+relations with them, of the gods and supernatural powers in whom the
+people then believed, and of the state of civilisation which then
+prevailed. If I have done my task well, the reader will have been
+supplied, without any intensity of application on his part--a condition
+of the public mind upon which no historian of this country should
+count--with some knowledge of ancient Irish history, and with an
+interest in the subject which may lead him to peruse for himself that
+ancient literature, and to read works of a more strictly scientific
+nature upon the subject than those which I have yet written. But until
+such an interest is aroused, it is useless to swell the mass of valuable
+critical matter, which everyone at present is very well content to leave
+unread.
+
+In the first volume, however, I have committed this error, that I did
+not permit it to be seen with sufficient clearness that the characters
+and chief events of the tale are absolutely historic; and that much
+of the colouring, inasmuch as its source must have been the centuries
+immediately succeeding the floruerunt of those characters, is also
+reliable as history, while the remainder is true to the times and the
+state of society which then obtained. The story seems to progress too
+much in the air, too little in time and space, and seems to be more
+of the nature of legend and romance than of actual historic fact seen
+through an imaginative medium. Such is the history of Concobar Mac Nessa
+and his knights--historic fact seen through the eyes of a loving wonder.
+
+Indeed, I must confess that the blaze of bardic light which illuminates
+those centuries at first so dazzled the eye and disturbed the judgment,
+that I saw only the literature, only the epic and dramatic interest, and
+did not see as I should the distinctly historical character of the age
+around which that literature revolves, wrongly deeming that a literature
+so noble, and dealing with events so remote, must have originated
+mainly or altogether in the imagination. All the borders of the epic
+representation at which, in the first volume, I have aimed, seem to
+melt, and wander away vaguely on every side into space and time. I have
+now taken care to remedy that defect, supplying to the unset picture the
+clear historical frame to which it is entitled. I will also request the
+reader, when the two volumes may diverge in tone or statement, to
+attach greater importance to the second, as the result of wider and more
+careful reading and more matured reflection.
+
+A great English poet, himself a severe student, pronounced the early
+history of his own country to be a mere scuffling of kites and crows, as
+indeed are all wars which lack the sacred bard, and the sacred bard is
+absent where the kites and crows pick out his eyes. That the Irish kings
+and heroes should succeed one another, surrounded by a blaze of bardic
+light, in which both themselves and all those who were contemporaneous
+with them are seen clearly and distinctly, was natural in a country
+where in each little realm or sub-kingdom the ard-ollav was equal in
+dignity to the king, which is proved by the equivalence of their cries.
+The dawn of English history is in the seventh century--a late dawn, dark
+and sombre, without a ray of cheerful sunshine; that of Ireland dates
+reliably from a point before the commencement of the Christian era
+luminous with that light which never was on sea or land--thronged
+with heroic forms of men and women--terrible with the presence of the
+supernatural and its over-arching power.
+
+Educated Irishmen are ignorant of, and indifferent to, their history;
+yet from the hold of that history they cannot shake themselves free. It
+still haunts the imagination, like Mordecai at Haman's gate, a cause
+of continual annoyance and vexation. An Irishman can no more release
+himself from his history than he can absolve himself from social and
+domestic duties. He may outrage it, but he cannot placidly ignore.
+Hence the uneasy, impatient feeling with which the subject is generally
+regarded.
+
+I think that I do not exaggerate when I say that the majority of
+educated Irishmen would feel grateful to the man who informed them that
+the history of their country was valueless and unworthy of study, that
+the pre-Christian history was a myth, the post-Christian mere annals,
+the mediaeval a scuffling of kites and crows, and the modern alone
+deserving of some slight consideration. That writer will be in Ireland
+most praised who sets latest the commencement of our history. Without
+study he will be pronounced sober and rational before the critic opens
+the book. So anxious is the Irish mind to see that effaced which it is
+conscious of having neglected.
+
+There are two compositions which affect an interest comparable to that
+which Ireland claims for her bardic literature, One is the Ossian of
+MacPherson, the other the Nibelungen Lied.
+
+If we are to suppose Macpherson faithfully to have written down,
+printed, and published the floating disconnected poems which he found
+lingering in the Scotch highlands, how small, comparatively, would be
+their value as indications of antique thought and feeling, reduced then
+for the first time to writing, sixteen hundred years after the time of
+Ossian and his heroes, in a country not the home of those heroes, and
+destitute of the regular bardic organisation. The Ossianic tales and
+poems still told and sung by the Irish peasantry at the present day in
+the country of Ossian and Oscar, would be, if collected even now, quite
+as valuable, if not more so. Truer to the antique these latter are,
+for in them the cycles are not blended. The Red Branch heroes are not
+confused with Ossian's Fianna.
+
+But MacPherson's Ossian is not a translation. In the publications of the
+Irish Ossianic poetry we see what that poetry really was--rude, homely,
+plain-spoken, leagues removed from the nebulous sublimity of MacPherson.
+
+With regard to the other, the Germans, who naturally desire to refer
+its composition to as remote a date as possible, and who arguing from
+no scientific data, but only style, ascribe the authorship of the
+Nibelungen to a poet living in the latter part of the twelfth century.
+Be it remembered, that the poem does not purport to be a collection of
+the scattered fragments of a cycle, but an original composition, then
+actually imagined and written. It does not even purport to deal with the
+ethnic times. _Its heroes are Christian heroes. They attend Mass._ The
+poem is not true, even to the leading features of the late period of
+history in which it is placed, if it have any habitat in the world of
+history at all. Attila, who died A.D. 450, and Theodoric, who did not
+die until the succeeding century, meet as coevals.
+
+Turn we now from the sole boast of Germany to one out of a hundred in
+the Irish bardic literature. The Tân-bo-Cooalney was transcribed into
+the Leabhar na Huidhré in the eleventh century a manuscript whose date
+has been established by the consentaneity of Irish, French, and German
+scholarship. Mark, it was transcribed, not composed. The scribe records
+the fact:--
+
+ "Ego qui scripsi hanc historian aut vero fabulam, quibusdam fidem
+ in hac historiâ aut fabulâ non commodo."
+
+The Tân-bo-Cooalney was therefore _transcribed_ by an ancient penman to
+the parchment of a still existing manuscript, in the century before
+that in which the German epic is presumed, from style only, and in the
+opinion of Germans, to have been _composed_.
+
+The same scribe adds this comment with regard to its contents:--
+
+ "Qaedam autem poetica figmenta, quaedam ad delectationem
+ stultorum."
+
+Such scorn could not have been felt by one living in an age of bardic
+production. That independence and originality of thought, which caused
+Milton to despise the poets of the Restoration, are impossible in
+the simple stages of civilisation. The scribe who appended this very
+interesting comment to the subject of his own handiwork must have been
+removed by centuries from the date of its compilation. That the tale
+was, in his time, an ancient one, is therefore rendered extremely
+probable, the scribe himself indicating how completely out of sympathy
+he is with this form of literature, its antiquity and peculiar
+archaeological interest being, doubtless, the cause of the
+transcription.
+
+Again, a close study of its contents, as of the contents of all the
+Irish historic tales, proves that in its present form, whenever
+that form was superadded, it is but a representation in prose of a
+pre-existing metrical original. Under this head I have already made some
+remarks, which, I shall request the reader to re-peruse [Note: Pages 23
+to 27]
+
+Once more, it deals with a particular event in Irish history, and with
+distinct and definite kings, heroes, and bards, who flourished in
+the epoch of which it treats. In the synchronisms of Tiherna, in the
+metrical chronology of Flann, in all the various historical compositions
+produced in various parts of the country, the main features and leading
+characters of the Tân-bo-Cooalney suffer no material change, while the
+minor divergencies show that the chronology of the annals and annalistic
+poems were not drawn from the tale, but owe their origin to other
+sources. Moreover, this epic is but a portion of the great Ultonian or
+Red Branch cycle, all the parts of which pre-suppose and support one
+another; and that cycle is itself a portion of the history of Ireland,
+and pre-supposes other preceding and succeeding cyles, preceding and
+succeeding kings. The event of which this epic treats occurred at the
+time of the Incarnation, and its characters are the leading Irish kings
+and warriors of that date. Such is the Tân-bo-Cooalney.
+
+This being so, how have the English literary classes recognised, or
+how treated, our claim to the possession of an antique literature of
+peculiar historical interest, and by reason of that antiquity, a matter
+of concern to all Aryan nations? The conquest has not more constituted
+the English Parliament guardian and trustee of Ireland, for purposes of
+legislation and government, than it has vested the welfare and fame
+of our literature and antiquities in the hands of English scholarship.
+London is the headquarters of the intellectualism and of the literary
+and historical culture of the Empire. It is the sole dispenser of fame.
+It alone influences the mind of the country and guides thought and
+sentiment. It can make and mar reputations. What it scorns or ignores,
+the world, too, ignores and scorns. How then has the native literature
+of Ireland been treated by the representatives of English scholarship
+and literary culture? Mr. Carlyle is the first man of letters of the
+day, his the highest name as a critic upon, and historian of, the
+past life of Europe. Let us hear him upon this subject, admittedly of
+European importance.
+
+Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. III., page 136. "Not only as the oldest
+Tradition of Modern Europe does it--the Nibelungen--possess a high
+antiquarian interest, but farther, and even in the shape we now see
+it under, unless the epics of the son of Fingal had some sort of
+authenticity, it is our oldest poem also."
+
+Poor Ireland, with her hundred ancient epics, standing at the door of
+the temple of fame, or, indeed, quite behind the vestibule out of the
+way! To see the Swabian enter in, crowned, to a flourish of somewhat
+barbarous music, was indeed bad enough, but Mr. MacPherson!
+
+They manage these things rather better in France, _vide passim_ "La
+Révue Celtique."
+
+Of the literary value of the bardic literature I fear to write at all,
+lest I should not know how to make an end. Rude indeed it is, but
+great. Like the central chamber of that huge tumulus [Note: New Grange
+anciently Cnobgha, and now also Knowth.] on the Boyne, overarched with
+massive unhewn rocks, its very ruggedness strikes an awe which the
+orderly arrangement of smaller and more reasonable thoughts, cut smooth
+by instruments inherited from classic times, fails so often to inspire.
+The labour of the Attic chisel may be seen since its invention in every
+other literary workshop of Europe, and seen in every other laboratory of
+thought the transmitted divine fire of the Hebrew. The bardic literature
+of Erin stands alone, as distinctively and genuinely Irish as the race
+itself, or the natural aspects of the island. Rude indeed it is, but
+like the hills which its authors tenanted with gods, holding dells
+[Note: Those sacred hills will generally be found to have this
+character.] of the most perfect beauty, springs of the most touching
+pathos. On page 33, Vol. I., will be seen a poem [Note: Publications
+of Ossianic Society, page 303, Vol. IV.] by Fionn upon the spring-time,
+made, as the old unknown historian says, to prove his poetic powers--a
+poem whose antique language relegates it to a period long prior to the
+tales of the Leabhar na Huidhré, one which, if we were to meet side
+by side with the "Ode to Night," by Alcman, in the Greek anthology, we
+would not be surprised; or those lines on page 203, Vol. I., the song of
+Cuculain, forsaken by his people, watching the frontier of his country--
+
+ "Alone in defence of the Ultonians,
+ Solitary keeping ward over the province"
+
+or the death [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, Vol. I.] of Oscar,
+on pages 34 and 35, Vol. I., an excerpt condensed from the Battle of
+Gabra. Innumerable such tender and thrilling passages.
+
+To all great nations their history presents itself under the aspect
+of poetry; a drama exciting pity and terror; an epic with unbroken
+continuity, and a wide range of thought, when the intellect is satisfied
+with coherence and unity, and the imagination by extent and diversity.
+Such is the bardic history of Ireland, but with this literary defect. A
+perfect epic is only possible when the critical spirit begins to be
+in the ascendant, for with the critical spirit comes that distrust and
+apathy towards the spontaneous literature of early times, which permit
+some great poet so to shape and alter the old materials as to construct
+a harmonious and internally consistent tale, observing throughout a
+sense of proportion and a due relation of the parts. Such a clipping
+and alteration of the authorities would have seemed sacrilege to earlier
+bards. In mediaeval Ireland there was, indeed, a subtle spirit of
+criticism; but under its influence, being as it was of scholastic
+origin, no great singing men appeared, re-fashioning the old rude epics;
+and yet, the very shortcomings of the Irish tales, from a literary point
+of view, increase their importance from a historical. Of poetry, as
+distinguised from metrical composition, these ancient bards knew little.
+The bardic literature, profoundly poetic though it be, in the eyes of
+our ancestors was history, and never was anything else. As history it
+was originally composed, and as history bound in the chains of metre,
+that it might not be lost or dissipated passing through the minds
+of men, and as history it was translated into prose and committed
+to parchment. Accordingly, no tale is without its defects as poetry,
+possessing therefore necessarily, a corresponding value as history.
+But that there was in the country, in very early times, a high and rare
+poetic culture of the lyric kind, native in its character, ethnic in
+origin, unaffected by scholastic culture which, as we know, took a
+different direction; that one exquisite poem, in which the father
+of Ossian praises the beauty of the springtime in anapaestic [Note:
+Cettemain | cain ree! | ro sair | an cuct | "He, Fionn MacCool, learned
+the three compositions which distinguish the poets, the TEINM LAEGHA,
+the IMUS OF OSNA, and the DICEDUE DICCENAIB, and it was then Fionn
+composed this poem to prove his poetry." In which of these three forms
+of metre the Ode to the spring-time is written I know not. Its form
+throughout is distinctly anapaestic.--S. O'G.] verse, would, even though
+it stood alone, both by the fact of its composition and the fact of its
+preservation, fully prove.
+
+Much and careful study, indeed, it requires, if we would compel these
+ancient epics to yield up their greatness or their beauty, or even their
+logical coherence and imaginative unity--broken, scattered portions as
+they all are of that one enormous epic, the bardic history of Ireland.
+At the best we read without the key. The magic of the names is gone,
+or can only be partially recovered by the most tender and sympathetic
+study. Indeed, without reading all or many, we will not understand
+the superficial meaning of even one. For instance, in one of the many
+histories of Cuculain's many battles, we read this--
+
+"It was said that Lu Mac AEthleen was assisting him."
+
+This at first seems meaningless, the bard seeing no necessity for
+throwing further light on the subject; but, as we wander through the
+bardic literature, gradually the conception of this Lu grows upon the
+mind--the destroyer of the sons of Turann--the implacably filial--the
+expulsor of the Fomoroh--the source of all the sciences--the god of the
+Tuátha De Danan--the protector and guardian of Cuculain--Lu Lamfáda,
+son of Cian, son of Diancéct, son of Esric, son of Dela, son of Ned the
+war-god, whose tomb or temple, Aula Neid, may still be seen beside the
+Foyle. This enormous and seemingly chaotic mass of literature is found
+at all times to possess an inner harmony, a consistency and logical
+unity, to be apprehended only by careful study.
+
+So read, the sublimity strikes through the rude representation.
+Astonished at himself, the student, who at first thinks that he has
+chanced upon a crowd of barbarians, ere long finds himself in the august
+presence of demi-gods and heroes.
+
+A noble moral tone pervades the whole. Courage, affection, and truth are
+native to all who live in this world. Under the dramatic image of
+Ossian wrangling with the Talkend, [Note: St. Patrick, on account of
+the tonsured crown.] the bards, themselves vainly fighting against the
+Christian life, a hundred times repeat through the lips of Ossian like a
+refrain--
+
+ "We, the Fianna of Erin, never uttered falsehood,
+ Lying was never attributed to us;
+ By courage and the strength of our hands
+ We used to come out of every difficulty."
+
+Again: Fergus, the bard, inciting Oscar to his last battle--in that poem
+called the Rosc Catha of Oscar:--
+
+ "Place thy hand on thy gentle forehead
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+[Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, p. 159; vol. i.]
+
+And again, elsewhere in the Ossianic poetry:--
+
+ "Oscar, who never wronged bard or woman."
+
+Strange to say, too, they inculcated chastity (see p. 257; vol. i.), an
+allusion taken from the "youthful adventures of Cuculain," Leabhar na
+Huidhré.
+
+The following ancient rann contains the four qualifications of a bard:--
+
+ "Purity of hand, bright, without wounding,
+ Purity of mouth, without poisonous satire,
+ Purity of learning, without reproach,
+ Purity, as a husband, in wedlock."
+
+Moreover, through all this literature sounds a high clear note of
+chivalry, in this contrasting favourably with the Iliad, where no man
+foregoes an advantage. Cuculain having slain the sons of Neara, "thought
+it unworthy of him to take possession of their chariot and horses."
+[Note: P. 155; vol. i.] Goll Mac Morna, in the Fenian or Ossianic cycle,
+declares to Conn Cedcathah [Note: Conn of the hundred battles.] that
+from his youth up he never attacked an enemy by night or under any
+disadvantage, and many times we read of heroes preferring to die rather
+than outrage their geisa. [Note: Certain vows taken with their arms on
+being knighted.]
+
+A noble literature indeed it is, having too this strange interest,
+that though mainly characterised by a great plainness and simplicity of
+thought, and, in the earlier stages, of expression, we feel, oftentimes,
+a sudden weirdness, a strange glamour shoots across the poem when the
+tale seems to open for a moment into mysterious depths, druidic secrets
+veiled by time, unsunned caves of thought, indicating a still deeper
+range of feeling, a still lower and wider reach of imagination. A youth
+came once to the Fianna Eireen encamped at Locha Lein [Note: The Lakes
+of Killarney.], leading a hound dazzling white, like snow. It was the
+same, the bard simply states, that was once a yew tree, flourishing
+fifty summers in the woods of Ioroway. Elsewhere, he is said to have
+been more terrible than the sun upon his flaming wheels. What meant this
+yew tree and the hound? Stray allusions I have met, but no history.
+The spirit of Coelté, visiting one far removed in time from the great
+captain of the Fianna, with a different name and different history,
+cries:--
+
+ "I was with thee, with Finn"--
+
+giving no explanation.
+
+To MacPherson, however, I will do this justice, that he had the merit
+to perceive, even in the debased and floating ballads of the highlands,
+traces of some past greatness and sublimity of thought, and to
+understand, he, for the first time, how much more they meant than what
+met the ear. But he saw, too, that the historical origin of the ballads,
+and the position in time and place of the heroes whom they praised, had
+been lost in that colony removed since the time of St. Columba from its
+old connection with the mother country. Thus released from the curb of
+history, he gave free rein to the imagination, and in the conventional
+literary language of sublimity, gave full expression to the feelings
+that arose within him, as to him, pondering over those ballads, their
+gigantesque element developed into a greatness and solemnity, and their
+vagueness and indeterminateness into that misty immensity and weird
+obscurity which, as constituent factors in a poem, not as back-ground,
+form one of the elements of the false sublime. Either not seeing the
+literary necessity of definiteness, or having no such abundant and
+ordered literature as we possess, upon which to draw for details,
+and being too conscientious to invent facts, however he might invent
+language, he published his epics of Ossian--false indeed to the
+original, but true to himself, and to the feelings excited by meditation
+upon them. This done, he had not sufficient courage to publish also
+the rude, homely, and often vulgar ballads--a step which, in that hard
+critical age, would have been to expose himself and his country to swift
+contempt. The thought of the great lexicographer riding rough-shod
+over the poor mountain songs which he loved, and the fame which he had
+already acquired, deterred and dissuaded him, if he had ever any such
+intention, until the opportunity was past.
+
+MacPherson feared English public opinion, and fearing lied. He declared
+that to be a translation which was original work, thus relegating
+himself for ever to a dubious renown, and depriving his country of
+the honest fame of having preserved through centuries, by mere oral
+transmission, a portion, at least, of the antique Irish literature. To
+the magnanimity of his own heroes he could not attain:--
+
+ "Oscar, Oscar, who feared not armies--
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+
+Of some such error as MacPherson's I have myself, with less excuse, been
+guilty, in chapters xi. and xii., Vol. I., where I attempt to give
+some conception of the character of the Ossianic cycle. The age and the
+heroes around whom that cycle revolves have, in the history of Ireland,
+a definite position in time; their battles, characters, several
+achievements, relationships, and pedigrees; their Dûns, and
+trysting-places, and tombs; their wives, musicians, and bards; their
+tributes, and sufferings, and triumphs; their internecine and other
+wars--are all fully and clearly described in the Ossianic cycle. They
+still remain demanding adequate treatment, when we arrive at the age of
+Conn [Note: See page 20.], Art, and Cormac, kings of Tara in the second
+and third centuries of the Christian era. All have been forgotten for
+the sake of a vague representation of the more sublime aspects of the
+cycle, and the meretricious seductions of a form of composition easy to
+write and easy to read, and to which the unwary or unwise often award
+praise to which it has no claim.
+
+On the other hand, chapter xi. purports only to be a representation of
+the feelings excited by this literature, and for every assertion there
+is authority in the cycle. Chapter xii., however, is a translation from
+the original. Every idea which it contains, except one, has been taken
+from different parts of the Ossianic poems, and all together expressthe
+graver attitude of the mind of Ossian towards the new faith. That idea,
+occurring in a separate paragraph in the middle of the page, though
+prevalent as a sentiment throughout all the conversations of Ossian with
+St. Patrick, has been, as it stands, taken from a meditation on life by
+St. Columbanus, one of the early Irish Saints--a meditation which,
+for subtle thought, for musical resigned sadness, tender brooding
+reflection, and exquisite Latin, is one of the masterpieces of mediaeval
+composition.
+
+To the casual reader of the bardic literature the preservation of an
+ordered historical sequence, amidst that riotous wealth of imaginative
+energy, may appear an impossibility. Can we believe that forestine
+luxuriance not to have overgrown all highways, that flood of
+superabundant song not have submerged all landmarks? Be the cause what
+it may, the fact remains that they did not. The landmarks of history
+stand clear and fixed, each in its own place unremoved; and through that
+forest-growth the highways of history run on beneath over-arching, not
+interfering, boughs. The age of the predominance of Ulster does not
+clash with the age of the predominance of Tara; the Temairian kings are
+not mixed with the contemporary Fians. The chaos of the Nibelungen is
+not found here, nor the confusion of the Scotch ballads blending all the
+ages into one.
+
+It is not imaginative strength that produces confusion, but imaginative
+weakness. The strong imagination which perceives definitely and realises
+vividly will not tolerate that obscurity so dear to all those who
+worship the eidola of the cave. Of each of these ages, the primary
+impressions were made in the bardic mind during the life-time of the
+heroes who gave to the epoch its character; and a strong impression made
+in such a mind could not have been easily dissipated or obscured. For it
+must be remembered, that the bardic literature of Ireland was committed
+to the custody of guardians whose character we ought not to forget. The
+bards were not the people, but a class. They were not so much a class
+as an organisation and fraternity acknowledging the authority of one
+elected chief. They were not loose wanderers, but a power in the State,
+having duties and privileges. The ard-ollav ranked next to the king, and
+his eric was kingly. Thus there was an educated body of public opinion
+entrusted with the preservation of the literature and history of the
+country, and capable of repressing the aberrations of individuals.
+
+But the question arises, Did they so repress such perversions of history
+as their wandering undisciplined members might commit? Too much, of
+course, must not reasonably be expected. It was an age of creative
+thought, and such thought is difficult to control; but that one of the
+prime objects and prime works of the bards, as an organisation, was to
+preserve a record of a certain class of historical facts is certain. The
+succession of the kings and of the great princely families was one of
+these. The tribal system, with the necessity of affinity as a ground of
+citizenship, demanded such a preservation of pedigrees in every family,
+and particularly in the kingly houses. One of the chief objects of the
+triennial feis of Tara was the revision of such records by the general
+assembly of the bards, under the presidency of the Ard-Ollav of Ireland.
+In the more ancient times, such records were rhymed and alliterated, and
+committed to memory--a practice which, we may believe on the authority
+of Caesar, treating of the Gauls, continued long after the introduction
+of letters. Even at those local assemblies also, which corresponded to
+great central and national feis of Tara, the bards were accustomed to
+meet for that purpose. In a poem [Note: O'Curry's Manners and Customs,
+Vol. I., page 543.], descriptive of the fair [Note: On the full meaning
+of this word "fair," see Chap. xiii., Vol. I.] of Garman, we see this--
+
+ "Feasts with the great feasts of Temair,
+ Fairs with the fairs of Emania,
+ Annals there are verified."
+
+In the existing literature we see two great divisions. On the one hand
+the epical, a realm of the most riotous activity of thought; on the
+other, the annalistic and genealogical, bald and bare to the last
+degree, a mere skeleton. They represent the two great hemispheres of
+the bardic mind, the latter controlling the former. Hence the orderly
+sequence of the cyclic literature; hence the strong confining banks
+between which the torrent of song rolls down through those centuries in
+which the bardic imagination reached its height. The consentaneity
+of the annals and the literature furnishes a trustworthy guide to the
+general course of history, until its guidance is barred by _a priori_
+considerations of a weightier nature, or by the statements of writers,
+having sources of information not open to us. For instance, the
+stream of Irish history must, for philosophical reasons, be no further
+traceable than to that point at which it issues from the enchanted land
+of the Tuátha De Danan. At the limit at which the gods appear, men
+and history must disappear; while on the other hand, the statement of
+Tiherna, that the foundation of Emain Alacha by Kimbay is the first
+certain date in Irish history, renders it undesirable to attach more
+historical reality of characters, adorning the ages prior to B.C. 299,
+than we could to such characters as Romulus in Roman, or Theseus in
+Athenian history.
+
+I desire here to record my complete and emphatic dissent from the
+opinions advanced by a writer in Hermathena on the subject of the Ogham
+inscriptions, and the introduction into this country of the art of
+writing. A cypher, i.e., an alphabet derived from a pre-existing
+alphabet, the Ogham may or may not have been. I advance no opinion upon
+that, but an invention of the Christian time it most assuredly was not.
+No sympathetic and careful student of the Irish bardic literature can
+possibly come to such a conclusion. The bardic poems relating to
+the heroes of the ethnic times are filled with allusions to Ogham
+inscriptions on stone, and contain some references to books of timber;
+but in my own reading I have not met with a single passage in that
+literature alluding to books of parchment and to rounded letters.
+
+If the Ogham was derived from the Roman characters introduced by
+Christian missionaries, then these characters would be the more ancient,
+and Ogham the more modern; books and Roman characters would be the more
+poetical, and inscriptions on stone and timber in the Ogham characters
+the more prosaic. The bards relating the lives and deeds of the ancient
+heroes, would have ascribed to their times parchment books and the Roman
+characters, not stone and wood, and the Ogham.
+
+In these compositions, whenever they were reduced to the form in which
+we find them to-day, the ethnic character of the times and the ethnic
+character of the heroes are clearly and universally observed. The
+ancient, the remote, the archaic clings to this literature. As Homer
+does not allude to writing, though all scholars agree that he lived in
+a lettered age, so the old bards do not allude to parchment and
+Roman characters, though the Irish epics, as distinguished from their
+component parts, reached their fixed state and their final development
+in times subsequent to the introduction of Christianity.
+
+When and how a knowledge of letters reached this island we know not.
+From the analogy of Gaul, we may conclude that they were known for some
+time prior to their use by the bards. Caesar tells us that the Gaulish
+bards and druids did not employ letters for the preservation of their
+lore, but trusted to memory, assisted, doubtless, as in this country, by
+the mechanical and musical aid of verse. Whether the Ogham was a native
+alphabet or a derivative from another, it was at first employed only to
+a limited extent. Its chief use was to preserve the name of buried kings
+and heroes in the stone that was set above their tombs. It was, perhaps,
+invented, and certainly became fashionable on this account, straight
+strokes being more easily cut in stone than rounded or uncial
+characters. For the same reason it was generally employed by those who
+inscribed timber tablets, which formed the primitive book, ere they
+discovered or learned how to use pen, ink, and parchment. The use of
+Ogham was partially practised in the Christian period for sepultural
+purposes, being venerable and sacred from time. Hence the discovery of
+Ogham-inscribed stones in Christian cemeteries. On the other hand,
+the fact that the majority of these stones are discovered in raths and
+forts, i.e., the tombs of our Pagan ancestors, corroborates the fact
+implied in all the bardic literature, that the characters employed in
+the ethnic times were Oghamic, and affords another proof of the close
+conservative spirit of the bards in their transcription, compilation, or
+reformation of the old epics.
+
+The full force of the concurrent authority of the bardic literature to
+the above effect can only be felt by one who has read that literature
+with care. He will find in all the epics no trace of original invention,
+but always a studied and conscientious following of authority. This
+being so, he will conclude that the universal ascription of Ogham, and
+Ogham only, to the ethnic times, arises solely from the fact that such
+was the alphabet then employed.
+
+If letters were unknown in those times, the example of Homer shows how
+unlikely the later poets would have been to outrage so violently the
+whole spirit of the heroic literature. If rounded letters were then
+used, why the universal ascription of the late invented Ogham which,
+as we know from the cemeteries and other sources, was unpopular in the
+Christian age.
+
+Cryptic, too, it was not. The very passages quoted in Hermathena to
+support this opinion, so far from doing so prove actually the reverse.
+When Cuculain came down into Meath on his first [Note: Vol. I., page
+155.] foray, he found, on the lawn of the Dûn of the sons of Nectan, a
+pillar stone with this inscription in Ogham--"Let no one pass without an
+offer of a challenge of single combat." The inscription was, of course,
+intended for all to read. Should there be any bardic passage in which
+Ogham inscriptions are alluded to as if an obscure form of writing, the
+natural explanation is, that this kind of writing was passing or had
+passed into desuetude at the time that particular passage was composed;
+but I have never met with any such. The ancient bard, who, in the
+Tân-bo-Cooalney, describes the slaughter of Cailitin and his sons by
+Cuculain, states that there was an inscription to that effect, written
+in Ogham, upon the stone over their tomb, beginning thus--"Take
+notice"--evidently intended for all to read. The tomb, by the way, was a
+rath--again showing the ethnic character of the alphabet.
+
+In the Annals of the Four Masters, at the date 1499 B.C., we read these
+words:--
+
+"THE FLEET OF THE SONS OF MILITH CAME TO IRELAND TO TAKE IT FROM THE
+TUÁTHA DE DANAN," i.e., the gods of the ethnic Irish.
+
+Without pausing to enquire into the reasonableness of the date, it will
+suffice now to state that at this point the bardic history of Ireland
+cleaves asunder into two great divisions--the mythological or divine on
+the one hand, and the historical or heroic-historical on the other.
+The first is an enchanted land--the world of the Tuátha De Danan--the
+country of the gods. There we see Mananan with his mountain-sundering
+sword, the Fray-garta; there Lu Lamfada, the deliverer, pondering over
+his mysteries; there Bove Derg and his fatal [Note: Every feast to which
+he came ended in blood. He was present at the death of Conairey Mor,
+Chap. xxxiii., Vol. I.] swine-herd, Lir and his ill-starred children,
+Mac Mánar and his harp shedding death from its stricken wires, Angus Og,
+the beautiful, and he who was called the mighty father, Eochaidht [Note:
+Ay-o-chee, written Yeoha in Vol. I.] Mac Elathan, a land populous with
+those who had partaken of the feast of Goibneen, and whom, therefore,
+weapons could not slay, who had eaten [Note: In early Greek literature
+the province of history has been already separated from that of poetry.
+The ancient bardic lore and primaeval traditions were refined to suit
+the new and sensitive poetic taste. No commentator has been able to
+explain the nature of ambrosia. In the genuine bardic times, no such
+vague euphuism would have been tolerated as that of Homer on this
+subject. The nature of Olympian ambrosia would have been told in
+language as clear as that in which Homer describes the preparation of
+that Pramnian bowl for which Nestor and Machaon waited while Hecamede
+was grating over it the goat's milk cheese, or that in which the Irish
+bards described the ambrosia of the Tuátha De Danan, which, indeed, was
+no more poetic and awe-inspiring than plain bacon prepared by Mananan
+from his herd of enchanted pigs, living invisible like himself in the
+plains of Tir-na-n-Og, the land of the ever-young. On the other hand,
+there is a vagueness about the Feed Fia which would seem to indicate the
+growth of a more awe-stricken mood in describing things supernatural.
+The Faed Fia of the Greek gods has been refined by Homer into "much
+darkness," which, from an artistic point of view, one can hardly help
+imagining that Homer nodded as he wrote.] at the the table of Mananan,
+and would never grow old, who had invented for themselves the Faed Fia,
+and might not be seen of the gross eyes of men; there steeds like Anvarr
+crossing the wet sea like a firm plain; there ships whose rudder was the
+will, and whose sails and oars the wish, of those they bore [Note: Cf.
+The barks of the Phoenicians in the Odyssey.]; there hounds like that
+one of Ioroway, and spears like fiery flying serpents. These are the
+Tuátha De Danan [Note: A mystery still hangs over this three-formed
+name. The full expression, Tuátha De Danan, is that generally employed,
+less frequently Tuátha De, and sometimes, but not often, Tuátha. Tuátha
+also means people. In mediaeval times the name lost its sublime meaning,
+and came to mean merely "fairy," no greater significance, indeed,
+attaching to the invisible people of the island after Christianity had
+destroyed their godhood.], fairy princes, Tuátha; gods, De; of Dana,
+Danan, otherwise Ana and the Moreega, or great queen; mater [Note:
+Cormac's Glossary] deorum Hibernensium--"well she used to cherish [Note:
+Scholiast noting same Glossary.] the gods." Limitless, this divine
+population, dwelling in all the seas and estuaries, river and lakes,
+mountains and fairy dells, in that enchanted Erin which was theirs.
+
+But they have not started into existence suddenly, like the gods of
+Rome, nor is their genealogy confined to a single generation like those
+of Greece. Behind them extends a long line of ancestors, and a history
+reaching into the remotest depths of the past. As the Greek gods
+dethroned the Titans, so the Irish gods drove out or subjected the
+giants of the Fir-bolgs; but in the Irish mythology, we find both gods
+and giants descended from other ancient races of deities, called the
+Clanna Nemedh and the Fomoroh, and these a branch of a divine cycle; yet
+more ancient the race of Partholan, while Partholan himself is not the
+eldest.
+
+The history of the Italian gods is completely lost. For all that the
+early Roman literature tells us of their origin, they may have been
+either self-created or eternal. Rome was a seedling shaken from some
+old perished civilisation. The Romans created their own empire, but they
+inherited their gods. They supply no example of an Aryan nation evolving
+its own mythology and religion. Regal Rome, as we know from Niebuhr, was
+not the root from which our Rome sprang, but an old imperial city, from
+whose ashes sprang that Rome we all know so well. The mythology of the
+Latin writers came to them full-grown.
+
+The gods of Greece were a creation of the Greek mind, indeed; but of
+their ancestry, i.e., of their development from more ancient divine
+tribes, we know little. Like Pallas, they all but start into existence
+suddenly full-grown. Between the huge physical entities of the Greek
+theogonists and the Olympian gods, there intervenes but a single
+generation. For this loss of the Grecian mythology, and this
+substitution of Nox and Chaos for the remote ancestors of the Olympians,
+we have to thank the early Greek philosophers, and the general diffusion
+of a rude scientific knowledge, imparting a physical complexion to the
+mythological memory of the Greeks.
+
+In the theogony of the ancient inhabitants of this country, we have an
+example of a slowly-growing, slowly-changing mythology, such as no other
+nation in the world can supply. The ancestry of the Irish gods is not
+bounded by a single generation or by twenty. The Tuátha De Danan of the
+ancient Irish are the final outcome and last development of a mythology
+which we can see advancing step by step, one divine tribe pushing out
+another, one family of gods swallowing up another, or perishing under
+the hands of time and change, to make room for another. From Angus
+Og, the god of youth and love and beauty, whose fit home was the woody
+slopes of the Boyne, where it winds around Rosnaree, we count fourteen
+generations to Nemedh and four to Partholan, and Partholan is not the
+earliest. As the bards recorded with a zeal and minuteness, so far as I
+can see, without parallel, the histories of the families to which they
+were adscript, so also they recorded with equal patience and care the
+far-extending pedigrees of those other families--invisible indeed, but
+to them more real and more awe-inspiring--who dwelt by the sacred lakes
+and rivers, and in the folds of the fairy hills, and the great raths and
+cairns reared for them by pious hands.
+
+The extent, diversity, and populousness of the Irish mythological
+cycles, the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of that
+mythology of which the Tuátha De Danan, i.e., the gods of the historic
+period, were the final development, can only be rightly apprehended by
+one who reads the bardic literature as it deals with this subject. That
+literature, however, so far from having been printed and published, has
+not even been translated, but still moulders in the public libraries of
+Europe, those who, like myself, are not professed Irish scholars, being
+obliged to collect their information piece-meal from quotations and
+allusions of those who have written upon the subject in the English or
+Latin language. For to read the originals aright needs many years
+of labour, the Irish tongue presenting at different epochs the
+characteristics of distinct languages, while the peculiarities of
+ancient caligraphy, in the defaced and illegible manuscripts, form of
+themselves quite a large department of study. Stated succinctly, the
+mythological record of the bards, with its chronological decorations,
+runs thus:--
+
+AGE OF KEASAIR.
+
+2379 B.C. the gods of the KEASAIRIAN cycle, Bith, Lara, and Fintann,
+and their wives, KEASAIR, Barran and Balba; their sacred places, Carn
+Keshra, Keasair's tomb or temple, on the banks of the Boyle, Ard Laran
+on the Wexford Coast, Fert Fintann on the shores of Lough Derg.
+
+About the same time Lot Luaimenich, Lot of the Lower Shannon, an ancient
+sylvan deity.
+
+AGE OF PARTHOLAN AND THE EARLIEST FOMORIAN GODS.
+
+2057 B.C. a new spiritual dynasty, of which PARTHOLAN was father and
+king. Though their worship was extended over Ireland, which is shown by
+the many different places connected with their history, yet the hill
+of Tallaght, ten miles from Dublin, was where they were chiefly adored.
+Here to the present day are the mounds and barrows raised in honour of
+the deified heroes of this cycle, PARTHOLAN himself, his wife Delgna,
+his sons, Rury, Slaney, and Laighlinni, and among others, the father of
+Irish hospitality, bearing the expressive name of Beer. Now first appear
+the Fomoroh giant princes, under the leadership of curt Kical, son of
+Niul, son of Garf, son of U-Mor--a divine cycle intervening between
+KEASAIR and PARTHOLAN, but not of sufficient importance to secure a
+separate chapter and distinct place in the annals. Battles now between
+the Clan Partholan and the Fomoroh, on the plain of Ith, beside the
+river Finn, Co. Donegal, so called from Ith [Note: See Vol. I, p. 60],
+son of Brogan, the most ancient of the heroes, slain here by the Tuátha
+De Danan, but more anciently known by some lost Fomorian name; also at
+Iorrus Domnan, now Erris, Co. Mayo, where Kical and his Fomorians first
+reached Ireland. These battles are a parable--objective representations
+of a fact in the mental history of the ancient Irish--typifying the
+invisible war waged between Partholanian and Fomorian deities for the
+spiritual sovereignty of the Gael.
+
+AGE OF THE NEMEDIAN GODS AND SECOND CYCLE OF THE FOMORIANS.
+
+1700 B.C. age of the NEMEDIAN divinities, a later branch of the
+PARTHOLANIAN _vide post_ NEMEDIAN pedigree. NEMEDH, his wife Maca (first
+appearance of Macha, the war goddess, who gave her name to Armagh, i.e.,
+Ard Macha, the Height of Macha), Iarbanel; Fergus, the Red-sided, and
+Starn, sons of Nemedh; Beothah, son of Iarbanel; Erglann, son of Beoan,
+son of Starn; Siméon Brac, son of Starn; Ibath, son of Beothach; Britan
+Mael, son of Fergus. This must be remembered, that not one of the
+almost countless names that figure in the Irish mythology is of fanciful
+origin. They all represent antique heroes and heroines, their names
+being preserved in connection with those monuments which were raised for
+purposes of sepulture or cult.
+
+Wars now between the Clanna Nemedh and the second cycle of the Fomoroh,
+led this time by Faebar and More, sons of Dela, and Coning, son of
+Faebar; battles at Ros Freachan, now Rosreahan, barony of Murresk,
+Co. Mayo, at Slieve Blahma [Note: Slieve Blahma, now Slieve Bloom, a
+mountain range famous in our mythology; one of the peaks, Ard Erin,
+sacred to Eiré, a goddess of the Tuátha De Danan, who has given her name
+to the island. The sites of all these mythological battles, where they
+are not placed in the haunted mountains, will be found to be a place
+of raths and cromlechs.] and Murbolg, in Dalaradia (Murbolg, i.e., the
+stronghold of the giants,) also at Tor Coning, now Tory Island.
+
+FIRBOLGS AND THIRD CYCLE OF THE FOMOROH.
+
+1525 B.C. Age of the FIRBOLGS and third cycle of the Fomorians, once
+gods, but expulsed from their sovereignty by the Tuátha De Danan, after
+which they loom through the heroic literature as giants of the elder
+time, overthrown by the gods. From the FIRBOLGS were descended, or
+claimed to have descended, the Connaught warriors who fought with Queen
+Meave against Cuculain, also the Clan Humor, appearing in the Second
+Volume, also the heroes of Ossian, the Fianna Eireen. Even in the time
+of Keating, Irish families traced thither their pedigrees. The great
+chiefs of the FIR-BOLGIC dynasty were the five sons of Dela, Gann,
+Genann, Sengann, Rury, and Slaney, with their wives Fuad, Edain, Anust,
+Cnucha, and Libra; also their last and most potent king, EOCAIDH MAC
+ERC, son of Ragnal, son of Genann, whose tomb or temple may be seen
+to-day at Ballysadare, Co. Sligo, on the edge of the sea.
+
+The Fomorians of this age were ruled over by Baler Beimenna and his wife
+Kethlenn. Their grandson was Lu Lamáda, one of the noblest of the Irish
+gods.
+
+The last of the mythological cycles is that of the Tuátha De Danan,
+whose character, attributes, and history will, I hope, be rendered
+interesting and intelligible in my account of Cuculain and the Red
+Branch of Ulster.
+
+Irish history has suffered from rationalism almost more than from
+neglect and ignorance. The conjectures of the present century are
+founded upon mediaeval attempts to reduce to verisimilitude and
+historical probability what was by its nature quite incapable of such
+treatment. The mythology of the Irish nation, being relieved of the
+marvellous and sublime, was set down with circumstantial dates as a
+portion of the country's history by the literary men of the middle ages.
+Unable to excide from the national narrative those mythological beings
+who filled so great a place in the imagination of the times, and unable,
+as Christians, to describe them in their true character as gods, or, as
+patriots, in the character which they believed them to possess, namely,
+demons, they rationalized the whole of the mythological period with
+names, dates, and ordered generations, putting men for gods, flesh and
+blood for that invisible might, till the page bristled with names and
+dates, thus formulating, as annals, what was really the theogony and
+mythology of their country. The error of the mediaeval historians is
+shared by the not wiser moderns. In the generations of the gods we seem
+to see prehistoric racial divisions and large branches of the Aryan
+family, an error which results from a neglect of the bardic literature,
+and a consequently misdirected study of the annals.
+
+As history, the pre-Milesian record contains but a limited supply of
+objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish gods,
+these much abused chronicles are as true as the roll of the kings of
+England.
+
+These divine nations, with their many successive generations and
+dynasties, constitute a single family; they are all inter-connected and
+spring from common sources, and where the literature permits us to see
+more clearly, the earlier races exhibit a common character. Like a human
+clan, the elements of this divine family grew and died, and shed forth
+seedlings which, in time, over-grew and killed the parent stock. Great
+names became obscure and passed away, and new ones grew and became
+great. Gods, worshipped by the whole nation, declined and became
+topical, and minor deities expanding, became national. Gods lost their
+immortality, and were remembered as giants of the old time--mighty men,
+which were of yore, men of renown.
+
+ "The gods which were of old time rest in their tombs,"
+
+sang the Egyptians, consciously ascribing mortality even to gods.
+Such was Mac Ere, King of Fir-bolgs. His temple [Note: Strand near
+Ballysadare, Co. Sligo], beside the sea at Iorrus Domnan [Note:
+Keating--evidently quoting a bardic historian], became his tomb. Daily
+the salt tide embraces the feet of the great tumulus, regal amongst its
+smaller comrades, where the last king of Fir-bolgs was worshipped by
+his people. "Good [Note: Temple--vide post.] were the years of the
+sovereignty of Mac Ere. There was no wet or tempestuous weather
+in Ireland, nor was there any unfruitful year." Such were all the
+predecessors of the children of Dana--gods which were of old times,
+that rest in their tombs; and the days, too, of the Tuátha De Danan were
+numbered. They, too, smitten by a more celestial light, vanished from
+their hills, like Ossian lamenting over his own heroes; those others
+still mightier, might say:--
+
+ "Once every step which we took might be heard throughout the
+ firmament. Now, all have gone, they have melted into the air."
+
+But that divine tree, though it had its branches in fairy-land, had
+its roots in the soil of Erin. An unceasing translation of heroes
+into Tir-na-n-og went on through time, the fairy-world of the bards,
+receiving every century new inhabitants, whose humbler human origin
+being forgotten, were supplied there with both wives and children. The
+apotheosis of great men went forward, tirelessly; the hero of one epoch
+becoming the god of the next, until the formation of the Tuátha De
+Danan, who represent the gods of the historic ages. Had the advent of
+exact genealogy been delayed, and the creative imagination of the bards
+suffered to work on for a couple of centuries longer, unchecked by the
+historical conscience, Cuculain's human origin would, perhaps, have been
+forgotten, and he would have been numbered amongst the Tuátha De Danan,
+probably, as the son of Lu Lamfáda and the Moreega, his patron deities.
+It was, indeed, a favourite fancy of the bards that not Sualtam, but
+Lu Lamfáda himself, was his father; this, however, in a spiritual or
+supernatural sense, for his age was far removed from that of the Tuátha
+De Danan, and falling well within the scope of the historic period.
+Even as late as the time of Alexander, the Greeks could believe a great
+contemporary warrior to be of divine origin, and the son of Zeus.
+
+When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their
+country, they naturally commenced with the enumeration of the elder
+gods. I at one time suspected that the long pedigrees running between
+those several divisions of the mythological period were the invention of
+mediaeval historians, anxious to spin out the national record, that it
+might reach to Shinar and the dispersion. Not only, however, was such
+fabrication completely foreign to the genius of the literature, but in
+the fragments of those early divine cycles, we see that each of these
+personages was at one time the centre of a literature, and holds a
+definite place as regards those who went before and came after.
+These pedigrees, as I said before, have no historical meaning, being
+pre-Milesian, and therefore absolutely prehistoric; but as the genealogy
+of the gods, and as representing the successive generations of that
+invisible family, whose history not one or ten bards, but the whole
+bardic and druidic organisation of the island, delighted to record,
+collate, and verify--those pedigrees are as reliable as that of any of
+the regal clans. They represent accurately the mythological panorama, as
+it unrolled itself slowly through the centuries before the
+imagination and spirit of our ancestors accurately that divine
+drama, millennium--lasting, with its exits and entrances of gods.
+Millennium-lasting, and more so, for it is plain that one divine
+generation represents on the average a much greater space of time than
+a generation of mortal men. The former probably represents the period
+which would elapse before a hero would become so divine, that is, so
+consecrated in the imagination of the country, as to be received into
+the family of the gods. Cuculain died in the era of the Incarnation,
+three hundred years, if not more, before the country even began to be
+Christianised, yet he is never spoken of as anything but a great hero,
+from which one of two things would follow, either that the apotheosis of
+heroes needed the lapse of centuries, or that, during the first,
+second, third, and fourth centuries, the historical conscience was so
+enlightened, and a positive definite knowledge of the past so universal,
+that the translation of heroes into the divine clans could no longer
+take place. The latter is indeed the more correct view; but the
+reader will, I think, agree with me that the divine generations, taken
+generally, represent more than the average space of man's life. To what
+remote unimagined distances of time those earlier cycles extend has been
+shown by an examination of the tombs of the lower Moy Tura. The ancient
+heroes there interred were those who, as Fir-bolgs, preceded the reign
+of the Tuáth De Danan, coming long after the Clanna Nemedh in the divine
+cycle, who were themselves preceded by the children of Partholan, who
+were subsequent to the Queen Keasair. Such then being the position in
+the divine cycle of the Fir-bolgs, an examination of the Firbolgic
+raths on Moy Tura has revealed only implements of stone, proving
+demonstratively that the early divine cycles originated before the
+bronze age in Ireland, whenever that commenced. Those heroes who, as
+Fir-bolgs, received divine honours, lived in the age of stone. So far is
+it from being the case, that the mythological record has been extended
+and unduly stretched, to enable the monkish historians to connect the
+Irish pedigrees with those of the Mosaic record, that it has, I believe,
+been contracted for this purpose.
+
+The reader will be now prepared to peruse with some interest and
+understanding one or two of the mythological pedigrees. To these I have
+at times appended the dates, as given in the chronicles, to show how the
+early historians rationalised the pre-historic record.
+
+Angus Og, the Beautiful, represents the Greek Eros. He was surnamed
+Og, or young; Mac-an-Og, or the son of youth; Mac-an-Dagda, son of the
+Dagda. He was represented with a harp, and attended by bright birds,
+his own transformed kisses, at whose singing love arose in the hearts
+of youths and maidens. To him and to his father the great tumulus of New
+Grange, upon the Boyne, was sacred.
+
+ "I visited the Royal Brugh that stands
+ By the dark-rolling waters of the Boyne,
+ Where Angus Og magnificently dwells."
+
+He was the patron god of Diarmid, the Paris of Ossian's Fianna, and
+removed him into Tir-na-n-Og, when he died, having been ripped by the
+tusks of the wild boar on the peaks of Slieve Gulban.
+
+Lu Lamfáda was the patron god of Cuculain. He was surnamed Ioldana, as
+the source of the sciences, and represented the Greek Apollo. The latter
+was argurgurotoxos [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original], but Lu
+was a sling bearing god. Of Fomorian descent on the mother's side,
+he joined his father's people, the Tuátha De Danan, in the great war
+against the Fomoroh. He is principally celebrated for his oppression of
+the sons of Turann, in vengeance for the murder of his father.
+
+ ANGUS OG, (circa 1500 B.C.) LU LAMFADA, (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ THE DAGDA, (Zeus) Cian,
+ son of son of
+ Elathan, Diancéct, (god the healer)
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Esric,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+
+Amongst other Irish gods was Bove Derg, who dwelt invisible in the
+Galtee mountains, and in the hills above Lough Derg. The transformed
+children alluded to in Vol. I. were his grand-children. It was his
+goldsmith Len, who gave its ancient name to the Lakes of Killarney,
+Locha Lein. Here by the lake he worked, surrounded by rainbows and
+showers of fiery dew.
+
+Mananan was the god of the sea, of winds and storms, and most skilled
+in magic lore. He was friendly to Cuculain, and was invoked by seafaring
+men. He was called the Far Shee of the promontories.
+
+ BOVE DERG (circa 1500 B.C.) MANANAN (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Eocaidh Garf, Alloid,
+ son of son of
+ Duach Temen, Elathan,
+ son of son of
+ Bras, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Indaei,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+
+The Tuátha De Danan maybe counted literally by the hundred, each with a
+distinct history, and all descended from Alldaei.
+
+From Alldaei the pedigree runs back thus:--
+
+ Alldaei
+ son of
+ Tath,
+ son of
+ Tabarn,
+ son of
+ Enna,
+ son of
+ Baath,
+ son of
+ Ebat,
+ son of
+ Betah,
+ son of
+ Iarbanel,
+ son of
+ NEMEDH (circa 1700 B.C.)
+
+Nemedh, as I have said, forms one of the great epochs in the
+mythological record. As will be seen, he and the earlier Partholan have
+a common source:--
+
+ NEMEDH
+ son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Pamp,
+ son of
+ Tath, PARTHOLAN (2000 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Sru,
+ son of
+ Esru,
+ son of
+ Pramant.
+
+The connection between Keasair, the earliest of the Irish gods, and
+the rest of the cycle, I have not discovered, but am confident of its
+existence.
+
+How this divine cycle can be expunged from the history of Ireland I am
+at a loss to see. The account which a nation renders of itself must, and
+always does, stand at the head of every history.
+
+How different is this from the history and genealogy of the Greek gods
+which runs thus:--
+
+ The Olympian gods,
+ Titans,
+ Physical entities, Nox, Chaos, &c.
+
+The Greek gods, undoubtedly, had a long ancestry extending into the
+depths of the past, but the sudden advent of civilisation broke up
+the bardic system before the historians could become philosophical, or
+philosophers interested in antiquities.
+
+But the Irish history corrects our view with regard to other matters
+connected with the gods of the Aryan nations of Europe also.
+
+All the nations of Europe lived at one time under the bardic and druidic
+system, and under that system imagined their gods and elaborated their
+various theogonies, yet, in no country in Europe has a bardic literature
+been preserved except in Ireland, for no thinking man can believe Homer
+to have been a product of that rude type of civilisation of which he
+sings. This being the case, modern philosophy, accounting for the origin
+of the classical deities by guesses and _a priori_ reasonings, has
+almost universally adopted that explanation which I have, elsewhere,
+called Wordsworthian, and which derives them directly from the
+imagination personifying the aspects of nature.
+
+ "In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretched
+ On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
+ With music lulled his indolent repose,
+ And in some fit of weariness if he,
+ When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
+ A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
+ Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched,
+ Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
+ A beardless youth who touched a golden lute
+ And filled the illumined groves with ravishment--
+ ***
+ "Sunbeams upon distant hills,
+ Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
+ Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
+ Into fleet oreads, sporting visibly."
+
+This is pretty, but untrue. In all the ancient Irish literature we find
+the connection of the gods, both those who survived into the historic
+times, and those whom they had dethroned, with the raths and cairns
+perpetually and almost universally insisted upon. The scene of the
+destruction of the Firbolgs will be found to be a place of tombs, the
+metropolis of the Fomorians a place of tombs, and a place of tombs the
+sacred home of the Tuátha along the shores of the Boyne. Doubtless, they
+are represented also as dwelling in the hills, lakes, and rivers, but
+still the connection between the great raths and cairns and the gods
+is never really forgotten. When the floruit of a god has expired, he
+is assigned a tomb in one of the great tumuli. No one can peruse this
+ancient literature without seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods,
+_videlicet_ heroes, passing, through the imagination and through the
+region of poetic representation, into the world of the supernatural.
+When a king died, his people raised his ferta, set up his stone, and
+engraved upon it, at least in later times, his name in ogham. They
+celebrated his death with funeral lamentations and funeral games, and
+listened to the bards chanting his prowess, his liberality, and his
+beauty. In the case of great warriors, these games and lamentations
+became periodical. It is distinctly recorded in many places, for
+instance in connection with Taylti, who gave her name to Taylteen and
+Garman, who gave her name to Loch Garman, now Wexford, and with Lu
+Lamfáda, whose annual worship gave its name to the Kalends of August.
+Gradually, as his actual achievements became more remote, and the
+imagination of the bards, proportionately, more unrestrained, he would
+pass into the world of the supernatural. Even in the case of a hero
+so surrounded with historic light as Cuculain we find a halo, as of
+godhood, often settling around him. His gray warsteed had already passed
+into the realm of mythical representation, as a second avatar of the
+Liath Macha, the grey war-horse of the war-goddess Macha. This could be
+believed, even in the days when the imagination was controlled by the
+annalists and tribal heralds.
+
+The gods of the Irish were their deified ancestors. They were not the
+offspring of the poetic imagination, personifying the various aspects of
+nature. Traces, indeed, we find of their influence over the operations
+of nature, but they are, upon the whole, slight and unimportant.
+From nature they extract her secrets by their necromantic and magical
+labours, but nature is as yet too great to be governed and impelled by
+them. The Irish Apollo had not yet entered into the sun.
+
+Like every country upon which imperial Rome did not leave the impress
+of her genius, Ireland, in these ethnic times, attained only a
+partial unity. The chief king indeed presided at Tara, and enjoyed the
+reputation and emoluments flowing to him on that account, but, upon the
+whole, no Irish king exercised more than a local sovereignty; they were
+all reguli, petty kings, and their direct authority was small. This
+being the case, it would appear to me that in the more ancient times
+the death of a king would not be an event which would disturb a very
+extensive district, and that, though his tomb might be considerable, it
+would not be gigantic.
+
+Now on the banks of the Boyne, opposite Rosnaree, there stands a
+tumulus, said to be the greatest in Europe. It covers acres of ground,
+being of proportionate height. The earth is confined by a compact stone
+wall about twelve feet high. The central chamber, made of huge irregular
+pebbles, is about twenty feet from ground to roof, communicating with
+the outer air by a flagged passage. Immense pebbles, drawn from the
+County of Antrim, stand around it, each of which, even to move at
+all, would require the labour of many men, assisted with mechanical
+appliances. It is, of course, impossible to make an accurate estimate of
+the expenditure of labour necessary for the construction of such a work,
+but it would seem to me to require thousands of men working for years.
+Can we imagine that a petty king of those times could, after his
+death, when probably his successor had enough to do to sustain his new
+authority, command such labour merely to provide for himself a tomb. If
+this tomb were raised to the hero whose name it bears immediately after
+his death, and in his mundane character, he must have been such a king
+as never existed in Ireland, even in the late Christian times.
+Even Brian of the Tributes himself, could not have commanded such a
+sepulture, or anything like it, living though he did, probably, two
+thousand years later than that Eocaidh Mac Elathan, whenever he did
+live. There is a _nodus_ here needing a god to solve it.
+
+Returning now to what would most likely take place after the interment
+of a hero, we may well imagine that the size of his tomb would be in
+proportion to the love which he inspired, where no accidental causes
+would interfere with the gratification of that feeling. Of one of his
+heroes, Ossian, sings--
+
+ "We made his cairn great and high
+ Like a king's."
+
+After that there would be periodical meetings in his honour, the
+celebration of games, solemn recitations by bards, singing his aristeia
+[Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original]. Gradually the new wine
+would burst the old bottles. The ever-active, eager-loving imagination
+would behold the champion grown to heroic proportions, the favourite of
+the gods, the performer of superhuman feats. The tomb, which was once
+commensurate with the love and reverence which he inspired, would seem
+so now no longer. The tribal bards, wandering or attending the great
+fairs and assemblies, would disperse among strangers and neighbours a
+knowledge of his renown. In the same cemetery or neighbourhood their
+might be other tombs of heroes now forgotten, while he, whose fame was
+in every bardic mouth in all that region, was honoured only with a tomb
+no greater than theirs. The mere king or champion, grown into a topical
+hero, would need a greater tomb.
+
+Ere long again, owing to the bardic fraternity, who, though coming from
+Innishowen or Cape Clear, formed a single community, the topical hero
+would, in some cases, where his character was such as would excite
+deeper reverence and greater fame, grow into a national hero, and a
+still nobler tomb be required, in order that the visible memorial might
+prove commensurate with the imaginative conception.
+
+Now all this time the periodic celebrations, the games, and
+lamentations, and songs would be assuming a more solemn character. Awe
+would more and more mingle with the other feelings inspired by his name.
+Certain rites and a certain ritual would attend those annual games
+and lamentations, which would formerly not have been suitable, and
+eventually, when the hero, slowly drawing nearer through generations,
+if not centuries, at last reached Tir-na-n-Og, and was received into
+the family of the gods, a religious feeling of a different nature would
+mingle with the more secular celebration of his memory, and his rath or
+cairn would assume in their eyes a new character.
+
+To an ardent imaginative people the complete extinction by death of a
+much-loved hero would even at first be hardly possible. That the tomb
+which held his ashes should be looked upon as the house of the hero must
+have been, even shortly after his interment, a prevailing sentiment,
+whether expressed or not. Also, the feeling must have been present,
+that the hero in whose honour they performed the annual games, and
+periodically chanted the remembrance of whose achievements, saw and
+heard those things that were done in his honour. But as the celebration
+became greater and more solemn, this feeling would become more strong,
+and as the tomb, from a small heap of stones or low mound, grew into an
+enormous and imposing rath, the belief that this was the hero's house,
+in which he invisibly dwelt, could not be avoided, even before they
+ceased to regard him as a disembodied hero; and after the hero had
+mingled with the divine clans, and was numbered amongst the gods, the
+idea that the rath was a tomb could not logically be entertained. As
+a god, was he not one of those who had eaten of the food provided by
+Mananan, and therefore never died. The rath would then become his house
+or temple. As matter of fact, the bardic writings teem with this idea.
+From reason and probability, we would with some certainty conclude that
+the great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of some Irish god; but
+that it was so, we know as a fact. The father and king of the gods
+is alluded to as dwelling there, going out from thence, and returning
+again, and there holding his invisible court.
+
+ "Behold the _Sid_ before your eyes,
+ It is manifest to you that it is a king's mansion."
+[Note: O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History, page 505.]
+
+ "Bove Derg went to visit the Dagda at the Brugh of Mac-An-Og."
+[Note: "Dream of Angus," Révue Celtique, Vol. III., page 349.]
+
+Here also dwelt Angus Og, the son of the Dagda. In this, his spiritual
+court or temple, he is represented as having entertained Oscar and
+the Ossianic heroes, and thither he conducted [Note: Publications of
+Ossianic Society, Vol. III., page 201.] the spirit of Diarmid, that he
+might have him for ever there.
+
+In the etymology also we see the origin of the Irish gods. A grave in
+Irish is Sid, the disembodied spirit is Sidhe, and this latter word
+glosses Tuátha De Danan.
+
+The fact that the grave of a hero developed slowly into the temple of
+a god, explains certain obscurities in the annals and literature. As
+a hero was exalted into a god, so in turn a god sank into a hero,
+or rather into the race of the giants. The elder gods, conquered and
+destroyed by the younger, could no longer be regarded as really divine,
+for were they not proved to be mortal? The development of the temple
+from the tomb was not forgotten, the whole country being filled with
+such tombs and incipient temples, from the great Brugh on the Boyne to
+the smallest mound in any of the cemeteries. Thus, when the elder gods
+lost their spiritual sovereignty, and their destruction at the hands of
+the younger took the form of great battles, then as the god was forced
+to become a giant, so his temple was remembered to be a tomb. Doubtless,
+in his own territory, divine honours were still paid him; but in the
+national imagination and in the classical literature and received
+history, he was a giant of the olden time, slain by the gods, and
+interred in the rath which bore his name. Such was the great Mac Erc,
+King of Fir-bolgs.
+
+Again, when the mediaeval Christians ceased to regard the Tuátha De
+Danan as devils, and proceeded to rationalise the divine record as the
+ethnic bards had rationalised the history of the early gods; the Tuátha
+De Danan, shorn of immortality, became ancient heroes who had lived
+their day and died, and the greater raths, no longer the houses of the
+gods, figure in that literature irrationally rational, as their tombs.
+Thus we are gravely informed [Note: Annals of Four Masters.] that "the
+Dagda Mor, after the second battle of Moy Tura, retired to the Brugh on
+the Boyne, where he died from the venom of the wounds inflicted on him
+by Kethlenn"--the Fomorian amazon--"and was there interred." Even in
+this passage the writer seems to have been unable to dispossess his mind
+quite of the traditional belief that the Brugh was the Dagda's house.
+
+The peculiarity of this mound, in addition to its size, is the
+spaciousness of the central chamber. This was that germ which, but for
+the overthrow of the bardic religion, would have developed into a temple
+in the classic sense of the word. A two-fold motive would have impelled
+the growing civilisation in this direction. A desire to make the house
+of the god as spacious within as it was great without, and a desire to
+transfer his worship, or the more esoteric and solemn part of it, from
+without to within. Either the absence of architectural knowledge, or
+the force of conservatism, or the advent of the Christian missionaries,
+checked any further development on these lines.
+
+Elsewhere the tomb, instead of developing as a tumulus or barrow,
+produced the effect of greatness by huge circumvallations of earth, and
+massive walls of stone. Such is the temple of Ned the war-god, called
+Aula Neid, the court or palace of Ned, near the Foyle in the North. Had
+the ethnic civilisation of Ireland been suffered to develop according to
+its own laws, it is probable that, as the roofed central chamber of the
+cairn would have grown until it filled the space occupied by the mound,
+so the open-walled temple would have developed into a covered building,
+by the elevation of the walls, and their gradual inclination to the
+centre.
+
+The bee-hive houses of the monks, the early churches, and the round
+towers are a development of that architecture which constructed the
+central chambers of the raths. In this fact lies, too, the explanation
+of the cyclopean style of building which characterizes our most ancient
+buildings. The cromlech alone, formed in very ancient times the central
+chamber of the cairn; it is found in the centre of the raths on Moy
+Tura, belonging to the stone age and that of the Firbolgs. When the
+cromlech fell into disuse, the arched chamber above the ashes of the
+hero was constructed with enormous stones, as a substitute for the
+majestic appearance presented by the massive slab and supporting pillars
+of the more ancient cromlech, and the early stone buildings preserved
+the same characteristic to a certain extent.
+
+The same sentiment which caused the mediaeval Christians to disinter and
+enshrine the bones of their saints, and subsequently to re-enshrine
+them with greater art and more precious materials, caused the ethnic
+worshippers of heroes to erect nobler tombs over the inurned relics
+of those whom they revered, as the meanness of the tomb was seen to
+misrepresent and humiliate the sublimity of the conception. But the
+Christians could never have imagined their saints to have been anything
+but men--a fact which caused the retention and preservation of the
+relics. When the Gentiles exalted their hero into a god, the charred
+bones were forgotten or ascribed to another. The hero then became
+immortal in his own right; he had feasted with Mananan and eaten his
+life-giving food, and would not know death.
+
+When the mortal character of the hero was forgotten, his house or temple
+might be erected anywhere. The great Raths of the Boyne--a place grown
+sacred from causes which we may not now learn--represented, probably,
+heroes and heroines, who died and were interred in many different parts
+of the country.
+
+To recapitulate, the Dagda Mor was a divine title given to a hero named
+Eocaidh, who lived many centuries before the birth of Christ, and in the
+depths of the pre-historic ages. He was the mortal scion or ward of
+an elder god, Elathan, and was interred in some unknown grave--marked,
+perhaps, by a plain pillar stone, or small insignificant cairn.
+
+The great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of the divine or
+supernatural period of his spiritual or imagined career after death, and
+was a development by steps from that small unremembered grave where once
+his warriors hid the inurned ashes of the hero.
+
+What is true of one branch of the Aryan family is true of all.
+Sentiments of such universality and depth must have been common to all.
+If this be so, the Olympian Zeus himself was once some rude chieftain
+dwelling in Thrace or Macedonia, and his sublime temple of Doric
+architecture traceable to some insignificant cairn or flagged cist in
+Greece, or some earlier home of the Hellenic race, and his name not
+Zeus, but another; and Kronos, that god whom he, as a living wight,
+adored, and under whose protection and favour he prospered.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by
+Standish O'Grady
+
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by Standish O'Grady
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+Project Gutenberg's Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by Standish O'Grady
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Early Bardic Literature, Ireland
+
+Author: Standish O'Grady
+
+Release Date: August 4, 2009 [EBook #8109]
+Last Updated: February 4, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ar dTeanga Fein, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Standish O'Grady
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ 11 Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scattered over the surface of every country in Europe may be found
+ sepulchral monuments, the remains of pre-historic times and nations, and
+ of a phase of life will civilisation which has long since passed away. No
+ country in Europe is without its cromlechs and dolmens, huge earthen
+ tumuli, great flagged sepulchres, and enclosures of tall pillar-stones.
+ The men by whom these works were made, so interesting in themselves, and
+ so different from anything of the kind erected since, were not strangers
+ and aliens, but our own ancestors, and out of their rude civilisation our
+ own has slowly grown. Of that elder phase of European civilisation no
+ record or tradition has been anywhere bequeathed to us. Of its nature, and
+ the ideas and sentiments whereby it was sustained, nought may now be
+ learned save by an examination of those tombs themselves, and of the dumb
+ remnants, from time to time exhumed out of their soil&mdash;rude
+ instruments of clay, flint, brass, and gold, and by speculations and
+ reasonings founded upon these archaeological gleanings, meagre and
+ sapless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For after the explorer has broken up, certainly desecrated, and perhaps
+ destroyed, those noble sepulchral raths; after he has disinterred the
+ bones laid there once by pious hands, and the urn with its unrecognisable
+ ashes of king or warrior, and by the industrious labour of years hoarded
+ his fruitless treasure of stone celt and arrow-head, of brazen sword and
+ gold fibula and torque; and after the savant has rammed many skulls with
+ sawdust, measuring their capacity, and has adorned them with some obscure
+ label, and has tabulated and arranged the implements and decorations of
+ flint and metal in the glazed cases of the cold gaunt museum, the
+ imagination, unsatisfied and revolted, shrinks back from all that he has
+ done. Still we continue to inquire, receiving from him no adequate
+ response, Who were those ancient chieftains and warriors for whom an
+ affectionate people raised those strange tombs? What life did they lead?
+ What deeds perform? How did their personality affect the minds of their
+ people and posterity? How did our ancestors look upon those great tombs,
+ certainly not reared to be forgotten, and how did they&mdash;those huge
+ monumental pebbles and swelling raths&mdash;enter into and affect the
+ civilisation or religion of the times?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see the cromlech with its massive slab and immense supporting pillars,
+ but we vainly endeavour to imagine for whom it was first erected, and how
+ that greater than cyclopean house affected the minds of those who made it,
+ or those who were reared in its neighbourhood or within reach of its
+ influence. We see the stone cist with its great smooth flags, the rocky
+ cairn, and huge barrow and massive walled cathair, but the interest which
+ they invariably excite is only aroused to subside again unsatisfied. From
+ this department of European antiquities the historian retires baffled, and
+ the dry savant is alone master of the field, but a field which, as
+ cultivated by him alone, remains barren or fertile only in things the
+ reverse of exhilarating. An antiquarian museum is more melancholy than a
+ tomb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there is one country in Europe in which, by virtue of a marvellous
+ strength and tenacity of the historical intellect, and of filial
+ devotedness to the memory of their ancestors, there have been preserved
+ down into the early phases of mediaeval civilisation, and then committed
+ to the sure guardianship of manuscript, the hymns, ballads, stories, and
+ chronicles, the names, pedigrees, achievements, and even characters, of
+ those ancient kings and warriors over whom those massive cromlechs were
+ erected and great cairns piled. There is not a conspicuous sepulchral
+ monument in Ireland, the traditional history of which is not recorded in
+ our ancient literature, and of the heroes in whose honour they were
+ raised. In the rest of Europe there is not a single barrow, dolmen, or
+ cist of which the ancient traditional history is recorded; in Ireland
+ there is hardly one of which it is not. And these histories are in many
+ cases as rich and circumstantial as that of men of the greatest eminence
+ who have lived in modern times. Granted that the imagination which for
+ centuries followed with eager interest the lives of these heroes, beheld
+ as gigantic what was not so, as romantic and heroic what was neither one
+ nor the other, still the great fact remains, that it was beside and in
+ connection with the mounds and cairns that this history was elaborated,
+ and elaborated concerning them and concerning the heroes to whom they were
+ sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the plain of Tara, beside the little stream Nemanna, itself famous as
+ that which first turned a mill-wheel in Ireland, there lies a barrow, not
+ itself very conspicuous in the midst of others, all named and illustrious
+ in the ancient literature of the country. The ancient hero there interred
+ is to the student of the Irish bardic literature a figure as familiar and
+ clearly seen as any personage in the Biographia Britannica. We know the
+ name he bore as a boy and the name he bore as a man. We know the names of
+ his father and his grandfather, and of the father of his grandfather, of
+ his mother, and the father and mother of his mother, and the pedigrees and
+ histories of each of these. We know the name of his nurse, and of his
+ children, and of his wife, and the character of his wife, and of the
+ father and mother of his wife, and where they lived and were buried. We
+ know all the striking events of his boyhood and manhood, the names of his
+ horses and his weapons, his own character and his friends, male and
+ female. We know his battles, and the names of those whom he slew in
+ battle, and how he was himself slain, and by whose hands. We know his
+ physical and spiritual characteristics, the device upon his shield, and
+ how that was originated, carved, and painted, by whom. We know the colour
+ of his hair, the date of his birth and of his death, and his relations, in
+ time and otherwise, with the remainder of the princes and warriors with
+ whom, in that mound-raising period of our history, he was connected, in
+ hostility or friendship; and all this enshrined in ancient song, the
+ transmitted traditions of the people who raised that barrow, and who laid
+ within it sorrowing their brave ruler and, defender. That mound is the
+ tomb of Cuculain, once king of the district in which Dundalk stands
+ to-day, and the ruins of whose earthen fortification may still be seen two
+ miles from that town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a single instance, and used merely as an example, but one out of a
+ multitude almost as striking. There is not a king of Ireland, described as
+ such in the ancient annals, whose barrow is not mentioned in these or
+ other compositions, and every one of which may at the present day be
+ identified where the ignorant plebeian or the ignorant patrician has not
+ destroyed them. The early History of Ireland clings around and grows out
+ of the Irish barrows until, with almost the universality of that primeval
+ forest from which Ireland took one of its ancient names, the whole isle
+ and all within it was clothed with a nobler raiment, invisible, but not
+ the less real, of a full and luxuriant history, from whose presence,
+ all-embracing, no part was free. Of the many poetical and rhetorical
+ titles lavished upon this country, none is truer than that which calls her
+ the Isle of Song. Her ancient history passed unceasingly into the realm of
+ artistic representation; the history of one generation became the poetry
+ of the next, until the whole island was illuminated and coloured by the
+ poetry of the bards. Productions of mere fancy and imagination these songs
+ are not, though fancy and imagination may have coloured and shaped all
+ their subject-matter, but the names are names of men and women who once
+ lived and died in Ireland, and over whom their people raised the swelling
+ rath and reared the rocky cromlech. In the sepulchral monuments their
+ names were preserved, and in the performance of sacred rites, and the
+ holding of games, fairs, and assemblies in their honour, the memory of
+ their achievements kept fresh, till the traditions that clung around these
+ places were inshrined in tales which were finally incorporated in the
+ Leabhar na Huidhré and the Book of Leinster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pre-historic narrative is of two kinds&mdash;in one the imagination is at
+ work consciously, in the other unconsciously. Legends of the former class
+ are the product of a lettered and learned age. The story floats loosely in
+ a world of imagination. The other sort of pre-historic narrative clings
+ close to the soil, and to visible and tangible objects. It may be legend,
+ but it is legend believed in as history never consciously invented, and
+ growing out of certain spots of the earth's surface, and supported by and
+ drawing its life from the soil like a natural growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such are the early Irish tales that cling around the mounds and cromlechs
+ as that by which they are sustained, which was originally their source,
+ and sustained them afterwards in a strong enduring life. It is evident
+ that these cannot be classed with stories that float vaguely in an ideal
+ world, which may happen in one place as well as another, and in which the
+ names might be disarrayed without changing the character and consistency
+ of the tale, and its relations, in time or otherwise, with other tales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Foreigners are surprised to find the Irish claim for their own country an
+ antiquity and a history prior to that of the neighbouring countries.
+ Herein lie the proof and the explanation. The traditions and history of
+ the mound-raising period have in other countries passed away. Foreign
+ conquest, or less intrinsic force of imagination, and pious sentiment have
+ suffered them to fall into oblivion; but in Ireland they have been all
+ preserved in their original fulness and vigour, hardly a hue has faded,
+ hardly a minute circumstance or articulation been suffered to decay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enthusiasm with which the Irish intellect seized upon the grand moral
+ life of Christianity, and ideals so different from, and so hostile to,
+ those of the heroic age, did not consume the traditions or destroy the
+ pious and reverent spirit in which men still looked back upon those
+ monuments of their own pagan teachers and kings, and the deep spirit of
+ patriotism and affection with which the mind still clung to the old heroic
+ age, whose types were warlike prowess, physical beauty, generosity,
+ hospitality, love of family and nation, and all those noble attributes
+ which constituted the heroic character as distinguished from the saintly.
+ The Danish conquest, with its profound modification of Irish society, and
+ consequent disruption of old habits and conditions of life, did not
+ dissipate it; nor the more dangerous conquest of the Normans, with their
+ own innate nobility of character, chivalrous daring, and continental grace
+ and civilisation; nor the Elizabethan convulsions and systematic
+ repression and destruction of all native phases of thought and feeling.
+ Through all these storms, which successively assailed the heroic
+ literature of ancient Ireland, it still held itself undestroyed. There
+ were still found generous minds to shelter and shield the old tales and
+ ballads, to feel the nobleness of that life of which they were the
+ outcome, and to resolve that the soil of Ireland should not, so far as
+ they had the power to prevent it, be denuded of its raiment of history and
+ historic romance, or reduced again to primeval nakedness. The fruit of
+ this persistency and unquenched love of country and its ancient
+ traditions, is left to be enjoyed by us. There is not through the length
+ and breadth of the country a conspicuous rath or barrow of which we cannot
+ find the traditional history preserved in this ancient literature. The
+ mounds of Tara, the great barrows along the shores of the Boyne, the raths
+ of Slieve Mish, and Rathcrogan, and Teltown, the stone caiseals of Aran
+ and Innishowen, and those that alone or in smaller groups stud the country
+ over, are all, or nearly all, mentioned in this ancient literature, with
+ the names and traditional histories of those over whom they were raised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one thing to be learned from all this, which is, that we, at
+ least, should not suffer these ancient monuments to be destroyed, whose
+ history has been thus so astonishingly preserved. The English farmer may
+ tear down the barrow which is unfortunate enough to be situated within his
+ bounds. Neither he nor his neighbours know or can tell anything about its
+ ancient history; the removed earth will help to make his cattle fatter and
+ improve his crops, the stones will be useful to pave his roads and build
+ his fences, and the savant can enjoy the rest; but the Irish farmer and
+ landlord should not do or suffer this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The instinctive reverence of the peasantry has hitherto been a great
+ preservative; but the spread of education has to a considerable extent
+ impaired this kindly sentiment, and the progress of scientific farming,
+ and the anxiety of the Royal Irish Academy to collect antiquarian trifles,
+ have already led to the reckless destruction of too many. I think that no
+ one who reads the first two volumes of this history would greatly care to
+ bear a hand in the destruction of that tomb at Tara, in which long since
+ his people laid the bones of Cuculain; and I think, too, that they would
+ not like to destroy any other monument of the same age, when they know
+ that the history of its occupant and its own name are preserved in the
+ ancient literature, and that they may one day learn all that is to be
+ known concerning it. I am sure that if the case were put fairly to the
+ Irish landlords and country gentlemen, they would neither inflict nor
+ permit this outrage upon the antiquities of their country. The Irish
+ country gentleman prides himself on his love of trees, and entertains a
+ very wholesome contempt for the mercantile boor who, on purchasing an old
+ place, chops down the best timber for the market. And yet a tree, though
+ cut down, may be replaced. One elm tree is as good as another, and the
+ thinned wood, by proper treatment, will be as dense as ever; but the
+ ancient mound, once carted away, can never be replaced any more. When the
+ study of the Irish literary records is revived, as it certainly will be
+ revived, the old history of each of these raths and cromlechs will be
+ brought again into the light, and one new interest of a beautiful and
+ edifying nature attached to the landscape, and affecting wholly for good
+ the minds of our people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Irishmen are often taunted with the fact that their history is yet
+ unwritten, but that the Irish, as a nation, have been careless of their
+ past is refuted by the facts which I have mentioned. A people who alone in
+ Europe preserved, not in dry chronicles alone, but illuminated and adorned
+ with all that fancy could suggest in ballad, and tale, and rude epic, the
+ history of the mound-raising period, are not justly liable to this taunt.
+ Until very modern times, history was the one absorbing pursuit of the
+ Irish secular intellect, the delight of the noble, and the solace of the
+ vile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present, indeed, the apathy on this subject is, I believe, without
+ parallel in the world. It would seem as if the Irish, extreme in all
+ things, at one time thought of nothing but their history, and, at another,
+ thought of everything but it. Unlike those who write on other subjects,
+ the author of a work on Irish history has to labour simultaneously at a
+ two-fold task&mdash;he has to create the interest to which he intends to
+ address himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties from which
+ the corresponding period in the histories of other countries is free. The
+ surrounding nations escape the difficulty by having nothing to record. The
+ Irish historian is immersed in perplexity on account of the mass of
+ material ready to his hand. The English have lost utterly all record of
+ those centuries before which the Irish historian stands with dismay and
+ hesitation, not through deficiency of materials, but through their excess.
+ Had nought but the chronicles been preserved the task would have been
+ simple. We would then have had merely to determine approximately the date
+ of the introduction of letters, and allowing a margin on account of the
+ bardic system and the commission of family and national history to the
+ keeping of rhymed and alliterated verse, fix upon some reasonable point,
+ and set down in order, the old successions of kings and the battles and
+ other remarkable events. But in Irish history there remains, demanding
+ treatment, that other immense mass of literature of an imaginative nature,
+ illuminating with anecdote and tale the events and personages mentioned
+ simply and without comment by the chronicler. It is this poetic literature
+ which constitutes the stumbling-block, as it constitutes also the glory,
+ of early Irish history, for it cannot be rejected and it cannot be
+ retained. It cannot be rejected, because it contains historical matter
+ which is consonant with and illuminates the dry lists of the chronologist,
+ and it cannot be retained, for popular poetry is not history; and the task
+ of distinguishing In such literature the fact from the fiction&mdash;where
+ there is certainly fact and certainly fiction&mdash;is one of the most
+ difficult to which the intellect can apply itself. That this difficulty
+ has not been hitherto surmounted by Irish writers is no just reproach. For
+ the last century, intellects of the highest attainments, trained and
+ educated to the last degree, have been vainly endeavouring to solve a
+ similar question in the far less copious and less varied heroic literature
+ of Greece. Yet the labours of Wolfe, Grote, Mahaffy, Geddes, and
+ Gladstone, have not been sufficient to set at rest the small question,
+ whether it was one man or two or many who composed the Iliad and Odyssey,
+ while the reality of the achievements of Achilles and even his existence
+ might be denied or asserted by a scholar without general reproach. When
+ this is the case with regard to the great heroes of the Iliad, I fancy it
+ will be some time before the same problem will have been solved for the
+ minor characters, and as it affects Thersites, or that eminent artist who
+ dwelt at home in Hyla, being by far the most excellent of leather cutters.
+ When, therefore, Greek still meets Greek in an interminable and apparently
+ bloodless contest over the disputed body of the Iliad, and still no end
+ appears, surely it would be madness for any one to sit down and gaily
+ distinguish true from false in the immense and complex mass of the Irish
+ bardic literature, having in his ears this century-lasting struggle over a
+ single Greek poem and a single small phase of the pre-historic life of
+ Hellas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Irish heroic literature, the presence or absence of the marvellous
+ supplies <i>no test whatsoever</i> as to the general truth or falsehood of
+ the tale in which they appear. The marvellous is supplied with greater
+ abundance in the account of the battle of Clontarf, and the wars of the
+ O'Briens with the Normans, than in the tale in which is described the
+ foundation of Emain Macha by Kimbay. Exact-thinking, scientific France has
+ not hesitated to paint the battles of Louis XIV. with similar hues; and
+ England, though by no means fertile in angelic interpositions, delights to
+ adorn the barren tracts of her more popular histories with apocryphal
+ anecdotes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How then should this heroic literature of Ireland be treated in connection
+ with the history of the country? The true method would certainly be to
+ print it exactly as it is without excision or condensation. Immense it is,
+ and immense it must remain. No men living, and no men to live, will ever
+ so exhaust the meaning of any single tale as to render its publication
+ unnecessary for the study of others. The order adopted should be that
+ which the bards themselves deter mined, any other would be premature, and
+ I think no other will ever take its place. At the commencement should
+ stand the passage from the Book of Invasions, describing the occupation of
+ the isle by Queen Keasair and her companions, and along with it every
+ discoverable tale or poem dealing with this event and those characters.
+ After that, all that remains of the cycle of which Partholan was the
+ protagonist. Thirdly, all that relates to Nemeth and his sons, their wars
+ with curt Kical the bow-legged, and all that relates to the Fomoroh of the
+ Nemedian epoch, then first moving dimly in the forefront of our history.
+ After that, the great Fir-bolgic cycle, a cycle janus-faced, looking on
+ one side to the mythological period and the wars of the gods, and on the
+ other, to the heroic, and more particularly to the Ultonian cycle. In the
+ next place, the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of the
+ Irish gods who, having conquered the Fir-bolgs, like the Greek gods of the
+ age of gold dwelt visibly in the island until the coming of the Clan
+ Milith, out of Spain. In the sixth, the Milesian invasion, and every
+ accessible statement concerning the sons and kindred of Milesius. In the
+ seventh, the disconnected tales dealing with those local heroes whose
+ history is not connected with the great cycles, but who in the <i>fasti</i>
+ fill the spaces between the divine period and the heroic. In the eighth,
+ the heroic cycles, the Ultonian, the Temairian, and the Fenian, and after
+ these the historic tales that, without forming cycles, accompany the
+ course of history down to the extinction of Irish independence, and the
+ transference to aliens of all the great sources of authority in the
+ island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This great work when completed will be of that kind of which no other
+ European nation can supply an example. Every public library in the world
+ will find it necessary to procure a copy. The chronicles will then cease
+ to be so closely and exclusively studied. Every history of ancient Ireland
+ will consist of more or less intelligent comments upon and theories formed
+ in connection with this great series&mdash;theories which, in general,
+ will only be formed in order to be destroyed. What the present age demands
+ upon the subject of antique Irish history&mdash;an exact and scientific
+ treatment of the facts supplied by our native authorities&mdash;will be
+ demanded for ever. It will never be supplied. The history of Ireland will
+ be contained in this huge publication. In it the poet will find endless
+ themes of song, the philosopher strange workings of the human mind, the
+ archeologist a mass of information, marvellous in amount and quality, with
+ regard to primitive ideas and habits of life, and the rationalist
+ materials for framing a scientific history of Ireland, which will be
+ acceptable in proportion to the readableness of his style, and the mode in
+ which his views may harmonize with the prevailing humour and complexion of
+ his contemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a work it is evident could not be effected by a single individual. It
+ must be a public and national undertaking, carried out under the
+ supervision of the Royal Irish Academy, at the expense of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The publication of the Irish bardic remains in the way that I have
+ mentioned, is the only true and valuable method of presenting the history
+ of Ireland to the notice of the world. The mode which I have myself
+ adopted, that other being out of the question, is open to many obvious
+ objections; but in the existing state of the Irish mind on the subject, no
+ other is possible to an individual writer. I desire to make this heroic
+ period once again a portion of the imagination of the country, and its
+ chief characters as familiar in the minds of our people as they once were.
+ As mere history, and treated in the method in which history is generally
+ written at the present day, a work dealing with the early Irish kings and
+ heroes would certainly not secure an audience. Those who demand such a
+ treatment forget that there is not in the country an interest on the
+ subject to which to appeal. A work treating of early Irish kings, in the
+ same way in which the historians of neighbouring countries treat of their
+ own early kings, would be, to the Irish public generally, unreadable. It
+ might enjoy the reputation of being well written, and as such receive an
+ honourable place in half-a-dozen public libraries, but it would be
+ otherwise left severely alone. It would never make its way through that
+ frozen zone which, on this subject, surrounds the Irish mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, Irishmen are as ready as others to feel an interest in
+ a human character, having themselves the ordinary instincts, passions, and
+ curiosities of human nature. If I can awake an interest in the career of
+ even a single ancient Irish king, I shall establish a train of thoughts,
+ which will advance easily from thence to the state of society in which he
+ lived, and the kings and heroes who surrounded, preceded, or followed him.
+ Attention and interest once fully aroused, concerning even one feature of
+ this landscape of ancient history, could be easily widened and extended in
+ its scope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, if nothing remained of early Irish history save the dry <i>fasti</i>
+ of the chronicles and the Brehon laws, this would, I think, be a perfectly
+ legitimate object of ambition, and would be consonant with my ideal of
+ what the perfect flower of historical literature should be, to illuminate
+ a tale embodying the former by hues derived from the Senchus Mor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in Irish literature there has been preserved, along with the <i>fasti</i>
+ and the laws, this immense mass of ancient ballad, tale, and epic, whose
+ origin is lost in the mists of extreme antiquity, and in which have been
+ preserved the characters, relationships, adventures, and achievements of
+ the vast majority of the personages whose names, in a gaunt nakedness,
+ fill the books of the chroniclers. Around each of the greater heroes there
+ groups itself a mass of bardic literature, varying in tone and statement,
+ but preserving a substantial unity as to the general character and the
+ more important achievements of the hero, and also, a fact upon which their
+ general historical accuracy may be based with confidence, exhibiting a
+ knowledge of that same prior and subsequent history recorded in the <i>fasti</i>.
+ The literature which groups itself around a hero exhibits not only an
+ unity with itself, but an acquaintance with the general course of the
+ history of the country, and with preceding and succeeding kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The students of Irish literature do not require to be told this; for those
+ who are not, I would give a single instance as an illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the battle of Gabra, fought in the third century, and in which Oscar,
+ perhaps the greatest of all the Irish heroes heading the Fianna Eireen,
+ contended against Cairbry of the Liffey, King of Ireland, and his troops,
+ Cairbry on his side announces to his warriors that he would rather perish
+ in this battle than suffer one of the Fianna to survive; but while he
+ spoke&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Barran suddenly exclaimed&mdash;
+ 'Remember Mall Mucreema, remember Art.
+
+ "'Our ancestors fell there
+ By force of the treachery of the Fians;
+ Remember the hard tributes,
+ Remember the extraordinary pride.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here the poet, singing only of the events of the battle of Gabra, shows
+ that he was well-acquainted with all the relations subsisting for a long
+ time between the Fians and the Royal family. The battle of Mucreema was
+ fought by Cairbry's grandfather, Art, against Lewy Mac Conn and the Fianna
+ Eireen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, in the tale of the battle of Moy Leana, in which Conn of the
+ Hundred Battles, the father of this same Art, is the principal character,
+ the author of the tale mentions many times circumstances relating to his
+ father, Felimy Rectmar, and his grandfather, Tuhall Tectmar. Such is the
+ whole of the Irish literature, not vague, nebulous, and shifting, but
+ following the course of the <i>fasti</i>, and regulated and determined by
+ them. This argument has been used by Mr. Gladstone with great confidence,
+ in order to show the substantial historical truthfulness of the Iliad, and
+ that it is in fact a portion of a continuous historic sequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this being admitted, that the course of Irish history, as laid down by
+ the chroniclers, was familiar to the authors of the tales and heroic
+ ballads, one of two things must be admitted, either that the events and
+ kings did succeed one another in the order mentioned by the chroniclers,
+ or that what the chroniclers laid down was then taken as the theme of song
+ by the bards, and illuminated and adorned according to their wont.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second of these suppositions is one which I think few will adopt. Can
+ we believe it possible that the bards, who actually supported themselves
+ by the amount of pleasure which they gave their audiences, would have
+ forsaken those subjects which were already popular, and those kings and
+ heroes whose splendour and achievements must have affected, profoundly,
+ the popular imagination, in order to invent stories to illuminate
+ fabricated names. The thing is quite impossible. A practice which we can
+ trace to the edge of that period whose historical character may be proved
+ to demonstration, we may conclude to have extended on into the period
+ immediately preceding that. When bards illuminated with stories and
+ marvellous circumstances the battle of Clontarf and the battle of Moyrath,
+ we may believe their predecessors to have done the same for the earlier
+ centuries. The absence of an imaginative literature other than historical
+ shows also that the literature must have followed, regularly, the course
+ of the history, and was not an archaeological attempt to create an
+ interest in names and events which were found in the chronicles. It is,
+ therefore, a reasonable conclusion that the bardic literature, where it
+ reveals a clear sequence in the order of events, and where there is no
+ antecedent improbability, supplies a trustworthy guide to the general
+ course of our history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far as the clear light of history reaches, so far may these tales be
+ proved to be historical. It is, therefore, reasonable to suppose that the
+ same consonance between them and the actual course of events which
+ subsisted during the period which lies in clear light, marked also that
+ other preceding period of which the light is no longer dry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The earliest manuscript of these tales is the Leabhar [Note: Leabar na
+ Heera.] na Huidhré, a work of the eleventh century, so that we may feel
+ sure that we have them in a condition unimpaired by the revival of
+ learning, or any archaeological restoration or improvement. Now, of some
+ of these there have been preserved copies in other later MSS., which
+ differ very little from the copies preserved in the Leabhar na Huidhré,
+ from which we may conclude that these tales had arrived at a fixed state,
+ and a point at which it was considered wrong to interfere with the text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feast of Bricrind is one of the tales preserved in this manuscript.
+ The author of the tale in its present form, whenever he lived, composed
+ it, having before him original books which he collated, using his judgment
+ at times upon the materials to his hand. At one stage he observes that the
+ books are at variance on a certain point, namely, that at which Cuculain,
+ Conal the Victorious, and Laery Buada go to the lake of Uath in order to
+ be judged by him. Some of the books, according to the author, stated that
+ on this occasion the two latter behaved unfairly, but he agreed with those
+ books which did not state this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have, therefore, a tale penned in the eleventh century, composed at
+ some time prior to this, and itself collected, not from oral tradition,
+ but from books. These considerations would, therefore, render it extremely
+ probable that the tales of the Ultonian period, with which the Leabhar na
+ Huidhré is principally concerned, were committed to writing at a very
+ early period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To strengthen still further the general historic credibility of these
+ tales, and to show how close to the events and heroes described must have
+ been the bards who originally composed them, I would urge the following
+ considerations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the advent of Christianity the mound-raising period passed away. The
+ Irish heroic tales have their source in, and draw their interest from, the
+ mounds and those laid in them. It would, therefore, be extremely
+ improbable that the bards of the Christian period, when the days of rath
+ and cairn had departed, would modify, to any considerable extent, the
+ literature produced in conditions of society which had passed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, with the advent of Christianity, and the hold which the new faith
+ took upon the finest and boldest minds in the country, it is plain that
+ the golden age of bardic composition ended. The loss to the bards was
+ direct, by the withdrawal of so much intellect from their ranks, and
+ indirect, by the general substitution of other ideas for those whose
+ ministers they themselves were. It is, therefore, probable that the age of
+ production and creation, with regard to the ethnic history, ceased about
+ the fifth and sixth centuries, and that, about that time, men began to
+ gather up into a collected form the floating literature connected with the
+ pagan period. The general current of mediaeval opinion attributes the
+ collection of tales and ballads now known as the Tân-Bo-Cooalney to St.
+ Ciaran, the great founder of the monastery of Clonmacnoise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if this be the case, we are enabled to take another step in the
+ history of this most valuable literature. The tales of the Leabhar na
+ Huidhré are in prose, but prose whose source and original is poetry. The
+ author, from time to time, as if quoting an authority, breaks out with
+ verse; and I think there is no Irish tale in existence without these
+ rudimentary traces of a prior metrical cycle. The style and language are
+ quite different, and indicate two distinct epochs. The prose tale is
+ founded upon a metrical original, and composed in the meretricious style
+ then in fashion, while the old metrical excerpts are pure and simple. This
+ is sufficient, in a country like Ireland in those primitive times, to
+ necessitate a considerable step into the past, if we desire to get at the
+ originals upon which the prose tales were founded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For in ancient Ireland the conservatism of the people was very great. It
+ is the case in all primitive societies. Individual, initiative, personal
+ enterprise are content to work within a very small sphere. In agriculture,
+ laws, customs, and modes of literary composition, primitive and simple
+ societies are very adverse to change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we see how closely the Christian compilers followed the early
+ authorities, we can well believe that in the ethnic times no mind would
+ have been sufficiently daring or sacrilegious to alter or pervert those
+ epics which were in their eyes at the same time true and sacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the perusal of the Irish literature, we see that the strength of this
+ conservative instinct has been of the greatest service in the preservation
+ of the early monuments in their purity. So much is this the case, that in
+ many tales the most flagrant contradictions appear, the author or scribe
+ being unwilling to depart at all from that which he found handed down. For
+ instance, in the "Great Breach of Murthemney," we find Laeg at one moment
+ killed, and in the next riding black Shanglan off the field. From this
+ conservatism and careful following of authority, and the <i>littera
+ scripta</i>, or word once spoken, I conclude that the distance in time
+ between the prose tale and the metrical originals was very great, and,
+ unless under such exceptional circumstances as the revolution caused by
+ the introduction of Christianity, could not have been brought about within
+ hundreds of years. Moreover, this same conservatism would have caused the
+ tales concerning heroes to grow very slowly once they were actually
+ formed. All the noteworthy events of the hero's life and his
+ characteristics must have formed the original of the tales concerning him,
+ which would have been composed during his life, or not long after his
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have not met a single tale, whether in verse or prose, in which it is
+ not clearly seen that the author was not following authorities before him.
+ Such traces of invention or decoration as may be met with are not suffered
+ to interfere with the conduct of the tale and the statement of facts. They
+ fill empty niches and adorn vacant places. For instance, if a king is
+ represented as crossing the sea, we find that the causes leading to this,
+ the place whence he set out, his companions, &amp;c., are derived from the
+ authorities, but the bard, at the same time, permits himself to give what
+ seems to him to be an eloquent or beautiful description of the sea, and
+ the appearance presented by the many-oared galleys. And yet the last
+ transcription or recension of the majority of the tales was effected in
+ Christian times, and in an age characterised by considerable classical
+ attainments&mdash;a time when the imagination might have been expected to
+ shake itself loose from old restraints, and freely invent. <i>A fortiori</i>,
+ the more ancient bards, those of the ruder ethnic times, would have clung
+ still closer to authority, deriving all their imaginative representations
+ from preceding minstrels. There was no conscious invention at any time.
+ Each cycle and tale grew from historic roots, and was developed from
+ actual fact. So much may indeed be said for the more ancient tales, but
+ the Ultonian cycle deals with events well within the historic period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The era of Concobar Mac Nessa and the Red Branch knights of Ulster was
+ long subsequent to the floruerunt of the Irish gods and their Titan-like
+ opponents of this latter period, the names alone can be fairly held to be
+ historic. What swells out the Irish chronicles to such portentous
+ dimensions is the history of the gods and giants rationalised by mediaeval
+ historians. Unable to ignore or excide what filled so much of the
+ imagination of the country, and unable, as Christians, to believe in the
+ divinity of the Tuátha De Danan and their predecessors, they rationalised
+ all the pre-Milesian record. But the disappearance of the gods does not
+ yet bring us within the penumbra of history. After the death of the sons
+ of Milesius we find a long roll of kings. These were all topical heroes,
+ founders of nations, and believed, by the tribes and tribal confederacies
+ which they founded, to have been in their day the chief kings of Ireland.
+ The point fixed upon by the accurate and sceptical Tiherna as the
+ starting-point of trustworthy Irish history, was one long subsequent to
+ the floruerunt of the gods; and the age of Concobar Mac Nessa and his
+ knights was more than two centuries later than that of Kimbay and the
+ foundation of Emain Macha. The floruit of Cuculain, therefore, falls
+ completely within the historical penumbra, and the more carefully the
+ enormous, and in the main mutually consistent and self-supporting,
+ historical remains dealing with this period are studied, the more will
+ this be believed. The minuteness, accuracy, extent, and verisimilitude of
+ the literature, chronicles, pedigrees, &amp;c., relating to this period,
+ will cause the student to wonder more and more as he examines and
+ collates, seeing the marvellous self-consistency and consentaneity of such
+ a mass of varied recorded matter. The age, indeed, breathes sublimity, and
+ abounds with the marvellous, the romantic, and the grotesque. But as I
+ have already stated, the presence or absence of these qualities has no
+ crucial significance. Love and reverence and the poetic imagination always
+ effect such changes in the object of their passion. They are the essential
+ condition of the transference of the real into the world of art. AEval, of
+ Carriglea, the fairy queen of Munster, is one of the most important
+ characters in the history of the battle of Clontarf, the character of
+ which, and of the events that preceded and followed its occurrence, and
+ the chieftains and warriors who fought on one side and the other, are
+ identical, whether described by the bard singing, or by the monkish
+ chronicler jotting down in plain prose the fasti for the year. The reader
+ of these volumes can make such deductions as he pleases, on this account,
+ from the bardic history of the Red Branch, and clip the wings of the tale,
+ so that it may with him travel pedestrian. I know there are others, like
+ myself, who will not hesitate for once to let the fancy roam and luxuriate
+ in the larger spaces and freer airs of ancient song, nor fear that their
+ sanity will be imperilled by the shouting of semi-divine heroes, and the
+ sight of Cuculain entering battles with the Tuátha De Danan around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hope on some future occasion to examine more minutely the character and
+ place in literature of the Irish bardic remains, and put forward here
+ these general considerations, from which the reader may presume that the
+ Ultonian cycle, dealing as it does with Cuculain and his contemporaries,
+ is in the main true to the facts of the time, and that his history, and
+ that of the other heroes who figure in these volumes, is, on the whole,
+ and omitting the marvellous, sufficiently reliable. I would ask the
+ reader, who may be inclined to think that the principal character is too
+ chivalrous and refined for the age, to peruse for himself the tale named
+ the "Great Breach of Murthemney." He will there, and in many other tales
+ and poems besides, see that the noble and pathetic interest which attaches
+ to his character is substantially the same as I have represented in these
+ volumes. But unless the student has read the whole of the Ultonian cycle,
+ he should be cautious in condemning a departure in my work from any
+ particular version of an event which he may have himself met. Of many
+ minor events there are more than one version, and many scenes and
+ assertions which he may think of importance would yet, by being related,
+ cause inconsistency and contradiction. Of the nature of the work in which
+ all should be introduced I have already given my opinion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the rest, I have related one or two great events in the life of
+ Cuculain in such a way as to give a description as clear and correct as
+ possible of his own character and history as related by the bards, of
+ those celebrated men and women who were his contemporaries and of his
+ relations with them, of the gods and supernatural powers in whom the
+ people then believed, and of the state of civilisation which then
+ prevailed. If I have done my task well, the reader will have been
+ supplied, without any intensity of application on his part&mdash;a
+ condition of the public mind upon which no historian of this country
+ should count&mdash;with some knowledge of ancient Irish history, and with
+ an interest in the subject which may lead him to peruse for himself that
+ ancient literature, and to read works of a more strictly scientific nature
+ upon the subject than those which I have yet written. But until such an
+ interest is aroused, it is useless to swell the mass of valuable critical
+ matter, which everyone at present is very well content to leave unread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first volume, however, I have committed this error, that I did not
+ permit it to be seen with sufficient clearness that the characters and
+ chief events of the tale are absolutely historic; and that much of the
+ colouring, inasmuch as its source must have been the centuries immediately
+ succeeding the floruerunt of those characters, is also reliable as
+ history, while the remainder is true to the times and the state of society
+ which then obtained. The story seems to progress too much in the air, too
+ little in time and space, and seems to be more of the nature of legend and
+ romance than of actual historic fact seen through an imaginative medium.
+ Such is the history of Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights&mdash;historic
+ fact seen through the eyes of a loving wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, I must confess that the blaze of bardic light which illuminates
+ those centuries at first so dazzled the eye and disturbed the judgment,
+ that I saw only the literature, only the epic and dramatic interest, and
+ did not see as I should the distinctly historical character of the age
+ around which that literature revolves, wrongly deeming that a literature
+ so noble, and dealing with events so remote, must have originated mainly
+ or altogether in the imagination. All the borders of the epic
+ representation at which, in the first volume, I have aimed, seem to melt,
+ and wander away vaguely on every side into space and time. I have now
+ taken care to remedy that defect, supplying to the unset picture the clear
+ historical frame to which it is entitled. I will also request the reader,
+ when the two volumes may diverge in tone or statement, to attach greater
+ importance to the second, as the result of wider and more careful reading
+ and more matured reflection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great English poet, himself a severe student, pronounced the early
+ history of his own country to be a mere scuffling of kites and crows, as
+ indeed are all wars which lack the sacred bard, and the sacred bard is
+ absent where the kites and crows pick out his eyes. That the Irish kings
+ and heroes should succeed one another, surrounded by a blaze of bardic
+ light, in which both themselves and all those who were contemporaneous
+ with them are seen clearly and distinctly, was natural in a country where
+ in each little realm or sub-kingdom the ard-ollav was equal in dignity to
+ the king, which is proved by the equivalence of their cries. The dawn of
+ English history is in the seventh century&mdash;a late dawn, dark and
+ sombre, without a ray of cheerful sunshine; that of Ireland dates reliably
+ from a point before the commencement of the Christian era luminous with
+ that light which never was on sea or land&mdash;thronged with heroic forms
+ of men and women&mdash;terrible with the presence of the supernatural and
+ its over-arching power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Educated Irishmen are ignorant of, and indifferent to, their history; yet
+ from the hold of that history they cannot shake themselves free. It still
+ haunts the imagination, like Mordecai at Haman's gate, a cause of
+ continual annoyance and vexation. An Irishman can no more release himself
+ from his history than he can absolve himself from social and domestic
+ duties. He may outrage it, but he cannot placidly ignore. Hence the
+ uneasy, impatient feeling with which the subject is generally regarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I think that I do not exaggerate when I say that the majority of educated
+ Irishmen would feel grateful to the man who informed them that the history
+ of their country was valueless and unworthy of study, that the
+ pre-Christian history was a myth, the post-Christian mere annals, the
+ mediaeval a scuffling of kites and crows, and the modern alone deserving
+ of some slight consideration. That writer will be in Ireland most praised
+ who sets latest the commencement of our history. Without study he will be
+ pronounced sober and rational before the critic opens the book. So anxious
+ is the Irish mind to see that effaced which it is conscious of having
+ neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two compositions which affect an interest comparable to that
+ which Ireland claims for her bardic literature, One is the Ossian of
+ MacPherson, the other the Nibelungen Lied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we are to suppose Macpherson faithfully to have written down, printed,
+ and published the floating disconnected poems which he found lingering in
+ the Scotch highlands, how small, comparatively, would be their value as
+ indications of antique thought and feeling, reduced then for the first
+ time to writing, sixteen hundred years after the time of Ossian and his
+ heroes, in a country not the home of those heroes, and destitute of the
+ regular bardic organisation. The Ossianic tales and poems still told and
+ sung by the Irish peasantry at the present day in the country of Ossian
+ and Oscar, would be, if collected even now, quite as valuable, if not more
+ so. Truer to the antique these latter are, for in them the cycles are not
+ blended. The Red Branch heroes are not confused with Ossian's Fianna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But MacPherson's Ossian is not a translation. In the publications of the
+ Irish Ossianic poetry we see what that poetry really was&mdash;rude,
+ homely, plain-spoken, leagues removed from the nebulous sublimity of
+ MacPherson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the other, the Germans, who naturally desire to refer its
+ composition to as remote a date as possible, and who arguing from no
+ scientific data, but only style, ascribe the authorship of the Nibelungen
+ to a poet living in the latter part of the twelfth century. Be it
+ remembered, that the poem does not purport to be a collection of the
+ scattered fragments of a cycle, but an original composition, then actually
+ imagined and written. It does not even purport to deal with the ethnic
+ times. <i>Its heroes are Christian heroes. They attend Mass.</i> The poem
+ is not true, even to the leading features of the late period of history in
+ which it is placed, if it have any habitat in the world of history at all.
+ Attila, who died A.D. 450, and Theodoric, who did not die until the
+ succeeding century, meet as coevals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn we now from the sole boast of Germany to one out of a hundred in the
+ Irish bardic literature. The Tân-bo-Cooalney was transcribed into the
+ Leabhar na Huidhré in the eleventh century a manuscript whose date has
+ been established by the consentaneity of Irish, French, and German
+ scholarship. Mark, it was transcribed, not composed. The scribe records
+ the fact:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Ego qui scripsi hanc historian aut vero fabulam, quibusdam fidem
+ in hac historiâ aut fabulâ non commodo."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Tân-bo-Cooalney was therefore <i>transcribed</i> by an ancient penman
+ to the parchment of a still existing manuscript, in the century before
+ that in which the German epic is presumed, from style only, and in the
+ opinion of Germans, to have been <i>composed</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same scribe adds this comment with regard to its contents:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Qaedam autem poetica figmenta, quaedam ad delectationem
+ stultorum."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Such scorn could not have been felt by one living in an age of bardic
+ production. That independence and originality of thought, which caused
+ Milton to despise the poets of the Restoration, are impossible in the
+ simple stages of civilisation. The scribe who appended this very
+ interesting comment to the subject of his own handiwork must have been
+ removed by centuries from the date of its compilation. That the tale was,
+ in his time, an ancient one, is therefore rendered extremely probable, the
+ scribe himself indicating how completely out of sympathy he is with this
+ form of literature, its antiquity and peculiar archaeological interest
+ being, doubtless, the cause of the transcription.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, a close study of its contents, as of the contents of all the Irish
+ historic tales, proves that in its present form, whenever that form was
+ superadded, it is but a representation in prose of a pre-existing metrical
+ original. Under this head I have already made some remarks, which, I shall
+ request the reader to re-peruse [Note: Pages 23 to 27]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more, it deals with a particular event in Irish history, and with
+ distinct and definite kings, heroes, and bards, who flourished in the
+ epoch of which it treats. In the synchronisms of Tiherna, in the metrical
+ chronology of Flann, in all the various historical compositions produced
+ in various parts of the country, the main features and leading characters
+ of the Tân-bo-Cooalney suffer no material change, while the minor
+ divergencies show that the chronology of the annals and annalistic poems
+ were not drawn from the tale, but owe their origin to other sources.
+ Moreover, this epic is but a portion of the great Ultonian or Red Branch
+ cycle, all the parts of which pre-suppose and support one another; and
+ that cycle is itself a portion of the history of Ireland, and pre-supposes
+ other preceding and succeeding cyles, preceding and succeeding kings. The
+ event of which this epic treats occurred at the time of the Incarnation,
+ and its characters are the leading Irish kings and warriors of that date.
+ Such is the Tân-bo-Cooalney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This being so, how have the English literary classes recognised, or how
+ treated, our claim to the possession of an antique literature of peculiar
+ historical interest, and by reason of that antiquity, a matter of concern
+ to all Aryan nations? The conquest has not more constituted the English
+ Parliament guardian and trustee of Ireland, for purposes of legislation
+ and government, than it has vested the welfare and fame of our literature
+ and antiquities in the hands of English scholarship. London is the
+ headquarters of the intellectualism and of the literary and historical
+ culture of the Empire. It is the sole dispenser of fame. It alone
+ influences the mind of the country and guides thought and sentiment. It
+ can make and mar reputations. What it scorns or ignores, the world, too,
+ ignores and scorns. How then has the native literature of Ireland been
+ treated by the representatives of English scholarship and literary
+ culture? Mr. Carlyle is the first man of letters of the day, his the
+ highest name as a critic upon, and historian of, the past life of Europe.
+ Let us hear him upon this subject, admittedly of European importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. III., page 136. "Not only as the oldest
+ Tradition of Modern Europe does it&mdash;the Nibelungen&mdash;possess a
+ high antiquarian interest, but farther, and even in the shape we now see
+ it under, unless the epics of the son of Fingal had some sort of
+ authenticity, it is our oldest poem also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Ireland, with her hundred ancient epics, standing at the door of the
+ temple of fame, or, indeed, quite behind the vestibule out of the way! To
+ see the Swabian enter in, crowned, to a flourish of somewhat barbarous
+ music, was indeed bad enough, but Mr. MacPherson!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They manage these things rather better in France, <i>vide passim</i> "La
+ Révue Celtique."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the literary value of the bardic literature I fear to write at all,
+ lest I should not know how to make an end. Rude indeed it is, but great.
+ Like the central chamber of that huge tumulus [Note: New Grange anciently
+ Cnobgha, and now also Knowth.] on the Boyne, overarched with massive
+ unhewn rocks, its very ruggedness strikes an awe which the orderly
+ arrangement of smaller and more reasonable thoughts, cut smooth by
+ instruments inherited from classic times, fails so often to inspire. The
+ labour of the Attic chisel may be seen since its invention in every other
+ literary workshop of Europe, and seen in every other laboratory of thought
+ the transmitted divine fire of the Hebrew. The bardic literature of Erin
+ stands alone, as distinctively and genuinely Irish as the race itself, or
+ the natural aspects of the island. Rude indeed it is, but like the hills
+ which its authors tenanted with gods, holding dells [Note: Those sacred
+ hills will generally be found to have this character.] of the most perfect
+ beauty, springs of the most touching pathos. On page 33, Vol. I., will be
+ seen a poem [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, page 303, Vol. IV.]
+ by Fionn upon the spring-time, made, as the old unknown historian says, to
+ prove his poetic powers&mdash;a poem whose antique language relegates it
+ to a period long prior to the tales of the Leabhar na Huidhré, one which,
+ if we were to meet side by side with the "Ode to Night," by Alcman, in the
+ Greek anthology, we would not be surprised; or those lines on page 203,
+ Vol. I., the song of Cuculain, forsaken by his people, watching the
+ frontier of his country&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Alone in defence of the Ultonians,
+ Solitary keeping ward over the province"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ or the death [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, Vol. I.] of Oscar,
+ on pages 34 and 35, Vol. I., an excerpt condensed from the Battle of
+ Gabra. Innumerable such tender and thrilling passages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all great nations their history presents itself under the aspect of
+ poetry; a drama exciting pity and terror; an epic with unbroken
+ continuity, and a wide range of thought, when the intellect is satisfied
+ with coherence and unity, and the imagination by extent and diversity.
+ Such is the bardic history of Ireland, but with this literary defect. A
+ perfect epic is only possible when the critical spirit begins to be in the
+ ascendant, for with the critical spirit comes that distrust and apathy
+ towards the spontaneous literature of early times, which permit some great
+ poet so to shape and alter the old materials as to construct a harmonious
+ and internally consistent tale, observing throughout a sense of proportion
+ and a due relation of the parts. Such a clipping and alteration of the
+ authorities would have seemed sacrilege to earlier bards. In mediaeval
+ Ireland there was, indeed, a subtle spirit of criticism; but under its
+ influence, being as it was of scholastic origin, no great singing men
+ appeared, re-fashioning the old rude epics; and yet, the very shortcomings
+ of the Irish tales, from a literary point of view, increase their
+ importance from a historical. Of poetry, as distinguised from metrical
+ composition, these ancient bards knew little. The bardic literature,
+ profoundly poetic though it be, in the eyes of our ancestors was history,
+ and never was anything else. As history it was originally composed, and as
+ history bound in the chains of metre, that it might not be lost or
+ dissipated passing through the minds of men, and as history it was
+ translated into prose and committed to parchment. Accordingly, no tale is
+ without its defects as poetry, possessing therefore necessarily, a
+ corresponding value as history. But that there was in the country, in very
+ early times, a high and rare poetic culture of the lyric kind, native in
+ its character, ethnic in origin, unaffected by scholastic culture which,
+ as we know, took a different direction; that one exquisite poem, in which
+ the father of Ossian praises the beauty of the springtime in anapaestic
+ [Note: Cettemain | cain ree! | ro sair | an cuct | "He, Fionn MacCool,
+ learned the three compositions which distinguish the poets, the TEINM
+ LAEGHA, the IMUS OF OSNA, and the DICEDUE DICCENAIB, and it was then Fionn
+ composed this poem to prove his poetry." In which of these three forms of
+ metre the Ode to the spring-time is written I know not. Its form
+ throughout is distinctly anapaestic.&mdash;S. O'G.] verse, would, even
+ though it stood alone, both by the fact of its composition and the fact of
+ its preservation, fully prove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much and careful study, indeed, it requires, if we would compel these
+ ancient epics to yield up their greatness or their beauty, or even their
+ logical coherence and imaginative unity&mdash;broken, scattered portions
+ as they all are of that one enormous epic, the bardic history of Ireland.
+ At the best we read without the key. The magic of the names is gone, or
+ can only be partially recovered by the most tender and sympathetic study.
+ Indeed, without reading all or many, we will not understand the
+ superficial meaning of even one. For instance, in one of the many
+ histories of Cuculain's many battles, we read this&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was said that Lu Mac AEthleen was assisting him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This at first seems meaningless, the bard seeing no necessity for throwing
+ further light on the subject; but, as we wander through the bardic
+ literature, gradually the conception of this Lu grows upon the mind&mdash;the
+ destroyer of the sons of Turann&mdash;the implacably filial&mdash;the
+ expulsor of the Fomoroh&mdash;the source of all the sciences&mdash;the god
+ of the Tuátha De Danan&mdash;the protector and guardian of Cuculain&mdash;Lu
+ Lamfáda, son of Cian, son of Diancéct, son of Esric, son of Dela, son of
+ Ned the war-god, whose tomb or temple, Aula Neid, may still be seen beside
+ the Foyle. This enormous and seemingly chaotic mass of literature is found
+ at all times to possess an inner harmony, a consistency and logical unity,
+ to be apprehended only by careful study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So read, the sublimity strikes through the rude representation. Astonished
+ at himself, the student, who at first thinks that he has chanced upon a
+ crowd of barbarians, ere long finds himself in the august presence of
+ demi-gods and heroes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A noble moral tone pervades the whole. Courage, affection, and truth are
+ native to all who live in this world. Under the dramatic image of Ossian
+ wrangling with the Talkend, [Note: St. Patrick, on account of the tonsured
+ crown.] the bards, themselves vainly fighting against the Christian life,
+ a hundred times repeat through the lips of Ossian like a refrain&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "We, the Fianna of Erin, never uttered falsehood,
+ Lying was never attributed to us;
+ By courage and the strength of our hands
+ We used to come out of every difficulty."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Again: Fergus, the bard, inciting Oscar to his last battle&mdash;in that
+ poem called the Rosc Catha of Oscar:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Place thy hand on thy gentle forehead
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+[Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, p. 159; vol. i.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And again, elsewhere in the Ossianic poetry:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Oscar, who never wronged bard or woman."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, too, they inculcated chastity (see p. 257; vol. i.), an
+ allusion taken from the "youthful adventures of Cuculain," Leabhar na
+ Huidhré.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following ancient rann contains the four qualifications of a bard:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Purity of hand, bright, without wounding,
+ Purity of mouth, without poisonous satire,
+ Purity of learning, without reproach,
+ Purity, as a husband, in wedlock."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, through all this literature sounds a high clear note of
+ chivalry, in this contrasting favourably with the Iliad, where no man
+ foregoes an advantage. Cuculain having slain the sons of Neara, "thought
+ it unworthy of him to take possession of their chariot and horses." [Note:
+ P. 155; vol. i.] Goll Mac Morna, in the Fenian or Ossianic cycle, declares
+ to Conn Cedcathah [Note: Conn of the hundred battles.] that from his youth
+ up he never attacked an enemy by night or under any disadvantage, and many
+ times we read of heroes preferring to die rather than outrage their geisa.
+ [Note: Certain vows taken with their arms on being knighted.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A noble literature indeed it is, having too this strange interest, that
+ though mainly characterised by a great plainness and simplicity of
+ thought, and, in the earlier stages, of expression, we feel, oftentimes, a
+ sudden weirdness, a strange glamour shoots across the poem when the tale
+ seems to open for a moment into mysterious depths, druidic secrets veiled
+ by time, unsunned caves of thought, indicating a still deeper range of
+ feeling, a still lower and wider reach of imagination. A youth came once
+ to the Fianna Eireen encamped at Locha Lein [Note: The Lakes of
+ Killarney.], leading a hound dazzling white, like snow. It was the same,
+ the bard simply states, that was once a yew tree, flourishing fifty
+ summers in the woods of Ioroway. Elsewhere, he is said to have been more
+ terrible than the sun upon his flaming wheels. What meant this yew tree
+ and the hound? Stray allusions I have met, but no history. The spirit of
+ Coelté, visiting one far removed in time from the great captain of the
+ Fianna, with a different name and different history, cries:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I was with thee, with Finn"&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ giving no explanation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To MacPherson, however, I will do this justice, that he had the merit to
+ perceive, even in the debased and floating ballads of the highlands,
+ traces of some past greatness and sublimity of thought, and to understand,
+ he, for the first time, how much more they meant than what met the ear.
+ But he saw, too, that the historical origin of the ballads, and the
+ position in time and place of the heroes whom they praised, had been lost
+ in that colony removed since the time of St. Columba from its old
+ connection with the mother country. Thus released from the curb of
+ history, he gave free rein to the imagination, and in the conventional
+ literary language of sublimity, gave full expression to the feelings that
+ arose within him, as to him, pondering over those ballads, their
+ gigantesque element developed into a greatness and solemnity, and their
+ vagueness and indeterminateness into that misty immensity and weird
+ obscurity which, as constituent factors in a poem, not as back-ground,
+ form one of the elements of the false sublime. Either not seeing the
+ literary necessity of definiteness, or having no such abundant and ordered
+ literature as we possess, upon which to draw for details, and being too
+ conscientious to invent facts, however he might invent language, he
+ published his epics of Ossian&mdash;false indeed to the original, but true
+ to himself, and to the feelings excited by meditation upon them. This
+ done, he had not sufficient courage to publish also the rude, homely, and
+ often vulgar ballads&mdash;a step which, in that hard critical age, would
+ have been to expose himself and his country to swift contempt. The thought
+ of the great lexicographer riding rough-shod over the poor mountain songs
+ which he loved, and the fame which he had already acquired, deterred and
+ dissuaded him, if he had ever any such intention, until the opportunity
+ was past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MacPherson feared English public opinion, and fearing lied. He declared
+ that to be a translation which was original work, thus relegating himself
+ for ever to a dubious renown, and depriving his country of the honest fame
+ of having preserved through centuries, by mere oral transmission, a
+ portion, at least, of the antique Irish literature. To the magnanimity of
+ his own heroes he could not attain:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Oscar, Oscar, who feared not armies&mdash;
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of some such error as MacPherson's I have myself, with less excuse, been
+ guilty, in chapters xi. and xii., Vol. I., where I attempt to give some
+ conception of the character of the Ossianic cycle. The age and the heroes
+ around whom that cycle revolves have, in the history of Ireland, a
+ definite position in time; their battles, characters, several
+ achievements, relationships, and pedigrees; their Dûns, and
+ trysting-places, and tombs; their wives, musicians, and bards; their
+ tributes, and sufferings, and triumphs; their internecine and other wars&mdash;are
+ all fully and clearly described in the Ossianic cycle. They still remain
+ demanding adequate treatment, when we arrive at the age of Conn [Note: See
+ page 20.], Art, and Cormac, kings of Tara in the second and third
+ centuries of the Christian era. All have been forgotten for the sake of a
+ vague representation of the more sublime aspects of the cycle, and the
+ meretricious seductions of a form of composition easy to write and easy to
+ read, and to which the unwary or unwise often award praise to which it has
+ no claim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, chapter xi. purports only to be a representation of the
+ feelings excited by this literature, and for every assertion there is
+ authority in the cycle. Chapter xii., however, is a translation from the
+ original. Every idea which it contains, except one, has been taken from
+ different parts of the Ossianic poems, and all together expressthe graver
+ attitude of the mind of Ossian towards the new faith. That idea, occurring
+ in a separate paragraph in the middle of the page, though prevalent as a
+ sentiment throughout all the conversations of Ossian with St. Patrick, has
+ been, as it stands, taken from a meditation on life by St. Columbanus, one
+ of the early Irish Saints&mdash;a meditation which, for subtle thought,
+ for musical resigned sadness, tender brooding reflection, and exquisite
+ Latin, is one of the masterpieces of mediaeval composition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the casual reader of the bardic literature the preservation of an
+ ordered historical sequence, amidst that riotous wealth of imaginative
+ energy, may appear an impossibility. Can we believe that forestine
+ luxuriance not to have overgrown all highways, that flood of superabundant
+ song not have submerged all landmarks? Be the cause what it may, the fact
+ remains that they did not. The landmarks of history stand clear and fixed,
+ each in its own place unremoved; and through that forest-growth the
+ highways of history run on beneath over-arching, not interfering, boughs.
+ The age of the predominance of Ulster does not clash with the age of the
+ predominance of Tara; the Temairian kings are not mixed with the
+ contemporary Fians. The chaos of the Nibelungen is not found here, nor the
+ confusion of the Scotch ballads blending all the ages into one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not imaginative strength that produces confusion, but imaginative
+ weakness. The strong imagination which perceives definitely and realises
+ vividly will not tolerate that obscurity so dear to all those who worship
+ the eidola of the cave. Of each of these ages, the primary impressions
+ were made in the bardic mind during the life-time of the heroes who gave
+ to the epoch its character; and a strong impression made in such a mind
+ could not have been easily dissipated or obscured. For it must be
+ remembered, that the bardic literature of Ireland was committed to the
+ custody of guardians whose character we ought not to forget. The bards
+ were not the people, but a class. They were not so much a class as an
+ organisation and fraternity acknowledging the authority of one elected
+ chief. They were not loose wanderers, but a power in the State, having
+ duties and privileges. The ard-ollav ranked next to the king, and his eric
+ was kingly. Thus there was an educated body of public opinion entrusted
+ with the preservation of the literature and history of the country, and
+ capable of repressing the aberrations of individuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the question arises, Did they so repress such perversions of history
+ as their wandering undisciplined members might commit? Too much, of
+ course, must not reasonably be expected. It was an age of creative
+ thought, and such thought is difficult to control; but that one of the
+ prime objects and prime works of the bards, as an organisation, was to
+ preserve a record of a certain class of historical facts is certain. The
+ succession of the kings and of the great princely families was one of
+ these. The tribal system, with the necessity of affinity as a ground of
+ citizenship, demanded such a preservation of pedigrees in every family,
+ and particularly in the kingly houses. One of the chief objects of the
+ triennial feis of Tara was the revision of such records by the general
+ assembly of the bards, under the presidency of the Ard-Ollav of Ireland.
+ In the more ancient times, such records were rhymed and alliterated, and
+ committed to memory&mdash;a practice which, we may believe on the
+ authority of Caesar, treating of the Gauls, continued long after the
+ introduction of letters. Even at those local assemblies also, which
+ corresponded to great central and national feis of Tara, the bards were
+ accustomed to meet for that purpose. In a poem [Note: O'Curry's Manners
+ and Customs, Vol. I., page 543.], descriptive of the fair [Note: On the
+ full meaning of this word "fair," see Chap. xiii., Vol. I.] of Garman, we
+ see this&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Feasts with the great feasts of Temair,
+ Fairs with the fairs of Emania,
+ Annals there are verified."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the existing literature we see two great divisions. On the one hand the
+ epical, a realm of the most riotous activity of thought; on the other, the
+ annalistic and genealogical, bald and bare to the last degree, a mere
+ skeleton. They represent the two great hemispheres of the bardic mind, the
+ latter controlling the former. Hence the orderly sequence of the cyclic
+ literature; hence the strong confining banks between which the torrent of
+ song rolls down through those centuries in which the bardic imagination
+ reached its height. The consentaneity of the annals and the literature
+ furnishes a trustworthy guide to the general course of history, until its
+ guidance is barred by <i>a priori</i> considerations of a weightier
+ nature, or by the statements of writers, having sources of information not
+ open to us. For instance, the stream of Irish history must, for
+ philosophical reasons, be no further traceable than to that point at which
+ it issues from the enchanted land of the Tuátha De Danan. At the limit at
+ which the gods appear, men and history must disappear; while on the other
+ hand, the statement of Tiherna, that the foundation of Emain Alacha by
+ Kimbay is the first certain date in Irish history, renders it undesirable
+ to attach more historical reality of characters, adorning the ages prior
+ to B.C. 299, than we could to such characters as Romulus in Roman, or
+ Theseus in Athenian history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I desire here to record my complete and emphatic dissent from the opinions
+ advanced by a writer in Hermathena on the subject of the Ogham
+ inscriptions, and the introduction into this country of the art of
+ writing. A cypher, i.e., an alphabet derived from a pre-existing alphabet,
+ the Ogham may or may not have been. I advance no opinion upon that, but an
+ invention of the Christian time it most assuredly was not. No sympathetic
+ and careful student of the Irish bardic literature can possibly come to
+ such a conclusion. The bardic poems relating to the heroes of the ethnic
+ times are filled with allusions to Ogham inscriptions on stone, and
+ contain some references to books of timber; but in my own reading I have
+ not met with a single passage in that literature alluding to books of
+ parchment and to rounded letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Ogham was derived from the Roman characters introduced by Christian
+ missionaries, then these characters would be the more ancient, and Ogham
+ the more modern; books and Roman characters would be the more poetical,
+ and inscriptions on stone and timber in the Ogham characters the more
+ prosaic. The bards relating the lives and deeds of the ancient heroes,
+ would have ascribed to their times parchment books and the Roman
+ characters, not stone and wood, and the Ogham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In these compositions, whenever they were reduced to the form in which we
+ find them to-day, the ethnic character of the times and the ethnic
+ character of the heroes are clearly and universally observed. The ancient,
+ the remote, the archaic clings to this literature. As Homer does not
+ allude to writing, though all scholars agree that he lived in a lettered
+ age, so the old bards do not allude to parchment and Roman characters,
+ though the Irish epics, as distinguished from their component parts,
+ reached their fixed state and their final development in times subsequent
+ to the introduction of Christianity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When and how a knowledge of letters reached this island we know not. From
+ the analogy of Gaul, we may conclude that they were known for some time
+ prior to their use by the bards. Caesar tells us that the Gaulish bards
+ and druids did not employ letters for the preservation of their lore, but
+ trusted to memory, assisted, doubtless, as in this country, by the
+ mechanical and musical aid of verse. Whether the Ogham was a native
+ alphabet or a derivative from another, it was at first employed only to a
+ limited extent. Its chief use was to preserve the name of buried kings and
+ heroes in the stone that was set above their tombs. It was, perhaps,
+ invented, and certainly became fashionable on this account, straight
+ strokes being more easily cut in stone than rounded or uncial characters.
+ For the same reason it was generally employed by those who inscribed
+ timber tablets, which formed the primitive book, ere they discovered or
+ learned how to use pen, ink, and parchment. The use of Ogham was partially
+ practised in the Christian period for sepultural purposes, being venerable
+ and sacred from time. Hence the discovery of Ogham-inscribed stones in
+ Christian cemeteries. On the other hand, the fact that the majority of
+ these stones are discovered in raths and forts, i.e., the tombs of our
+ Pagan ancestors, corroborates the fact implied in all the bardic
+ literature, that the characters employed in the ethnic times were Oghamic,
+ and affords another proof of the close conservative spirit of the bards in
+ their transcription, compilation, or reformation of the old epics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The full force of the concurrent authority of the bardic literature to the
+ above effect can only be felt by one who has read that literature with
+ care. He will find in all the epics no trace of original invention, but
+ always a studied and conscientious following of authority. This being so,
+ he will conclude that the universal ascription of Ogham, and Ogham only,
+ to the ethnic times, arises solely from the fact that such was the
+ alphabet then employed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If letters were unknown in those times, the example of Homer shows how
+ unlikely the later poets would have been to outrage so violently the whole
+ spirit of the heroic literature. If rounded letters were then used, why
+ the universal ascription of the late invented Ogham which, as we know from
+ the cemeteries and other sources, was unpopular in the Christian age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cryptic, too, it was not. The very passages quoted in Hermathena to
+ support this opinion, so far from doing so prove actually the reverse.
+ When Cuculain came down into Meath on his first [Note: Vol. I., page 155.]
+ foray, he found, on the lawn of the Dûn of the sons of Nectan, a pillar
+ stone with this inscription in Ogham&mdash;"Let no one pass without an
+ offer of a challenge of single combat." The inscription was, of course,
+ intended for all to read. Should there be any bardic passage in which
+ Ogham inscriptions are alluded to as if an obscure form of writing, the
+ natural explanation is, that this kind of writing was passing or had
+ passed into desuetude at the time that particular passage was composed;
+ but I have never met with any such. The ancient bard, who, in the
+ Tân-bo-Cooalney, describes the slaughter of Cailitin and his sons by
+ Cuculain, states that there was an inscription to that effect, written in
+ Ogham, upon the stone over their tomb, beginning thus&mdash;"Take notice"&mdash;evidently
+ intended for all to read. The tomb, by the way, was a rath&mdash;again
+ showing the ethnic character of the alphabet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Annals of the Four Masters, at the date 1499 B.C., we read these
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "THE FLEET OF THE SONS OF MILITH CAME TO IRELAND TO TAKE IT FROM THE
+ TUÁTHA DE DANAN," i.e., the gods of the ethnic Irish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without pausing to enquire into the reasonableness of the date, it will
+ suffice now to state that at this point the bardic history of Ireland
+ cleaves asunder into two great divisions&mdash;the mythological or divine
+ on the one hand, and the historical or heroic-historical on the other. The
+ first is an enchanted land&mdash;the world of the Tuátha De Danan&mdash;the
+ country of the gods. There we see Mananan with his mountain-sundering
+ sword, the Fray-garta; there Lu Lamfada, the deliverer, pondering over his
+ mysteries; there Bove Derg and his fatal [Note: Every feast to which he
+ came ended in blood. He was present at the death of Conairey Mor, Chap.
+ xxxiii., Vol. I.] swine-herd, Lir and his ill-starred children, Mac Mánar
+ and his harp shedding death from its stricken wires, Angus Og, the
+ beautiful, and he who was called the mighty father, Eochaidht [Note:
+ Ay-o-chee, written Yeoha in Vol. I.] Mac Elathan, a land populous with
+ those who had partaken of the feast of Goibneen, and whom, therefore,
+ weapons could not slay, who had eaten [Note: In early Greek literature the
+ province of history has been already separated from that of poetry. The
+ ancient bardic lore and primaeval traditions were refined to suit the new
+ and sensitive poetic taste. No commentator has been able to explain the
+ nature of ambrosia. In the genuine bardic times, no such vague euphuism
+ would have been tolerated as that of Homer on this subject. The nature of
+ Olympian ambrosia would have been told in language as clear as that in
+ which Homer describes the preparation of that Pramnian bowl for which
+ Nestor and Machaon waited while Hecamede was grating over it the goat's
+ milk cheese, or that in which the Irish bards described the ambrosia of
+ the Tuátha De Danan, which, indeed, was no more poetic and awe-inspiring
+ than plain bacon prepared by Mananan from his herd of enchanted pigs,
+ living invisible like himself in the plains of Tir-na-n-Og, the land of
+ the ever-young. On the other hand, there is a vagueness about the Feed Fia
+ which would seem to indicate the growth of a more awe-stricken mood in
+ describing things supernatural. The Faed Fia of the Greek gods has been
+ refined by Homer into "much darkness," which, from an artistic point of
+ view, one can hardly help imagining that Homer nodded as he wrote.] at the
+ the table of Mananan, and would never grow old, who had invented for
+ themselves the Faed Fia, and might not be seen of the gross eyes of men;
+ there steeds like Anvarr crossing the wet sea like a firm plain; there
+ ships whose rudder was the will, and whose sails and oars the wish, of
+ those they bore [Note: Cf. The barks of the Phoenicians in the Odyssey.];
+ there hounds like that one of Ioroway, and spears like fiery flying
+ serpents. These are the Tuátha De Danan [Note: A mystery still hangs over
+ this three-formed name. The full expression, Tuátha De Danan, is that
+ generally employed, less frequently Tuátha De, and sometimes, but not
+ often, Tuátha. Tuátha also means people. In mediaeval times the name lost
+ its sublime meaning, and came to mean merely "fairy," no greater
+ significance, indeed, attaching to the invisible people of the island
+ after Christianity had destroyed their godhood.], fairy princes, Tuátha;
+ gods, De; of Dana, Danan, otherwise Ana and the Moreega, or great queen;
+ mater [Note: Cormac's Glossary] deorum Hibernensium&mdash;"well she used
+ to cherish [Note: Scholiast noting same Glossary.] the gods." Limitless,
+ this divine population, dwelling in all the seas and estuaries, river and
+ lakes, mountains and fairy dells, in that enchanted Erin which was theirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they have not started into existence suddenly, like the gods of Rome,
+ nor is their genealogy confined to a single generation like those of
+ Greece. Behind them extends a long line of ancestors, and a history
+ reaching into the remotest depths of the past. As the Greek gods dethroned
+ the Titans, so the Irish gods drove out or subjected the giants of the
+ Fir-bolgs; but in the Irish mythology, we find both gods and giants
+ descended from other ancient races of deities, called the Clanna Nemedh
+ and the Fomoroh, and these a branch of a divine cycle; yet more ancient
+ the race of Partholan, while Partholan himself is not the eldest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of the Italian gods is completely lost. For all that the early
+ Roman literature tells us of their origin, they may have been either
+ self-created or eternal. Rome was a seedling shaken from some old perished
+ civilisation. The Romans created their own empire, but they inherited
+ their gods. They supply no example of an Aryan nation evolving its own
+ mythology and religion. Regal Rome, as we know from Niebuhr, was not the
+ root from which our Rome sprang, but an old imperial city, from whose
+ ashes sprang that Rome we all know so well. The mythology of the Latin
+ writers came to them full-grown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gods of Greece were a creation of the Greek mind, indeed; but of their
+ ancestry, i.e., of their development from more ancient divine tribes, we
+ know little. Like Pallas, they all but start into existence suddenly
+ full-grown. Between the huge physical entities of the Greek theogonists
+ and the Olympian gods, there intervenes but a single generation. For this
+ loss of the Grecian mythology, and this substitution of Nox and Chaos for
+ the remote ancestors of the Olympians, we have to thank the early Greek
+ philosophers, and the general diffusion of a rude scientific knowledge,
+ imparting a physical complexion to the mythological memory of the Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the theogony of the ancient inhabitants of this country, we have an
+ example of a slowly-growing, slowly-changing mythology, such as no other
+ nation in the world can supply. The ancestry of the Irish gods is not
+ bounded by a single generation or by twenty. The Tuátha De Danan of the
+ ancient Irish are the final outcome and last development of a mythology
+ which we can see advancing step by step, one divine tribe pushing out
+ another, one family of gods swallowing up another, or perishing under the
+ hands of time and change, to make room for another. From Angus Og, the god
+ of youth and love and beauty, whose fit home was the woody slopes of the
+ Boyne, where it winds around Rosnaree, we count fourteen generations to
+ Nemedh and four to Partholan, and Partholan is not the earliest. As the
+ bards recorded with a zeal and minuteness, so far as I can see, without
+ parallel, the histories of the families to which they were adscript, so
+ also they recorded with equal patience and care the far-extending
+ pedigrees of those other families&mdash;invisible indeed, but to them more
+ real and more awe-inspiring&mdash;who dwelt by the sacred lakes and
+ rivers, and in the folds of the fairy hills, and the great raths and
+ cairns reared for them by pious hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extent, diversity, and populousness of the Irish mythological cycles,
+ the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of that mythology of
+ which the Tuátha De Danan, i.e., the gods of the historic period, were the
+ final development, can only be rightly apprehended by one who reads the
+ bardic literature as it deals with this subject. That literature, however,
+ so far from having been printed and published, has not even been
+ translated, but still moulders in the public libraries of Europe, those
+ who, like myself, are not professed Irish scholars, being obliged to
+ collect their information piece-meal from quotations and allusions of
+ those who have written upon the subject in the English or Latin language.
+ For to read the originals aright needs many years of labour, the Irish
+ tongue presenting at different epochs the characteristics of distinct
+ languages, while the peculiarities of ancient caligraphy, in the defaced
+ and illegible manuscripts, form of themselves quite a large department of
+ study. Stated succinctly, the mythological record of the bards, with its
+ chronological decorations, runs thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AGE OF KEASAIR.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2379 B.C. the gods of the KEASAIRIAN cycle, Bith, Lara, and Fintann, and
+ their wives, KEASAIR, Barran and Balba; their sacred places, Carn Keshra,
+ Keasair's tomb or temple, on the banks of the Boyle, Ard Laran on the
+ Wexford Coast, Fert Fintann on the shores of Lough Derg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the same time Lot Luaimenich, Lot of the Lower Shannon, an ancient
+ sylvan deity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AGE OF PARTHOLAN AND THE EARLIEST FOMORIAN GODS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2057 B.C. a new spiritual dynasty, of which PARTHOLAN was father and king.
+ Though their worship was extended over Ireland, which is shown by the many
+ different places connected with their history, yet the hill of Tallaght,
+ ten miles from Dublin, was where they were chiefly adored. Here to the
+ present day are the mounds and barrows raised in honour of the deified
+ heroes of this cycle, PARTHOLAN himself, his wife Delgna, his sons, Rury,
+ Slaney, and Laighlinni, and among others, the father of Irish hospitality,
+ bearing the expressive name of Beer. Now first appear the Fomoroh giant
+ princes, under the leadership of curt Kical, son of Niul, son of Garf, son
+ of U-Mor&mdash;a divine cycle intervening between KEASAIR and PARTHOLAN,
+ but not of sufficient importance to secure a separate chapter and distinct
+ place in the annals. Battles now between the Clan Partholan and the
+ Fomoroh, on the plain of Ith, beside the river Finn, Co. Donegal, so
+ called from Ith [Note: See Vol. I, p. 60], son of Brogan, the most ancient
+ of the heroes, slain here by the Tuátha De Danan, but more anciently known
+ by some lost Fomorian name; also at Iorrus Domnan, now Erris, Co. Mayo,
+ where Kical and his Fomorians first reached Ireland. These battles are a
+ parable&mdash;objective representations of a fact in the mental history of
+ the ancient Irish&mdash;typifying the invisible war waged between
+ Partholanian and Fomorian deities for the spiritual sovereignty of the
+ Gael.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AGE OF THE NEMEDIAN GODS AND SECOND CYCLE OF THE FOMORIANS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1700 B.C. age of the NEMEDIAN divinities, a later branch of the
+ PARTHOLANIAN <i>vide post</i> NEMEDIAN pedigree. NEMEDH, his wife Maca
+ (first appearance of Macha, the war goddess, who gave her name to Armagh,
+ i.e., Ard Macha, the Height of Macha), Iarbanel; Fergus, the Red-sided,
+ and Starn, sons of Nemedh; Beothah, son of Iarbanel; Erglann, son of
+ Beoan, son of Starn; Siméon Brac, son of Starn; Ibath, son of Beothach;
+ Britan Mael, son of Fergus. This must be remembered, that not one of the
+ almost countless names that figure in the Irish mythology is of fanciful
+ origin. They all represent antique heroes and heroines, their names being
+ preserved in connection with those monuments which were raised for
+ purposes of sepulture or cult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wars now between the Clanna Nemedh and the second cycle of the Fomoroh,
+ led this time by Faebar and More, sons of Dela, and Coning, son of Faebar;
+ battles at Ros Freachan, now Rosreahan, barony of Murresk, Co. Mayo, at
+ Slieve Blahma [Note: Slieve Blahma, now Slieve Bloom, a mountain range
+ famous in our mythology; one of the peaks, Ard Erin, sacred to Eiré, a
+ goddess of the Tuátha De Danan, who has given her name to the island. The
+ sites of all these mythological battles, where they are not placed in the
+ haunted mountains, will be found to be a place of raths and cromlechs.]
+ and Murbolg, in Dalaradia (Murbolg, i.e., the stronghold of the giants,)
+ also at Tor Coning, now Tory Island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FIRBOLGS AND THIRD CYCLE OF THE FOMOROH.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1525 B.C. Age of the FIRBOLGS and third cycle of the Fomorians, once gods,
+ but expulsed from their sovereignty by the Tuátha De Danan, after which
+ they loom through the heroic literature as giants of the elder time,
+ overthrown by the gods. From the FIRBOLGS were descended, or claimed to
+ have descended, the Connaught warriors who fought with Queen Meave against
+ Cuculain, also the Clan Humor, appearing in the Second Volume, also the
+ heroes of Ossian, the Fianna Eireen. Even in the time of Keating, Irish
+ families traced thither their pedigrees. The great chiefs of the
+ FIR-BOLGIC dynasty were the five sons of Dela, Gann, Genann, Sengann,
+ Rury, and Slaney, with their wives Fuad, Edain, Anust, Cnucha, and Libra;
+ also their last and most potent king, EOCAIDH MAC ERC, son of Ragnal, son
+ of Genann, whose tomb or temple may be seen to-day at Ballysadare, Co.
+ Sligo, on the edge of the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fomorians of this age were ruled over by Baler Beimenna and his wife
+ Kethlenn. Their grandson was Lu Lamáda, one of the noblest of the Irish
+ gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last of the mythological cycles is that of the Tuátha De Danan, whose
+ character, attributes, and history will, I hope, be rendered interesting
+ and intelligible in my account of Cuculain and the Red Branch of Ulster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Irish history has suffered from rationalism almost more than from neglect
+ and ignorance. The conjectures of the present century are founded upon
+ mediaeval attempts to reduce to verisimilitude and historical probability
+ what was by its nature quite incapable of such treatment. The mythology of
+ the Irish nation, being relieved of the marvellous and sublime, was set
+ down with circumstantial dates as a portion of the country's history by
+ the literary men of the middle ages. Unable to excide from the national
+ narrative those mythological beings who filled so great a place in the
+ imagination of the times, and unable, as Christians, to describe them in
+ their true character as gods, or, as patriots, in the character which they
+ believed them to possess, namely, demons, they rationalized the whole of
+ the mythological period with names, dates, and ordered generations,
+ putting men for gods, flesh and blood for that invisible might, till the
+ page bristled with names and dates, thus formulating, as annals, what was
+ really the theogony and mythology of their country. The error of the
+ mediaeval historians is shared by the not wiser moderns. In the
+ generations of the gods we seem to see prehistoric racial divisions and
+ large branches of the Aryan family, an error which results from a neglect
+ of the bardic literature, and a consequently misdirected study of the
+ annals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As history, the pre-Milesian record contains but a limited supply of
+ objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish gods,
+ these much abused chronicles are as true as the roll of the kings of
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These divine nations, with their many successive generations and
+ dynasties, constitute a single family; they are all inter-connected and
+ spring from common sources, and where the literature permits us to see
+ more clearly, the earlier races exhibit a common character. Like a human
+ clan, the elements of this divine family grew and died, and shed forth
+ seedlings which, in time, over-grew and killed the parent stock. Great
+ names became obscure and passed away, and new ones grew and became great.
+ Gods, worshipped by the whole nation, declined and became topical, and
+ minor deities expanding, became national. Gods lost their immortality, and
+ were remembered as giants of the old time&mdash;mighty men, which were of
+ yore, men of renown.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The gods which were of old time rest in their tombs,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ sang the Egyptians, consciously ascribing mortality even to gods. Such was
+ Mac Ere, King of Fir-bolgs. His temple [Note: Strand near Ballysadare, Co.
+ Sligo], beside the sea at Iorrus Domnan [Note: Keating&mdash;evidently
+ quoting a bardic historian], became his tomb. Daily the salt tide embraces
+ the feet of the great tumulus, regal amongst its smaller comrades, where
+ the last king of Fir-bolgs was worshipped by his people. "Good [Note:
+ Temple&mdash;vide post.] were the years of the sovereignty of Mac Ere.
+ There was no wet or tempestuous weather in Ireland, nor was there any
+ unfruitful year." Such were all the predecessors of the children of Dana&mdash;gods
+ which were of old times, that rest in their tombs; and the days, too, of
+ the Tuátha De Danan were numbered. They, too, smitten by a more celestial
+ light, vanished from their hills, like Ossian lamenting over his own
+ heroes; those others still mightier, might say:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Once every step which we took might be heard throughout the
+ firmament. Now, all have gone, they have melted into the air."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But that divine tree, though it had its branches in fairy-land, had its
+ roots in the soil of Erin. An unceasing translation of heroes into
+ Tir-na-n-og went on through time, the fairy-world of the bards, receiving
+ every century new inhabitants, whose humbler human origin being forgotten,
+ were supplied there with both wives and children. The apotheosis of great
+ men went forward, tirelessly; the hero of one epoch becoming the god of
+ the next, until the formation of the Tuátha De Danan, who represent the
+ gods of the historic ages. Had the advent of exact genealogy been delayed,
+ and the creative imagination of the bards suffered to work on for a couple
+ of centuries longer, unchecked by the historical conscience, Cuculain's
+ human origin would, perhaps, have been forgotten, and he would have been
+ numbered amongst the Tuátha De Danan, probably, as the son of Lu Lamfáda
+ and the Moreega, his patron deities. It was, indeed, a favourite fancy of
+ the bards that not Sualtam, but Lu Lamfáda himself, was his father; this,
+ however, in a spiritual or supernatural sense, for his age was far removed
+ from that of the Tuátha De Danan, and falling well within the scope of the
+ historic period. Even as late as the time of Alexander, the Greeks could
+ believe a great contemporary warrior to be of divine origin, and the son
+ of Zeus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their
+ country, they naturally commenced with the enumeration of the elder gods.
+ I at one time suspected that the long pedigrees running between those
+ several divisions of the mythological period were the invention of
+ mediaeval historians, anxious to spin out the national record, that it
+ might reach to Shinar and the dispersion. Not only, however, was such
+ fabrication completely foreign to the genius of the literature, but in the
+ fragments of those early divine cycles, we see that each of these
+ personages was at one time the centre of a literature, and holds a
+ definite place as regards those who went before and came after. These
+ pedigrees, as I said before, have no historical meaning, being
+ pre-Milesian, and therefore absolutely prehistoric; but as the genealogy
+ of the gods, and as representing the successive generations of that
+ invisible family, whose history not one or ten bards, but the whole bardic
+ and druidic organisation of the island, delighted to record, collate, and
+ verify&mdash;those pedigrees are as reliable as that of any of the regal
+ clans. They represent accurately the mythological panorama, as it unrolled
+ itself slowly through the centuries before the imagination and spirit of
+ our ancestors accurately that divine drama, millennium&mdash;lasting, with
+ its exits and entrances of gods. Millennium-lasting, and more so, for it
+ is plain that one divine generation represents on the average a much
+ greater space of time than a generation of mortal men. The former probably
+ represents the period which would elapse before a hero would become so
+ divine, that is, so consecrated in the imagination of the country, as to
+ be received into the family of the gods. Cuculain died in the era of the
+ Incarnation, three hundred years, if not more, before the country even
+ began to be Christianised, yet he is never spoken of as anything but a
+ great hero, from which one of two things would follow, either that the
+ apotheosis of heroes needed the lapse of centuries, or that, during the
+ first, second, third, and fourth centuries, the historical conscience was
+ so enlightened, and a positive definite knowledge of the past so
+ universal, that the translation of heroes into the divine clans could no
+ longer take place. The latter is indeed the more correct view; but the
+ reader will, I think, agree with me that the divine generations, taken
+ generally, represent more than the average space of man's life. To what
+ remote unimagined distances of time those earlier cycles extend has been
+ shown by an examination of the tombs of the lower Moy Tura. The ancient
+ heroes there interred were those who, as Fir-bolgs, preceded the reign of
+ the Tuáth De Danan, coming long after the Clanna Nemedh in the divine
+ cycle, who were themselves preceded by the children of Partholan, who were
+ subsequent to the Queen Keasair. Such then being the position in the
+ divine cycle of the Fir-bolgs, an examination of the Firbolgic raths on
+ Moy Tura has revealed only implements of stone, proving demonstratively
+ that the early divine cycles originated before the bronze age in Ireland,
+ whenever that commenced. Those heroes who, as Fir-bolgs, received divine
+ honours, lived in the age of stone. So far is it from being the case, that
+ the mythological record has been extended and unduly stretched, to enable
+ the monkish historians to connect the Irish pedigrees with those of the
+ Mosaic record, that it has, I believe, been contracted for this purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will be now prepared to peruse with some interest and
+ understanding one or two of the mythological pedigrees. To these I have at
+ times appended the dates, as given in the chronicles, to show how the
+ early historians rationalised the pre-historic record.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Angus Og, the Beautiful, represents the Greek Eros. He was surnamed Og, or
+ young; Mac-an-Og, or the son of youth; Mac-an-Dagda, son of the Dagda. He
+ was represented with a harp, and attended by bright birds, his own
+ transformed kisses, at whose singing love arose in the hearts of youths
+ and maidens. To him and to his father the great tumulus of New Grange,
+ upon the Boyne, was sacred.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I visited the Royal Brugh that stands
+ By the dark-rolling waters of the Boyne,
+ Where Angus Og magnificently dwells."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He was the patron god of Diarmid, the Paris of Ossian's Fianna, and
+ removed him into Tir-na-n-Og, when he died, having been ripped by the
+ tusks of the wild boar on the peaks of Slieve Gulban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lu Lamfáda was the patron god of Cuculain. He was surnamed Ioldana, as the
+ source of the sciences, and represented the Greek Apollo. The latter was
+ argurgurotoxos [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original], but Lu was a
+ sling bearing god. Of Fomorian descent on the mother's side, he joined his
+ father's people, the Tuátha De Danan, in the great war against the
+ Fomoroh. He is principally celebrated for his oppression of the sons of
+ Turann, in vengeance for the murder of his father.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ANGUS OG, (circa 1500 B.C.) LU LAMFADA, (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ THE DAGDA, (Zeus) Cian,
+ son of son of
+ Elathan, Diancéct, (god the healer)
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Esric,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Amongst other Irish gods was Bove Derg, who dwelt invisible in the Galtee
+ mountains, and in the hills above Lough Derg. The transformed children
+ alluded to in Vol. I. were his grand-children. It was his goldsmith Len,
+ who gave its ancient name to the Lakes of Killarney, Locha Lein. Here by
+ the lake he worked, surrounded by rainbows and showers of fiery dew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mananan was the god of the sea, of winds and storms, and most skilled in
+ magic lore. He was friendly to Cuculain, and was invoked by seafaring men.
+ He was called the Far Shee of the promontories.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ BOVE DERG (circa 1500 B.C.) MANANAN (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Eocaidh Garf, Alloid,
+ son of son of
+ Duach Temen, Elathan,
+ son of son of
+ Bras, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Indaei,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Tuátha De Danan maybe counted literally by the hundred, each with a
+ distinct history, and all descended from Alldaei.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Alldaei the pedigree runs back thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Alldaei
+ son of
+ Tath,
+ son of
+ Tabarn,
+ son of
+ Enna,
+ son of
+ Baath,
+ son of
+ Ebat,
+ son of
+ Betah,
+ son of
+ Iarbanel,
+ son of
+ NEMEDH (circa 1700 B.C.)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nemedh, as I have said, forms one of the great epochs in the mythological
+ record. As will be seen, he and the earlier Partholan have a common
+ source:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ NEMEDH
+ son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Pamp,
+ son of
+ Tath, PARTHOLAN (2000 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Sru,
+ son of
+ Esru,
+ son of
+ Pramant.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The connection between Keasair, the earliest of the Irish gods, and the
+ rest of the cycle, I have not discovered, but am confident of its
+ existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How this divine cycle can be expunged from the history of Ireland I am at
+ a loss to see. The account which a nation renders of itself must, and
+ always does, stand at the head of every history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How different is this from the history and genealogy of the Greek gods
+ which runs thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Olympian gods,
+ Titans,
+ Physical entities, Nox, Chaos, &amp;c.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Greek gods, undoubtedly, had a long ancestry extending into the depths
+ of the past, but the sudden advent of civilisation broke up the bardic
+ system before the historians could become philosophical, or philosophers
+ interested in antiquities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Irish history corrects our view with regard to other matters
+ connected with the gods of the Aryan nations of Europe also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the nations of Europe lived at one time under the bardic and druidic
+ system, and under that system imagined their gods and elaborated their
+ various theogonies, yet, in no country in Europe has a bardic literature
+ been preserved except in Ireland, for no thinking man can believe Homer to
+ have been a product of that rude type of civilisation of which he sings.
+ This being the case, modern philosophy, accounting for the origin of the
+ classical deities by guesses and <i>a priori</i> reasonings, has almost
+ universally adopted that explanation which I have, elsewhere, called
+ Wordsworthian, and which derives them directly from the imagination
+ personifying the aspects of nature.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretched
+ On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
+ With music lulled his indolent repose,
+ And in some fit of weariness if he,
+ When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
+ A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
+ Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched,
+ Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
+ A beardless youth who touched a golden lute
+ And filled the illumined groves with ravishment&mdash;
+ ***
+ "Sunbeams upon distant hills,
+ Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
+ Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
+ Into fleet oreads, sporting visibly."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This is pretty, but untrue. In all the ancient Irish literature we find
+ the connection of the gods, both those who survived into the historic
+ times, and those whom they had dethroned, with the raths and cairns
+ perpetually and almost universally insisted upon. The scene of the
+ destruction of the Firbolgs will be found to be a place of tombs, the
+ metropolis of the Fomorians a place of tombs, and a place of tombs the
+ sacred home of the Tuátha along the shores of the Boyne. Doubtless, they
+ are represented also as dwelling in the hills, lakes, and rivers, but
+ still the connection between the great raths and cairns and the gods is
+ never really forgotten. When the floruit of a god has expired, he is
+ assigned a tomb in one of the great tumuli. No one can peruse this ancient
+ literature without seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods, <i>videlicet</i>
+ heroes, passing, through the imagination and through the region of poetic
+ representation, into the world of the supernatural. When a king died, his
+ people raised his ferta, set up his stone, and engraved upon it, at least
+ in later times, his name in ogham. They celebrated his death with funeral
+ lamentations and funeral games, and listened to the bards chanting his
+ prowess, his liberality, and his beauty. In the case of great warriors,
+ these games and lamentations became periodical. It is distinctly recorded
+ in many places, for instance in connection with Taylti, who gave her name
+ to Taylteen and Garman, who gave her name to Loch Garman, now Wexford, and
+ with Lu Lamfáda, whose annual worship gave its name to the Kalends of
+ August. Gradually, as his actual achievements became more remote, and the
+ imagination of the bards, proportionately, more unrestrained, he would
+ pass into the world of the supernatural. Even in the case of a hero so
+ surrounded with historic light as Cuculain we find a halo, as of godhood,
+ often settling around him. His gray warsteed had already passed into the
+ realm of mythical representation, as a second avatar of the Liath Macha,
+ the grey war-horse of the war-goddess Macha. This could be believed, even
+ in the days when the imagination was controlled by the annalists and
+ tribal heralds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gods of the Irish were their deified ancestors. They were not the
+ offspring of the poetic imagination, personifying the various aspects of
+ nature. Traces, indeed, we find of their influence over the operations of
+ nature, but they are, upon the whole, slight and unimportant. From nature
+ they extract her secrets by their necromantic and magical labours, but
+ nature is as yet too great to be governed and impelled by them. The Irish
+ Apollo had not yet entered into the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like every country upon which imperial Rome did not leave the impress of
+ her genius, Ireland, in these ethnic times, attained only a partial unity.
+ The chief king indeed presided at Tara, and enjoyed the reputation and
+ emoluments flowing to him on that account, but, upon the whole, no Irish
+ king exercised more than a local sovereignty; they were all reguli, petty
+ kings, and their direct authority was small. This being the case, it would
+ appear to me that in the more ancient times the death of a king would not
+ be an event which would disturb a very extensive district, and that,
+ though his tomb might be considerable, it would not be gigantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now on the banks of the Boyne, opposite Rosnaree, there stands a tumulus,
+ said to be the greatest in Europe. It covers acres of ground, being of
+ proportionate height. The earth is confined by a compact stone wall about
+ twelve feet high. The central chamber, made of huge irregular pebbles, is
+ about twenty feet from ground to roof, communicating with the outer air by
+ a flagged passage. Immense pebbles, drawn from the County of Antrim, stand
+ around it, each of which, even to move at all, would require the labour of
+ many men, assisted with mechanical appliances. It is, of course,
+ impossible to make an accurate estimate of the expenditure of labour
+ necessary for the construction of such a work, but it would seem to me to
+ require thousands of men working for years. Can we imagine that a petty
+ king of those times could, after his death, when probably his successor
+ had enough to do to sustain his new authority, command such labour merely
+ to provide for himself a tomb. If this tomb were raised to the hero whose
+ name it bears immediately after his death, and in his mundane character,
+ he must have been such a king as never existed in Ireland, even in the
+ late Christian times. Even Brian of the Tributes himself, could not have
+ commanded such a sepulture, or anything like it, living though he did,
+ probably, two thousand years later than that Eocaidh Mac Elathan, whenever
+ he did live. There is a <i>nodus</i> here needing a god to solve it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning now to what would most likely take place after the interment of
+ a hero, we may well imagine that the size of his tomb would be in
+ proportion to the love which he inspired, where no accidental causes would
+ interfere with the gratification of that feeling. Of one of his heroes,
+ Ossian, sings&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "We made his cairn great and high
+ Like a king's."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After that there would be periodical meetings in his honour, the
+ celebration of games, solemn recitations by bards, singing his aristeia
+ [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original]. Gradually the new wine would
+ burst the old bottles. The ever-active, eager-loving imagination would
+ behold the champion grown to heroic proportions, the favourite of the
+ gods, the performer of superhuman feats. The tomb, which was once
+ commensurate with the love and reverence which he inspired, would seem so
+ now no longer. The tribal bards, wandering or attending the great fairs
+ and assemblies, would disperse among strangers and neighbours a knowledge
+ of his renown. In the same cemetery or neighbourhood their might be other
+ tombs of heroes now forgotten, while he, whose fame was in every bardic
+ mouth in all that region, was honoured only with a tomb no greater than
+ theirs. The mere king or champion, grown into a topical hero, would need a
+ greater tomb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere long again, owing to the bardic fraternity, who, though coming from
+ Innishowen or Cape Clear, formed a single community, the topical hero
+ would, in some cases, where his character was such as would excite deeper
+ reverence and greater fame, grow into a national hero, and a still nobler
+ tomb be required, in order that the visible memorial might prove
+ commensurate with the imaginative conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all this time the periodic celebrations, the games, and lamentations,
+ and songs would be assuming a more solemn character. Awe would more and
+ more mingle with the other feelings inspired by his name. Certain rites
+ and a certain ritual would attend those annual games and lamentations,
+ which would formerly not have been suitable, and eventually, when the
+ hero, slowly drawing nearer through generations, if not centuries, at last
+ reached Tir-na-n-Og, and was received into the family of the gods, a
+ religious feeling of a different nature would mingle with the more secular
+ celebration of his memory, and his rath or cairn would assume in their
+ eyes a new character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To an ardent imaginative people the complete extinction by death of a
+ much-loved hero would even at first be hardly possible. That the tomb
+ which held his ashes should be looked upon as the house of the hero must
+ have been, even shortly after his interment, a prevailing sentiment,
+ whether expressed or not. Also, the feeling must have been present, that
+ the hero in whose honour they performed the annual games, and periodically
+ chanted the remembrance of whose achievements, saw and heard those things
+ that were done in his honour. But as the celebration became greater and
+ more solemn, this feeling would become more strong, and as the tomb, from
+ a small heap of stones or low mound, grew into an enormous and imposing
+ rath, the belief that this was the hero's house, in which he invisibly
+ dwelt, could not be avoided, even before they ceased to regard him as a
+ disembodied hero; and after the hero had mingled with the divine clans,
+ and was numbered amongst the gods, the idea that the rath was a tomb could
+ not logically be entertained. As a god, was he not one of those who had
+ eaten of the food provided by Mananan, and therefore never died. The rath
+ would then become his house or temple. As matter of fact, the bardic
+ writings teem with this idea. From reason and probability, we would with
+ some certainty conclude that the great tumulus of New Grange was the
+ temple of some Irish god; but that it was so, we know as a fact. The
+ father and king of the gods is alluded to as dwelling there, going out
+ from thence, and returning again, and there holding his invisible court.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Behold the <i>Sid</i> before your eyes,
+ It is manifest to you that it is a king's mansion."
+[Note: O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History, page 505.]
+
+ "Bove Derg went to visit the Dagda at the Brugh of Mac-An-Og."
+[Note: "Dream of Angus," Révue Celtique, Vol. III., page 349.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here also dwelt Angus Og, the son of the Dagda. In this, his spiritual
+ court or temple, he is represented as having entertained Oscar and the
+ Ossianic heroes, and thither he conducted [Note: Publications of Ossianic
+ Society, Vol. III., page 201.] the spirit of Diarmid, that he might have
+ him for ever there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the etymology also we see the origin of the Irish gods. A grave in
+ Irish is Sid, the disembodied spirit is Sidhe, and this latter word
+ glosses Tuátha De Danan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that the grave of a hero developed slowly into the temple of a
+ god, explains certain obscurities in the annals and literature. As a hero
+ was exalted into a god, so in turn a god sank into a hero, or rather into
+ the race of the giants. The elder gods, conquered and destroyed by the
+ younger, could no longer be regarded as really divine, for were they not
+ proved to be mortal? The development of the temple from the tomb was not
+ forgotten, the whole country being filled with such tombs and incipient
+ temples, from the great Brugh on the Boyne to the smallest mound in any of
+ the cemeteries. Thus, when the elder gods lost their spiritual
+ sovereignty, and their destruction at the hands of the younger took the
+ form of great battles, then as the god was forced to become a giant, so
+ his temple was remembered to be a tomb. Doubtless, in his own territory,
+ divine honours were still paid him; but in the national imagination and in
+ the classical literature and received history, he was a giant of the olden
+ time, slain by the gods, and interred in the rath which bore his name.
+ Such was the great Mac Erc, King of Fir-bolgs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, when the mediaeval Christians ceased to regard the Tuátha De Danan
+ as devils, and proceeded to rationalise the divine record as the ethnic
+ bards had rationalised the history of the early gods; the Tuátha De Danan,
+ shorn of immortality, became ancient heroes who had lived their day and
+ died, and the greater raths, no longer the houses of the gods, figure in
+ that literature irrationally rational, as their tombs. Thus we are gravely
+ informed [Note: Annals of Four Masters.] that "the Dagda Mor, after the
+ second battle of Moy Tura, retired to the Brugh on the Boyne, where he
+ died from the venom of the wounds inflicted on him by Kethlenn"&mdash;the
+ Fomorian amazon&mdash;"and was there interred." Even in this passage the
+ writer seems to have been unable to dispossess his mind quite of the
+ traditional belief that the Brugh was the Dagda's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiarity of this mound, in addition to its size, is the
+ spaciousness of the central chamber. This was that germ which, but for the
+ overthrow of the bardic religion, would have developed into a temple in
+ the classic sense of the word. A two-fold motive would have impelled the
+ growing civilisation in this direction. A desire to make the house of the
+ god as spacious within as it was great without, and a desire to transfer
+ his worship, or the more esoteric and solemn part of it, from without to
+ within. Either the absence of architectural knowledge, or the force of
+ conservatism, or the advent of the Christian missionaries, checked any
+ further development on these lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere the tomb, instead of developing as a tumulus or barrow, produced
+ the effect of greatness by huge circumvallations of earth, and massive
+ walls of stone. Such is the temple of Ned the war-god, called Aula Neid,
+ the court or palace of Ned, near the Foyle in the North. Had the ethnic
+ civilisation of Ireland been suffered to develop according to its own
+ laws, it is probable that, as the roofed central chamber of the cairn
+ would have grown until it filled the space occupied by the mound, so the
+ open-walled temple would have developed into a covered building, by the
+ elevation of the walls, and their gradual inclination to the centre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bee-hive houses of the monks, the early churches, and the round towers
+ are a development of that architecture which constructed the central
+ chambers of the raths. In this fact lies, too, the explanation of the
+ cyclopean style of building which characterizes our most ancient
+ buildings. The cromlech alone, formed in very ancient times the central
+ chamber of the cairn; it is found in the centre of the raths on Moy Tura,
+ belonging to the stone age and that of the Firbolgs. When the cromlech
+ fell into disuse, the arched chamber above the ashes of the hero was
+ constructed with enormous stones, as a substitute for the majestic
+ appearance presented by the massive slab and supporting pillars of the
+ more ancient cromlech, and the early stone buildings preserved the same
+ characteristic to a certain extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same sentiment which caused the mediaeval Christians to disinter and
+ enshrine the bones of their saints, and subsequently to re-enshrine them
+ with greater art and more precious materials, caused the ethnic
+ worshippers of heroes to erect nobler tombs over the inurned relics of
+ those whom they revered, as the meanness of the tomb was seen to
+ misrepresent and humiliate the sublimity of the conception. But the
+ Christians could never have imagined their saints to have been anything
+ but men&mdash;a fact which caused the retention and preservation of the
+ relics. When the Gentiles exalted their hero into a god, the charred bones
+ were forgotten or ascribed to another. The hero then became immortal in
+ his own right; he had feasted with Mananan and eaten his life-giving food,
+ and would not know death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the mortal character of the hero was forgotten, his house or temple
+ might be erected anywhere. The great Raths of the Boyne&mdash;a place
+ grown sacred from causes which we may not now learn&mdash;represented,
+ probably, heroes and heroines, who died and were interred in many
+ different parts of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To recapitulate, the Dagda Mor was a divine title given to a hero named
+ Eocaidh, who lived many centuries before the birth of Christ, and in the
+ depths of the pre-historic ages. He was the mortal scion or ward of an
+ elder god, Elathan, and was interred in some unknown grave&mdash;marked,
+ perhaps, by a plain pillar stone, or small insignificant cairn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of the divine or
+ supernatural period of his spiritual or imagined career after death, and
+ was a development by steps from that small unremembered grave where once
+ his warriors hid the inurned ashes of the hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is true of one branch of the Aryan family is true of all. Sentiments
+ of such universality and depth must have been common to all. If this be
+ so, the Olympian Zeus himself was once some rude chieftain dwelling in
+ Thrace or Macedonia, and his sublime temple of Doric architecture
+ traceable to some insignificant cairn or flagged cist in Greece, or some
+ earlier home of the Hellenic race, and his name not Zeus, but another; and
+ Kronos, that god whom he, as a living wight, adored, and under whose
+ protection and favour he prospered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by Standish O'Grady
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Early Bardic Literature, Ireland
+
+Author: Standish O'Grady
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8109]
+Release Date: August 4, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ar dTeanga Fein
+
+
+
+
+
+EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND.
+
+
+By Standish O'Grady
+
+11 Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
+
+
+
+Scattered over the surface of every country in Europe may be found
+sepulchral monuments, the remains of pre-historic times and nations, and
+of a phase of life will civilisation which has long since passed away.
+No country in Europe is without its cromlechs and dolmens, huge earthen
+tumuli, great flagged sepulchres, and enclosures of tall pillar-stones.
+The men by whom these works were made, so interesting in themselves, and
+so different from anything of the kind erected since, were not strangers
+and aliens, but our own ancestors, and out of their rude civilisation
+our own has slowly grown. Of that elder phase of European civilisation
+no record or tradition has been anywhere bequeathed to us. Of its
+nature, and the ideas and sentiments whereby it was sustained, nought
+may now be learned save by an examination of those tombs themselves, and
+of the dumb remnants, from time to time exhumed out of their soil--rude
+instruments of clay, flint, brass, and gold, and by speculations and
+reasonings founded upon these archaeological gleanings, meagre and
+sapless.
+
+For after the explorer has broken up, certainly desecrated, and perhaps
+destroyed, those noble sepulchral raths; after he has disinterred
+the bones laid there once by pious hands, and the urn with its
+unrecognisable ashes of king or warrior, and by the industrious labour
+of years hoarded his fruitless treasure of stone celt and arrow-head, of
+brazen sword and gold fibula and torque; and after the savant has rammed
+many skulls with sawdust, measuring their capacity, and has adorned them
+with some obscure label, and has tabulated and arranged the implements
+and decorations of flint and metal in the glazed cases of the cold gaunt
+museum, the imagination, unsatisfied and revolted, shrinks back from all
+that he has done. Still we continue to inquire, receiving from him no
+adequate response, Who were those ancient chieftains and warriors for
+whom an affectionate people raised those strange tombs? What life did
+they lead? What deeds perform? How did their personality affect the
+minds of their people and posterity? How did our ancestors look upon
+those great tombs, certainly not reared to be forgotten, and how did
+they--those huge monumental pebbles and swelling raths--enter into and
+affect the civilisation or religion of the times?
+
+We see the cromlech with its massive slab and immense supporting
+pillars, but we vainly endeavour to imagine for whom it was first
+erected, and how that greater than cyclopean house affected the minds
+of those who made it, or those who were reared in its neighbourhood
+or within reach of its influence. We see the stone cist with its great
+smooth flags, the rocky cairn, and huge barrow and massive walled
+cathair, but the interest which they invariably excite is only
+aroused to subside again unsatisfied. From this department of European
+antiquities the historian retires baffled, and the dry savant is alone
+master of the field, but a field which, as cultivated by him alone,
+remains barren or fertile only in things the reverse of exhilarating. An
+antiquarian museum is more melancholy than a tomb.
+
+But there is one country in Europe in which, by virtue of a marvellous
+strength and tenacity of the historical intellect, and of filial
+devotedness to the memory of their ancestors, there have been preserved
+down into the early phases of mediaeval civilisation, and then committed
+to the sure guardianship of manuscript, the hymns, ballads, stories, and
+chronicles, the names, pedigrees, achievements, and even characters, of
+those ancient kings and warriors over whom those massive cromlechs were
+erected and great cairns piled. There is not a conspicuous sepulchral
+monument in Ireland, the traditional history of which is not recorded
+in our ancient literature, and of the heroes in whose honour they were
+raised. In the rest of Europe there is not a single barrow, dolmen, or
+cist of which the ancient traditional history is recorded; in Ireland
+there is hardly one of which it is not. And these histories are in many
+cases as rich and circumstantial as that of men of the greatest eminence
+who have lived in modern times. Granted that the imagination which for
+centuries followed with eager interest the lives of these heroes, beheld
+as gigantic what was not so, as romantic and heroic what was neither one
+nor the other, still the great fact remains, that it was beside and in
+connection with the mounds and cairns that this history was elaborated,
+and elaborated concerning them and concerning the heroes to whom they
+were sacred.
+
+On the plain of Tara, beside the little stream Nemanna, itself famous
+as that which first turned a mill-wheel in Ireland, there lies a barrow,
+not itself very conspicuous in the midst of others, all named and
+illustrious in the ancient literature of the country. The ancient hero
+there interred is to the student of the Irish bardic literature a
+figure as familiar and clearly seen as any personage in the Biographia
+Britannica. We know the name he bore as a boy and the name he bore as
+a man. We know the names of his father and his grandfather, and of the
+father of his grandfather, of his mother, and the father and mother of
+his mother, and the pedigrees and histories of each of these. We know
+the name of his nurse, and of his children, and of his wife, and the
+character of his wife, and of the father and mother of his wife, and
+where they lived and were buried. We know all the striking events of his
+boyhood and manhood, the names of his horses and his weapons, his own
+character and his friends, male and female. We know his battles, and the
+names of those whom he slew in battle, and how he was himself slain, and
+by whose hands. We know his physical and spiritual characteristics,
+the device upon his shield, and how that was originated, carved, and
+painted, by whom. We know the colour of his hair, the date of his birth
+and of his death, and his relations, in time and otherwise, with the
+remainder of the princes and warriors with whom, in that mound-raising
+period of our history, he was connected, in hostility or friendship; and
+all this enshrined in ancient song, the transmitted traditions of the
+people who raised that barrow, and who laid within it sorrowing their
+brave ruler and, defender. That mound is the tomb of Cuculain, once king
+of the district in which Dundalk stands to-day, and the ruins of whose
+earthen fortification may still be seen two miles from that town.
+
+This is a single instance, and used merely as an example, but one out
+of a multitude almost as striking. There is not a king of Ireland,
+described as such in the ancient annals, whose barrow is not mentioned
+in these or other compositions, and every one of which may at the
+present day be identified where the ignorant plebeian or the ignorant
+patrician has not destroyed them. The early History of Ireland clings
+around and grows out of the Irish barrows until, with almost the
+universality of that primeval forest from which Ireland took one of
+its ancient names, the whole isle and all within it was clothed with
+a nobler raiment, invisible, but not the less real, of a full and
+luxuriant history, from whose presence, all-embracing, no part was free.
+Of the many poetical and rhetorical titles lavished upon this country,
+none is truer than that which calls her the Isle of Song. Her ancient
+history passed unceasingly into the realm of artistic representation;
+the history of one generation became the poetry of the next, until the
+whole island was illuminated and coloured by the poetry of the bards.
+Productions of mere fancy and imagination these songs are not,
+though fancy and imagination may have coloured and shaped all their
+subject-matter, but the names are names of men and women who once lived
+and died in Ireland, and over whom their people raised the swelling rath
+and reared the rocky cromlech. In the sepulchral monuments their names
+were preserved, and in the performance of sacred rites, and the holding
+of games, fairs, and assemblies in their honour, the memory of their
+achievements kept fresh, till the traditions that clung around these
+places were inshrined in tales which were finally incorporated in the
+Leabhar na Huidhre and the Book of Leinster.
+
+Pre-historic narrative is of two kinds--in one the imagination is at
+work consciously, in the other unconsciously. Legends of the former
+class are the product of a lettered and learned age. The story floats
+loosely in a world of imagination. The other sort of pre-historic
+narrative clings close to the soil, and to visible and tangible
+objects. It may be legend, but it is legend believed in as history never
+consciously invented, and growing out of certain spots of the earth's
+surface, and supported by and drawing its life from the soil like a
+natural growth.
+
+Such are the early Irish tales that cling around the mounds and
+cromlechs as that by which they are sustained, which was originally
+their source, and sustained them afterwards in a strong enduring life.
+It is evident that these cannot be classed with stories that float
+vaguely in an ideal world, which may happen in one place as well as
+another, and in which the names might be disarrayed without changing
+the character and consistency of the tale, and its relations, in time or
+otherwise, with other tales.
+
+Foreigners are surprised to find the Irish claim for their own country
+an antiquity and a history prior to that of the neighbouring countries.
+Herein lie the proof and the explanation. The traditions and history of
+the mound-raising period have in other countries passed away. Foreign
+conquest, or less intrinsic force of imagination, and pious sentiment
+have suffered them to fall into oblivion; but in Ireland they have been
+all preserved in their original fulness and vigour, hardly a hue has
+faded, hardly a minute circumstance or articulation been suffered to
+decay.
+
+The enthusiasm with which the Irish intellect seized upon the grand
+moral life of Christianity, and ideals so different from, and so hostile
+to, those of the heroic age, did not consume the traditions or destroy
+the pious and reverent spirit in which men still looked back upon those
+monuments of their own pagan teachers and kings, and the deep spirit
+of patriotism and affection with which the mind still clung to the
+old heroic age, whose types were warlike prowess, physical beauty,
+generosity, hospitality, love of family and nation, and all those noble
+attributes which constituted the heroic character as distinguished from
+the saintly. The Danish conquest, with its profound modification of
+Irish society, and consequent disruption of old habits and conditions
+of life, did not dissipate it; nor the more dangerous conquest of the
+Normans, with their own innate nobility of character, chivalrous daring,
+and continental grace and civilisation; nor the Elizabethan convulsions
+and systematic repression and destruction of all native phases of
+thought and feeling. Through all these storms, which successively
+assailed the heroic literature of ancient Ireland, it still held itself
+undestroyed. There were still found generous minds to shelter and shield
+the old tales and ballads, to feel the nobleness of that life of which
+they were the outcome, and to resolve that the soil of Ireland should
+not, so far as they had the power to prevent it, be denuded of its
+raiment of history and historic romance, or reduced again to primeval
+nakedness. The fruit of this persistency and unquenched love of country
+and its ancient traditions, is left to be enjoyed by us. There is not
+through the length and breadth of the country a conspicuous rath or
+barrow of which we cannot find the traditional history preserved in
+this ancient literature. The mounds of Tara, the great barrows along
+the shores of the Boyne, the raths of Slieve Mish, and Rathcrogan, and
+Teltown, the stone caiseals of Aran and Innishowen, and those that alone
+or in smaller groups stud the country over, are all, or nearly all,
+mentioned in this ancient literature, with the names and traditional
+histories of those over whom they were raised.
+
+There is one thing to be learned from all this, which is, that we, at
+least, should not suffer these ancient monuments to be destroyed, whose
+history has been thus so astonishingly preserved. The English farmer may
+tear down the barrow which is unfortunate enough to be situated within
+his bounds. Neither he nor his neighbours know or can tell anything
+about its ancient history; the removed earth will help to make his
+cattle fatter and improve his crops, the stones will be useful to pave
+his roads and build his fences, and the savant can enjoy the rest; but
+the Irish farmer and landlord should not do or suffer this.
+
+The instinctive reverence of the peasantry has hitherto been a great
+preservative; but the spread of education has to a considerable extent
+impaired this kindly sentiment, and the progress of scientific farming,
+and the anxiety of the Royal Irish Academy to collect antiquarian
+trifles, have already led to the reckless destruction of too many. I
+think that no one who reads the first two volumes of this history would
+greatly care to bear a hand in the destruction of that tomb at Tara,
+in which long since his people laid the bones of Cuculain; and I think,
+too, that they would not like to destroy any other monument of the same
+age, when they know that the history of its occupant and its own name
+are preserved in the ancient literature, and that they may one day learn
+all that is to be known concerning it. I am sure that if the case were
+put fairly to the Irish landlords and country gentlemen, they would
+neither inflict nor permit this outrage upon the antiquities of their
+country. The Irish country gentleman prides himself on his love of
+trees, and entertains a very wholesome contempt for the mercantile boor
+who, on purchasing an old place, chops down the best timber for the
+market. And yet a tree, though cut down, may be replaced. One elm tree
+is as good as another, and the thinned wood, by proper treatment, will
+be as dense as ever; but the ancient mound, once carted away, can never
+be replaced any more. When the study of the Irish literary records is
+revived, as it certainly will be revived, the old history of each of
+these raths and cromlechs will be brought again into the light, and
+one new interest of a beautiful and edifying nature attached to the
+landscape, and affecting wholly for good the minds of our people.
+
+Irishmen are often taunted with the fact that their history is yet
+unwritten, but that the Irish, as a nation, have been careless of their
+past is refuted by the facts which I have mentioned. A people who alone
+in Europe preserved, not in dry chronicles alone, but illuminated and
+adorned with all that fancy could suggest in ballad, and tale, and rude
+epic, the history of the mound-raising period, are not justly liable
+to this taunt. Until very modern times, history was the one absorbing
+pursuit of the Irish secular intellect, the delight of the noble, and
+the solace of the vile.
+
+At present, indeed, the apathy on this subject is, I believe, without
+parallel in the world. It would seem as if the Irish, extreme in all
+things, at one time thought of nothing but their history, and, at
+another, thought of everything but it. Unlike those who write on
+other subjects, the author of a work on Irish history has to labour
+simultaneously at a two-fold task--he has to create the interest to
+which he intends to address himself.
+
+The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties from
+which the corresponding period in the histories of other countries is
+free. The surrounding nations escape the difficulty by having nothing to
+record. The Irish historian is immersed in perplexity on account of the
+mass of material ready to his hand. The English have lost utterly all
+record of those centuries before which the Irish historian stands with
+dismay and hesitation, not through deficiency of materials, but through
+their excess. Had nought but the chronicles been preserved the task
+would have been simple. We would then have had merely to determine
+approximately the date of the introduction of letters, and allowing a
+margin on account of the bardic system and the commission of family and
+national history to the keeping of rhymed and alliterated verse, fix
+upon some reasonable point, and set down in order, the old successions
+of kings and the battles and other remarkable events. But in Irish
+history there remains, demanding treatment, that other immense mass of
+literature of an imaginative nature, illuminating with anecdote and tale
+the events and personages mentioned simply and without comment by
+the chronicler. It is this poetic literature which constitutes the
+stumbling-block, as it constitutes also the glory, of early Irish
+history, for it cannot be rejected and it cannot be retained. It cannot
+be rejected, because it contains historical matter which is consonant
+with and illuminates the dry lists of the chronologist, and it cannot
+be retained, for popular poetry is not history; and the task of
+distinguishing In such literature the fact from the fiction--where there
+is certainly fact and certainly fiction--is one of the most difficult to
+which the intellect can apply itself. That this difficulty has not been
+hitherto surmounted by Irish writers is no just reproach. For the last
+century, intellects of the highest attainments, trained and educated
+to the last degree, have been vainly endeavouring to solve a similar
+question in the far less copious and less varied heroic literature of
+Greece. Yet the labours of Wolfe, Grote, Mahaffy, Geddes, and Gladstone,
+have not been sufficient to set at rest the small question, whether it
+was one man or two or many who composed the Iliad and Odyssey, while the
+reality of the achievements of Achilles and even his existence might be
+denied or asserted by a scholar without general reproach. When this is
+the case with regard to the great heroes of the Iliad, I fancy it will
+be some time before the same problem will have been solved for the minor
+characters, and as it affects Thersites, or that eminent artist who
+dwelt at home in Hyla, being by far the most excellent of leather
+cutters. When, therefore, Greek still meets Greek in an interminable and
+apparently bloodless contest over the disputed body of the Iliad, and
+still no end appears, surely it would be madness for any one to sit down
+and gaily distinguish true from false in the immense and complex mass
+of the Irish bardic literature, having in his ears this century-lasting
+struggle over a single Greek poem and a single small phase of the
+pre-historic life of Hellas.
+
+In the Irish heroic literature, the presence or absence of the
+marvellous supplies _no test whatsoever_ as to the general truth or
+falsehood of the tale in which they appear. The marvellous is supplied
+with greater abundance in the account of the battle of Clontarf, and
+the wars of the O'Briens with the Normans, than in the tale in which
+is described the foundation of Emain Macha by Kimbay. Exact-thinking,
+scientific France has not hesitated to paint the battles of Louis XIV.
+with similar hues; and England, though by no means fertile in angelic
+interpositions, delights to adorn the barren tracts of her more popular
+histories with apocryphal anecdotes.
+
+How then should this heroic literature of Ireland be treated in
+connection with the history of the country? The true method would
+certainly be to print it exactly as it is without excision or
+condensation. Immense it is, and immense it must remain. No men living,
+and no men to live, will ever so exhaust the meaning of any single tale
+as to render its publication unnecessary for the study of others. The
+order adopted should be that which the bards themselves deter mined, any
+other would be premature, and I think no other will ever take its place.
+At the commencement should stand the passage from the Book of Invasions,
+describing the occupation of the isle by Queen Keasair and her
+companions, and along with it every discoverable tale or poem dealing
+with this event and those characters. After that, all that remains of
+the cycle of which Partholan was the protagonist. Thirdly, all
+that relates to Nemeth and his sons, their wars with curt Kical the
+bow-legged, and all that relates to the Fomoroh of the Nemedian epoch,
+then first moving dimly in the forefront of our history. After that, the
+great Fir-bolgic cycle, a cycle janus-faced, looking on one side to the
+mythological period and the wars of the gods, and on the other, to the
+heroic, and more particularly to the Ultonian cycle. In the next place,
+the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of the Irish gods
+who, having conquered the Fir-bolgs, like the Greek gods of the age of
+gold dwelt visibly in the island until the coming of the Clan Milith,
+out of Spain. In the sixth, the Milesian invasion, and every accessible
+statement concerning the sons and kindred of Milesius. In the seventh,
+the disconnected tales dealing with those local heroes whose history
+is not connected with the great cycles, but who in the _fasti_ fill
+the spaces between the divine period and the heroic. In the eighth, the
+heroic cycles, the Ultonian, the Temairian, and the Fenian, and after
+these the historic tales that, without forming cycles, accompany the
+course of history down to the extinction of Irish independence, and
+the transference to aliens of all the great sources of authority in the
+island.
+
+This great work when completed will be of that kind of which no other
+European nation can supply an example. Every public library in the world
+will find it necessary to procure a copy. The chronicles will then
+cease to be so closely and exclusively studied. Every history of ancient
+Ireland will consist of more or less intelligent comments upon and
+theories formed in connection with this great series--theories which, in
+general, will only be formed in order to be destroyed. What the present
+age demands upon the subject of antique Irish history--an exact
+and scientific treatment of the facts supplied by our native
+authorities--will be demanded for ever. It will never be supplied. The
+history of Ireland will be contained in this huge publication. In it the
+poet will find endless themes of song, the philosopher strange workings
+of the human mind, the archeologist a mass of information, marvellous in
+amount and quality, with regard to primitive ideas and habits of life,
+and the rationalist materials for framing a scientific history of
+Ireland, which will be acceptable in proportion to the readableness
+of his style, and the mode in which his views may harmonize with the
+prevailing humour and complexion of his contemporaries.
+
+Such a work it is evident could not be effected by a single individual.
+It must be a public and national undertaking, carried out under the
+supervision of the Royal Irish Academy, at the expense of the country.
+
+The publication of the Irish bardic remains in the way that I have
+mentioned, is the only true and valuable method of presenting the
+history of Ireland to the notice of the world. The mode which I have
+myself adopted, that other being out of the question, is open to many
+obvious objections; but in the existing state of the Irish mind on the
+subject, no other is possible to an individual writer. I desire to
+make this heroic period once again a portion of the imagination of the
+country, and its chief characters as familiar in the minds of our people
+as they once were. As mere history, and treated in the method in which
+history is generally written at the present day, a work dealing with
+the early Irish kings and heroes would certainly not secure an audience.
+Those who demand such a treatment forget that there is not in the
+country an interest on the subject to which to appeal. A work treating
+of early Irish kings, in the same way in which the historians of
+neighbouring countries treat of their own early kings, would be, to the
+Irish public generally, unreadable. It might enjoy the reputation
+of being well written, and as such receive an honourable place in
+half-a-dozen public libraries, but it would be otherwise left severely
+alone. It would never make its way through that frozen zone which, on
+this subject, surrounds the Irish mind.
+
+On the other hand, Irishmen are as ready as others to feel an interest
+in a human character, having themselves the ordinary instincts,
+passions, and curiosities of human nature. If I can awake an interest
+in the career of even a single ancient Irish king, I shall establish a
+train of thoughts, which will advance easily from thence to the state
+of society in which he lived, and the kings and heroes who surrounded,
+preceded, or followed him. Attention and interest once fully aroused,
+concerning even one feature of this landscape of ancient history, could
+be easily widened and extended in its scope.
+
+Now, if nothing remained of early Irish history save the dry _fasti_ of
+the chronicles and the Brehon laws, this would, I think, be a perfectly
+legitimate object of ambition, and would be consonant with my ideal
+of what the perfect flower of historical literature should be, to
+illuminate a tale embodying the former by hues derived from the Senchus
+Mor.
+
+But in Irish literature there has been preserved, along with the _fasti_
+and the laws, this immense mass of ancient ballad, tale, and epic, whose
+origin is lost in the mists of extreme antiquity, and in which have been
+preserved the characters, relationships, adventures, and achievements of
+the vast majority of the personages whose names, in a gaunt nakedness,
+fill the books of the chroniclers. Around each of the greater heroes
+there groups itself a mass of bardic literature, varying in tone
+and statement, but preserving a substantial unity as to the general
+character and the more important achievements of the hero, and also,
+a fact upon which their general historical accuracy may be based with
+confidence, exhibiting a knowledge of that same prior and subsequent
+history recorded in the _fasti_. The literature which groups
+itself around a hero exhibits not only an unity with itself, but an
+acquaintance with the general course of the history of the country, and
+with preceding and succeeding kings.
+
+The students of Irish literature do not require to be told this; for
+those who are not, I would give a single instance as an illustration.
+
+In the battle of Gabra, fought in the third century, and in which Oscar,
+perhaps the greatest of all the Irish heroes heading the Fianna Eireen,
+contended against Cairbry of the Liffey, King of Ireland, and his
+troops, Cairbry on his side announces to his warriors that he would
+rather perish in this battle than suffer one of the Fianna to survive;
+but while he spoke--
+
+ "Barran suddenly exclaimed--
+ 'Remember Mall Mucreema, remember Art.
+
+ "'Our ancestors fell there
+ By force of the treachery of the Fians;
+ Remember the hard tributes,
+ Remember the extraordinary pride.'"
+
+Here the poet, singing only of the events of the battle of Gabra, shows
+that he was well-acquainted with all the relations subsisting for a long
+time between the Fians and the Royal family. The battle of Mucreema
+was fought by Cairbry's grandfather, Art, against Lewy Mac Conn and the
+Fianna Eireen.
+
+Again, in the tale of the battle of Moy Leana, in which Conn of
+the Hundred Battles, the father of this same Art, is the principal
+character, the author of the tale mentions many times circumstances
+relating to his father, Felimy Rectmar, and his grandfather, Tuhall
+Tectmar. Such is the whole of the Irish literature, not vague, nebulous,
+and shifting, but following the course of the _fasti_, and regulated and
+determined by them. This argument has been used by Mr. Gladstone
+with great confidence, in order to show the substantial historical
+truthfulness of the Iliad, and that it is in fact a portion of a
+continuous historic sequence.
+
+Now this being admitted, that the course of Irish history, as laid down
+by the chroniclers, was familiar to the authors of the tales and heroic
+ballads, one of two things must be admitted, either that the events and
+kings did succeed one another in the order mentioned by the chroniclers,
+or that what the chroniclers laid down was then taken as the theme of
+song by the bards, and illuminated and adorned according to their wont.
+
+The second of these suppositions is one which I think few will adopt.
+Can we believe it possible that the bards, who actually supported
+themselves by the amount of pleasure which they gave their audiences,
+would have forsaken those subjects which were already popular, and those
+kings and heroes whose splendour and achievements must have affected,
+profoundly, the popular imagination, in order to invent stories to
+illuminate fabricated names. The thing is quite impossible. A practice
+which we can trace to the edge of that period whose historical character
+may be proved to demonstration, we may conclude to have extended on
+into the period immediately preceding that. When bards illuminated with
+stories and marvellous circumstances the battle of Clontarf and the
+battle of Moyrath, we may believe their predecessors to have done the
+same for the earlier centuries. The absence of an imaginative literature
+other than historical shows also that the literature must have followed,
+regularly, the course of the history, and was not an archaeological
+attempt to create an interest in names and events which were found
+in the chronicles. It is, therefore, a reasonable conclusion that the
+bardic literature, where it reveals a clear sequence in the order of
+events, and where there is no antecedent improbability, supplies a
+trustworthy guide to the general course of our history.
+
+So far as the clear light of history reaches, so far may these tales be
+proved to be historical. It is, therefore, reasonable to suppose that
+the same consonance between them and the actual course of events which
+subsisted during the period which lies in clear light, marked also that
+other preceding period of which the light is no longer dry.
+
+The earliest manuscript of these tales is the Leabhar [Note: Leabar na
+Heera.] na Huidhre, a work of the eleventh century, so that we may
+feel sure that we have them in a condition unimpaired by the revival of
+learning, or any archaeological restoration or improvement. Now, of some
+of these there have been preserved copies in other later MSS., which
+differ very little from the copies preserved in the Leabhar na Huidhre,
+from which we may conclude that these tales had arrived at a fixed
+state, and a point at which it was considered wrong to interfere with
+the text.
+
+The feast of Bricrind is one of the tales preserved in this manuscript.
+The author of the tale in its present form, whenever he lived, composed
+it, having before him original books which he collated, using his
+judgment at times upon the materials to his hand. At one stage he
+observes that the books are at variance on a certain point, namely, that
+at which Cuculain, Conal the Victorious, and Laery Buada go to the lake
+of Uath in order to be judged by him. Some of the books, according
+to the author, stated that on this occasion the two latter behaved
+unfairly, but he agreed with those books which did not state this.
+
+We have, therefore, a tale penned in the eleventh century, composed at
+some time prior to this, and itself collected, not from oral tradition,
+but from books. These considerations would, therefore, render it
+extremely probable that the tales of the Ultonian period, with which the
+Leabhar na Huidhre is principally concerned, were committed to writing
+at a very early period.
+
+To strengthen still further the general historic credibility of these
+tales, and to show how close to the events and heroes described must
+have been the bards who originally composed them, I would urge the
+following considerations.
+
+With the advent of Christianity the mound-raising period passed away.
+The Irish heroic tales have their source in, and draw their interest
+from, the mounds and those laid in them. It would, therefore, be
+extremely improbable that the bards of the Christian period, when the
+days of rath and cairn had departed, would modify, to any considerable
+extent, the literature produced in conditions of society which had
+passed away.
+
+Again, with the advent of Christianity, and the hold which the new faith
+took upon the finest and boldest minds in the country, it is plain that
+the golden age of bardic composition ended. The loss to the bards was
+direct, by the withdrawal of so much intellect from their ranks, and
+indirect, by the general substitution of other ideas for those whose
+ministers they themselves were. It is, therefore, probable that the age
+of production and creation, with regard to the ethnic history, ceased
+about the fifth and sixth centuries, and that, about that time, men
+began to gather up into a collected form the floating literature
+connected with the pagan period. The general current of mediaeval
+opinion attributes the collection of tales and ballads now known as the
+Tan-Bo-Cooalney to St. Ciaran, the great founder of the monastery of
+Clonmacnoise.
+
+But if this be the case, we are enabled to take another step in the
+history of this most valuable literature. The tales of the Leabhar na
+Huidhre are in prose, but prose whose source and original is poetry. The
+author, from time to time, as if quoting an authority, breaks out with
+verse; and I think there is no Irish tale in existence without these
+rudimentary traces of a prior metrical cycle. The style and language
+are quite different, and indicate two distinct epochs. The prose tale is
+founded upon a metrical original, and composed in the meretricious style
+then in fashion, while the old metrical excerpts are pure and simple.
+This is sufficient, in a country like Ireland in those primitive times,
+to necessitate a considerable step into the past, if we desire to get at
+the originals upon which the prose tales were founded.
+
+For in ancient Ireland the conservatism of the people was very great. It
+is the case in all primitive societies. Individual, initiative,
+personal enterprise are content to work within a very small sphere. In
+agriculture, laws, customs, and modes of literary composition, primitive
+and simple societies are very adverse to change.
+
+When we see how closely the Christian compilers followed the early
+authorities, we can well believe that in the ethnic times no mind would
+have been sufficiently daring or sacrilegious to alter or pervert those
+epics which were in their eyes at the same time true and sacred.
+
+In the perusal of the Irish literature, we see that the strength of
+this conservative instinct has been of the greatest service in the
+preservation of the early monuments in their purity. So much is this the
+case, that in many tales the most flagrant contradictions appear, the
+author or scribe being unwilling to depart at all from that which he
+found handed down. For instance, in the "Great Breach of Murthemney,"
+we find Laeg at one moment killed, and in the next riding black
+Shanglan off the field. From this conservatism and careful following of
+authority, and the _littera scripta_, or word once spoken, I conclude
+that the distance in time between the prose tale and the metrical
+originals was very great, and, unless under such exceptional
+circumstances as the revolution caused by the introduction of
+Christianity, could not have been brought about within hundreds of
+years. Moreover, this same conservatism would have caused the tales
+concerning heroes to grow very slowly once they were actually formed.
+All the noteworthy events of the hero's life and his characteristics
+must have formed the original of the tales concerning him, which would
+have been composed during his life, or not long after his death.
+
+I have not met a single tale, whether in verse or prose, in which it is
+not clearly seen that the author was not following authorities before
+him. Such traces of invention or decoration as may be met with are not
+suffered to interfere with the conduct of the tale and the statement of
+facts. They fill empty niches and adorn vacant places. For instance,
+if a king is represented as crossing the sea, we find that the causes
+leading to this, the place whence he set out, his companions, &c., are
+derived from the authorities, but the bard, at the same time, permits
+himself to give what seems to him to be an eloquent or beautiful
+description of the sea, and the appearance presented by the many-oared
+galleys. And yet the last transcription or recension of the majority of
+the tales was effected in Christian times, and in an age characterised
+by considerable classical attainments--a time when the imagination might
+have been expected to shake itself loose from old restraints, and freely
+invent. _A fortiori_, the more ancient bards, those of the ruder ethnic
+times, would have clung still closer to authority, deriving all their
+imaginative representations from preceding minstrels. There was no
+conscious invention at any time. Each cycle and tale grew from historic
+roots, and was developed from actual fact. So much may indeed be said
+for the more ancient tales, but the Ultonian cycle deals with events
+well within the historic period.
+
+The era of Concobar Mac Nessa and the Red Branch knights of Ulster was
+long subsequent to the floruerunt of the Irish gods and their Titan-like
+opponents of this latter period, the names alone can be fairly held to
+be historic. What swells out the Irish chronicles to such portentous
+dimensions is the history of the gods and giants rationalised by
+mediaeval historians. Unable to ignore or excide what filled so much of
+the imagination of the country, and unable, as Christians, to believe
+in the divinity of the Tuatha De Danan and their predecessors, they
+rationalised all the pre-Milesian record. But the disappearance of the
+gods does not yet bring us within the penumbra of history. After the
+death of the sons of Milesius we find a long roll of kings. These were
+all topical heroes, founders of nations, and believed, by the tribes and
+tribal confederacies which they founded, to have been in their day
+the chief kings of Ireland. The point fixed upon by the accurate and
+sceptical Tiherna as the starting-point of trustworthy Irish history,
+was one long subsequent to the floruerunt of the gods; and the age of
+Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights was more than two centuries later
+than that of Kimbay and the foundation of Emain Macha. The floruit of
+Cuculain, therefore, falls completely within the historical penumbra,
+and the more carefully the enormous, and in the main mutually consistent
+and self-supporting, historical remains dealing with this period are
+studied, the more will this be believed. The minuteness, accuracy,
+extent, and verisimilitude of the literature, chronicles, pedigrees,
+&c., relating to this period, will cause the student to wonder more and
+more as he examines and collates, seeing the marvellous self-consistency
+and consentaneity of such a mass of varied recorded matter. The age,
+indeed, breathes sublimity, and abounds with the marvellous, the
+romantic, and the grotesque. But as I have already stated, the presence
+or absence of these qualities has no crucial significance. Love and
+reverence and the poetic imagination always effect such changes in
+the object of their passion. They are the essential condition of the
+transference of the real into the world of art. AEval, of Carriglea, the
+fairy queen of Munster, is one of the most important characters in the
+history of the battle of Clontarf, the character of which, and of the
+events that preceded and followed its occurrence, and the chieftains and
+warriors who fought on one side and the other, are identical, whether
+described by the bard singing, or by the monkish chronicler jotting down
+in plain prose the fasti for the year. The reader of these volumes can
+make such deductions as he pleases, on this account, from the bardic
+history of the Red Branch, and clip the wings of the tale, so that it
+may with him travel pedestrian. I know there are others, like myself,
+who will not hesitate for once to let the fancy roam and luxuriate in
+the larger spaces and freer airs of ancient song, nor fear that their
+sanity will be imperilled by the shouting of semi-divine heroes, and the
+sight of Cuculain entering battles with the Tuatha De Danan around him.
+
+I hope on some future occasion to examine more minutely the character
+and place in literature of the Irish bardic remains, and put forward
+here these general considerations, from which the reader may presume
+that the Ultonian cycle, dealing as it does with Cuculain and his
+contemporaries, is in the main true to the facts of the time, and that
+his history, and that of the other heroes who figure in these volumes,
+is, on the whole, and omitting the marvellous, sufficiently reliable.
+I would ask the reader, who may be inclined to think that the principal
+character is too chivalrous and refined for the age, to peruse for
+himself the tale named the "Great Breach of Murthemney." He will there,
+and in many other tales and poems besides, see that the noble and
+pathetic interest which attaches to his character is substantially the
+same as I have represented in these volumes. But unless the student
+has read the whole of the Ultonian cycle, he should be cautious in
+condemning a departure in my work from any particular version of an
+event which he may have himself met. Of many minor events there are more
+than one version, and many scenes and assertions which he may think
+of importance would yet, by being related, cause inconsistency and
+contradiction. Of the nature of the work in which all should be
+introduced I have already given my opinion.
+
+For the rest, I have related one or two great events in the life of
+Cuculain in such a way as to give a description as clear and correct as
+possible of his own character and history as related by the bards, of
+those celebrated men and women who were his contemporaries and of his
+relations with them, of the gods and supernatural powers in whom the
+people then believed, and of the state of civilisation which then
+prevailed. If I have done my task well, the reader will have been
+supplied, without any intensity of application on his part--a condition
+of the public mind upon which no historian of this country should
+count--with some knowledge of ancient Irish history, and with an
+interest in the subject which may lead him to peruse for himself that
+ancient literature, and to read works of a more strictly scientific
+nature upon the subject than those which I have yet written. But until
+such an interest is aroused, it is useless to swell the mass of valuable
+critical matter, which everyone at present is very well content to leave
+unread.
+
+In the first volume, however, I have committed this error, that I did
+not permit it to be seen with sufficient clearness that the characters
+and chief events of the tale are absolutely historic; and that much
+of the colouring, inasmuch as its source must have been the centuries
+immediately succeeding the floruerunt of those characters, is also
+reliable as history, while the remainder is true to the times and the
+state of society which then obtained. The story seems to progress too
+much in the air, too little in time and space, and seems to be more
+of the nature of legend and romance than of actual historic fact seen
+through an imaginative medium. Such is the history of Concobar Mac Nessa
+and his knights--historic fact seen through the eyes of a loving wonder.
+
+Indeed, I must confess that the blaze of bardic light which illuminates
+those centuries at first so dazzled the eye and disturbed the judgment,
+that I saw only the literature, only the epic and dramatic interest, and
+did not see as I should the distinctly historical character of the age
+around which that literature revolves, wrongly deeming that a literature
+so noble, and dealing with events so remote, must have originated
+mainly or altogether in the imagination. All the borders of the epic
+representation at which, in the first volume, I have aimed, seem to
+melt, and wander away vaguely on every side into space and time. I have
+now taken care to remedy that defect, supplying to the unset picture the
+clear historical frame to which it is entitled. I will also request the
+reader, when the two volumes may diverge in tone or statement, to
+attach greater importance to the second, as the result of wider and more
+careful reading and more matured reflection.
+
+A great English poet, himself a severe student, pronounced the early
+history of his own country to be a mere scuffling of kites and crows, as
+indeed are all wars which lack the sacred bard, and the sacred bard is
+absent where the kites and crows pick out his eyes. That the Irish kings
+and heroes should succeed one another, surrounded by a blaze of bardic
+light, in which both themselves and all those who were contemporaneous
+with them are seen clearly and distinctly, was natural in a country
+where in each little realm or sub-kingdom the ard-ollav was equal in
+dignity to the king, which is proved by the equivalence of their cries.
+The dawn of English history is in the seventh century--a late dawn, dark
+and sombre, without a ray of cheerful sunshine; that of Ireland dates
+reliably from a point before the commencement of the Christian era
+luminous with that light which never was on sea or land--thronged
+with heroic forms of men and women--terrible with the presence of the
+supernatural and its over-arching power.
+
+Educated Irishmen are ignorant of, and indifferent to, their history;
+yet from the hold of that history they cannot shake themselves free. It
+still haunts the imagination, like Mordecai at Haman's gate, a cause
+of continual annoyance and vexation. An Irishman can no more release
+himself from his history than he can absolve himself from social and
+domestic duties. He may outrage it, but he cannot placidly ignore.
+Hence the uneasy, impatient feeling with which the subject is generally
+regarded.
+
+I think that I do not exaggerate when I say that the majority of
+educated Irishmen would feel grateful to the man who informed them that
+the history of their country was valueless and unworthy of study, that
+the pre-Christian history was a myth, the post-Christian mere annals,
+the mediaeval a scuffling of kites and crows, and the modern alone
+deserving of some slight consideration. That writer will be in Ireland
+most praised who sets latest the commencement of our history. Without
+study he will be pronounced sober and rational before the critic opens
+the book. So anxious is the Irish mind to see that effaced which it is
+conscious of having neglected.
+
+There are two compositions which affect an interest comparable to that
+which Ireland claims for her bardic literature, One is the Ossian of
+MacPherson, the other the Nibelungen Lied.
+
+If we are to suppose Macpherson faithfully to have written down,
+printed, and published the floating disconnected poems which he found
+lingering in the Scotch highlands, how small, comparatively, would be
+their value as indications of antique thought and feeling, reduced then
+for the first time to writing, sixteen hundred years after the time of
+Ossian and his heroes, in a country not the home of those heroes, and
+destitute of the regular bardic organisation. The Ossianic tales and
+poems still told and sung by the Irish peasantry at the present day in
+the country of Ossian and Oscar, would be, if collected even now, quite
+as valuable, if not more so. Truer to the antique these latter are,
+for in them the cycles are not blended. The Red Branch heroes are not
+confused with Ossian's Fianna.
+
+But MacPherson's Ossian is not a translation. In the publications of the
+Irish Ossianic poetry we see what that poetry really was--rude, homely,
+plain-spoken, leagues removed from the nebulous sublimity of MacPherson.
+
+With regard to the other, the Germans, who naturally desire to refer
+its composition to as remote a date as possible, and who arguing from
+no scientific data, but only style, ascribe the authorship of the
+Nibelungen to a poet living in the latter part of the twelfth century.
+Be it remembered, that the poem does not purport to be a collection of
+the scattered fragments of a cycle, but an original composition, then
+actually imagined and written. It does not even purport to deal with the
+ethnic times. _Its heroes are Christian heroes. They attend Mass._ The
+poem is not true, even to the leading features of the late period of
+history in which it is placed, if it have any habitat in the world of
+history at all. Attila, who died A.D. 450, and Theodoric, who did not
+die until the succeeding century, meet as coevals.
+
+Turn we now from the sole boast of Germany to one out of a hundred in
+the Irish bardic literature. The Tan-bo-Cooalney was transcribed into
+the Leabhar na Huidhre in the eleventh century a manuscript whose date
+has been established by the consentaneity of Irish, French, and German
+scholarship. Mark, it was transcribed, not composed. The scribe records
+the fact:--
+
+ "Ego qui scripsi hanc historian aut vero fabulam, quibusdam fidem
+ in hac historia aut fabula non commodo."
+
+The Tan-bo-Cooalney was therefore _transcribed_ by an ancient penman to
+the parchment of a still existing manuscript, in the century before
+that in which the German epic is presumed, from style only, and in the
+opinion of Germans, to have been _composed_.
+
+The same scribe adds this comment with regard to its contents:--
+
+ "Qaedam autem poetica figmenta, quaedam ad delectationem
+ stultorum."
+
+Such scorn could not have been felt by one living in an age of bardic
+production. That independence and originality of thought, which caused
+Milton to despise the poets of the Restoration, are impossible in
+the simple stages of civilisation. The scribe who appended this very
+interesting comment to the subject of his own handiwork must have been
+removed by centuries from the date of its compilation. That the tale
+was, in his time, an ancient one, is therefore rendered extremely
+probable, the scribe himself indicating how completely out of sympathy
+he is with this form of literature, its antiquity and peculiar
+archaeological interest being, doubtless, the cause of the
+transcription.
+
+Again, a close study of its contents, as of the contents of all the
+Irish historic tales, proves that in its present form, whenever
+that form was superadded, it is but a representation in prose of a
+pre-existing metrical original. Under this head I have already made some
+remarks, which, I shall request the reader to re-peruse [Note: Pages 23
+to 27]
+
+Once more, it deals with a particular event in Irish history, and with
+distinct and definite kings, heroes, and bards, who flourished in
+the epoch of which it treats. In the synchronisms of Tiherna, in the
+metrical chronology of Flann, in all the various historical compositions
+produced in various parts of the country, the main features and leading
+characters of the Tan-bo-Cooalney suffer no material change, while the
+minor divergencies show that the chronology of the annals and annalistic
+poems were not drawn from the tale, but owe their origin to other
+sources. Moreover, this epic is but a portion of the great Ultonian or
+Red Branch cycle, all the parts of which pre-suppose and support one
+another; and that cycle is itself a portion of the history of Ireland,
+and pre-supposes other preceding and succeeding cyles, preceding and
+succeeding kings. The event of which this epic treats occurred at the
+time of the Incarnation, and its characters are the leading Irish kings
+and warriors of that date. Such is the Tan-bo-Cooalney.
+
+This being so, how have the English literary classes recognised, or
+how treated, our claim to the possession of an antique literature of
+peculiar historical interest, and by reason of that antiquity, a matter
+of concern to all Aryan nations? The conquest has not more constituted
+the English Parliament guardian and trustee of Ireland, for purposes of
+legislation and government, than it has vested the welfare and fame
+of our literature and antiquities in the hands of English scholarship.
+London is the headquarters of the intellectualism and of the literary
+and historical culture of the Empire. It is the sole dispenser of fame.
+It alone influences the mind of the country and guides thought and
+sentiment. It can make and mar reputations. What it scorns or ignores,
+the world, too, ignores and scorns. How then has the native literature
+of Ireland been treated by the representatives of English scholarship
+and literary culture? Mr. Carlyle is the first man of letters of the
+day, his the highest name as a critic upon, and historian of, the
+past life of Europe. Let us hear him upon this subject, admittedly of
+European importance.
+
+Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. III., page 136. "Not only as the oldest
+Tradition of Modern Europe does it--the Nibelungen--possess a high
+antiquarian interest, but farther, and even in the shape we now see
+it under, unless the epics of the son of Fingal had some sort of
+authenticity, it is our oldest poem also."
+
+Poor Ireland, with her hundred ancient epics, standing at the door of
+the temple of fame, or, indeed, quite behind the vestibule out of the
+way! To see the Swabian enter in, crowned, to a flourish of somewhat
+barbarous music, was indeed bad enough, but Mr. MacPherson!
+
+They manage these things rather better in France, _vide passim_ "La
+Revue Celtique."
+
+Of the literary value of the bardic literature I fear to write at all,
+lest I should not know how to make an end. Rude indeed it is, but
+great. Like the central chamber of that huge tumulus [Note: New Grange
+anciently Cnobgha, and now also Knowth.] on the Boyne, overarched with
+massive unhewn rocks, its very ruggedness strikes an awe which the
+orderly arrangement of smaller and more reasonable thoughts, cut smooth
+by instruments inherited from classic times, fails so often to inspire.
+The labour of the Attic chisel may be seen since its invention in every
+other literary workshop of Europe, and seen in every other laboratory of
+thought the transmitted divine fire of the Hebrew. The bardic literature
+of Erin stands alone, as distinctively and genuinely Irish as the race
+itself, or the natural aspects of the island. Rude indeed it is, but
+like the hills which its authors tenanted with gods, holding dells
+[Note: Those sacred hills will generally be found to have this
+character.] of the most perfect beauty, springs of the most touching
+pathos. On page 33, Vol. I., will be seen a poem [Note: Publications
+of Ossianic Society, page 303, Vol. IV.] by Fionn upon the spring-time,
+made, as the old unknown historian says, to prove his poetic powers--a
+poem whose antique language relegates it to a period long prior to the
+tales of the Leabhar na Huidhre, one which, if we were to meet side
+by side with the "Ode to Night," by Alcman, in the Greek anthology, we
+would not be surprised; or those lines on page 203, Vol. I., the song of
+Cuculain, forsaken by his people, watching the frontier of his country--
+
+ "Alone in defence of the Ultonians,
+ Solitary keeping ward over the province"
+
+or the death [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, Vol. I.] of Oscar,
+on pages 34 and 35, Vol. I., an excerpt condensed from the Battle of
+Gabra. Innumerable such tender and thrilling passages.
+
+To all great nations their history presents itself under the aspect
+of poetry; a drama exciting pity and terror; an epic with unbroken
+continuity, and a wide range of thought, when the intellect is satisfied
+with coherence and unity, and the imagination by extent and diversity.
+Such is the bardic history of Ireland, but with this literary defect. A
+perfect epic is only possible when the critical spirit begins to be
+in the ascendant, for with the critical spirit comes that distrust and
+apathy towards the spontaneous literature of early times, which permit
+some great poet so to shape and alter the old materials as to construct
+a harmonious and internally consistent tale, observing throughout a
+sense of proportion and a due relation of the parts. Such a clipping
+and alteration of the authorities would have seemed sacrilege to earlier
+bards. In mediaeval Ireland there was, indeed, a subtle spirit of
+criticism; but under its influence, being as it was of scholastic
+origin, no great singing men appeared, re-fashioning the old rude epics;
+and yet, the very shortcomings of the Irish tales, from a literary point
+of view, increase their importance from a historical. Of poetry, as
+distinguised from metrical composition, these ancient bards knew little.
+The bardic literature, profoundly poetic though it be, in the eyes of
+our ancestors was history, and never was anything else. As history it
+was originally composed, and as history bound in the chains of metre,
+that it might not be lost or dissipated passing through the minds
+of men, and as history it was translated into prose and committed
+to parchment. Accordingly, no tale is without its defects as poetry,
+possessing therefore necessarily, a corresponding value as history.
+But that there was in the country, in very early times, a high and rare
+poetic culture of the lyric kind, native in its character, ethnic in
+origin, unaffected by scholastic culture which, as we know, took a
+different direction; that one exquisite poem, in which the father
+of Ossian praises the beauty of the springtime in anapaestic [Note:
+Cettemain | cain ree! | ro sair | an cuct | "He, Fionn MacCool, learned
+the three compositions which distinguish the poets, the TEINM LAEGHA,
+the IMUS OF OSNA, and the DICEDUE DICCENAIB, and it was then Fionn
+composed this poem to prove his poetry." In which of these three forms
+of metre the Ode to the spring-time is written I know not. Its form
+throughout is distinctly anapaestic.--S. O'G.] verse, would, even though
+it stood alone, both by the fact of its composition and the fact of its
+preservation, fully prove.
+
+Much and careful study, indeed, it requires, if we would compel these
+ancient epics to yield up their greatness or their beauty, or even their
+logical coherence and imaginative unity--broken, scattered portions as
+they all are of that one enormous epic, the bardic history of Ireland.
+At the best we read without the key. The magic of the names is gone,
+or can only be partially recovered by the most tender and sympathetic
+study. Indeed, without reading all or many, we will not understand
+the superficial meaning of even one. For instance, in one of the many
+histories of Cuculain's many battles, we read this--
+
+"It was said that Lu Mac AEthleen was assisting him."
+
+This at first seems meaningless, the bard seeing no necessity for
+throwing further light on the subject; but, as we wander through the
+bardic literature, gradually the conception of this Lu grows upon the
+mind--the destroyer of the sons of Turann--the implacably filial--the
+expulsor of the Fomoroh--the source of all the sciences--the god of the
+Tuatha De Danan--the protector and guardian of Cuculain--Lu Lamfada,
+son of Cian, son of Diancect, son of Esric, son of Dela, son of Ned the
+war-god, whose tomb or temple, Aula Neid, may still be seen beside the
+Foyle. This enormous and seemingly chaotic mass of literature is found
+at all times to possess an inner harmony, a consistency and logical
+unity, to be apprehended only by careful study.
+
+So read, the sublimity strikes through the rude representation.
+Astonished at himself, the student, who at first thinks that he has
+chanced upon a crowd of barbarians, ere long finds himself in the august
+presence of demi-gods and heroes.
+
+A noble moral tone pervades the whole. Courage, affection, and truth are
+native to all who live in this world. Under the dramatic image of
+Ossian wrangling with the Talkend, [Note: St. Patrick, on account of
+the tonsured crown.] the bards, themselves vainly fighting against the
+Christian life, a hundred times repeat through the lips of Ossian like a
+refrain--
+
+ "We, the Fianna of Erin, never uttered falsehood,
+ Lying was never attributed to us;
+ By courage and the strength of our hands
+ We used to come out of every difficulty."
+
+Again: Fergus, the bard, inciting Oscar to his last battle--in that poem
+called the Rosc Catha of Oscar:--
+
+ "Place thy hand on thy gentle forehead
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+[Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, p. 159; vol. i.]
+
+And again, elsewhere in the Ossianic poetry:--
+
+ "Oscar, who never wronged bard or woman."
+
+Strange to say, too, they inculcated chastity (see p. 257; vol. i.), an
+allusion taken from the "youthful adventures of Cuculain," Leabhar na
+Huidhre.
+
+The following ancient rann contains the four qualifications of a bard:--
+
+ "Purity of hand, bright, without wounding,
+ Purity of mouth, without poisonous satire,
+ Purity of learning, without reproach,
+ Purity, as a husband, in wedlock."
+
+Moreover, through all this literature sounds a high clear note of
+chivalry, in this contrasting favourably with the Iliad, where no man
+foregoes an advantage. Cuculain having slain the sons of Neara, "thought
+it unworthy of him to take possession of their chariot and horses."
+[Note: P. 155; vol. i.] Goll Mac Morna, in the Fenian or Ossianic cycle,
+declares to Conn Cedcathah [Note: Conn of the hundred battles.] that
+from his youth up he never attacked an enemy by night or under any
+disadvantage, and many times we read of heroes preferring to die rather
+than outrage their geisa. [Note: Certain vows taken with their arms on
+being knighted.]
+
+A noble literature indeed it is, having too this strange interest,
+that though mainly characterised by a great plainness and simplicity of
+thought, and, in the earlier stages, of expression, we feel, oftentimes,
+a sudden weirdness, a strange glamour shoots across the poem when the
+tale seems to open for a moment into mysterious depths, druidic secrets
+veiled by time, unsunned caves of thought, indicating a still deeper
+range of feeling, a still lower and wider reach of imagination. A youth
+came once to the Fianna Eireen encamped at Locha Lein [Note: The Lakes
+of Killarney.], leading a hound dazzling white, like snow. It was the
+same, the bard simply states, that was once a yew tree, flourishing
+fifty summers in the woods of Ioroway. Elsewhere, he is said to have
+been more terrible than the sun upon his flaming wheels. What meant this
+yew tree and the hound? Stray allusions I have met, but no history.
+The spirit of Coelte, visiting one far removed in time from the great
+captain of the Fianna, with a different name and different history,
+cries:--
+
+ "I was with thee, with Finn"--
+
+giving no explanation.
+
+To MacPherson, however, I will do this justice, that he had the merit
+to perceive, even in the debased and floating ballads of the highlands,
+traces of some past greatness and sublimity of thought, and to
+understand, he, for the first time, how much more they meant than what
+met the ear. But he saw, too, that the historical origin of the ballads,
+and the position in time and place of the heroes whom they praised, had
+been lost in that colony removed since the time of St. Columba from its
+old connection with the mother country. Thus released from the curb of
+history, he gave free rein to the imagination, and in the conventional
+literary language of sublimity, gave full expression to the feelings
+that arose within him, as to him, pondering over those ballads, their
+gigantesque element developed into a greatness and solemnity, and their
+vagueness and indeterminateness into that misty immensity and weird
+obscurity which, as constituent factors in a poem, not as back-ground,
+form one of the elements of the false sublime. Either not seeing the
+literary necessity of definiteness, or having no such abundant and
+ordered literature as we possess, upon which to draw for details,
+and being too conscientious to invent facts, however he might invent
+language, he published his epics of Ossian--false indeed to the
+original, but true to himself, and to the feelings excited by meditation
+upon them. This done, he had not sufficient courage to publish also
+the rude, homely, and often vulgar ballads--a step which, in that hard
+critical age, would have been to expose himself and his country to swift
+contempt. The thought of the great lexicographer riding rough-shod
+over the poor mountain songs which he loved, and the fame which he had
+already acquired, deterred and dissuaded him, if he had ever any such
+intention, until the opportunity was past.
+
+MacPherson feared English public opinion, and fearing lied. He declared
+that to be a translation which was original work, thus relegating
+himself for ever to a dubious renown, and depriving his country of
+the honest fame of having preserved through centuries, by mere oral
+transmission, a portion, at least, of the antique Irish literature. To
+the magnanimity of his own heroes he could not attain:--
+
+ "Oscar, Oscar, who feared not armies--
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+
+Of some such error as MacPherson's I have myself, with less excuse, been
+guilty, in chapters xi. and xii., Vol. I., where I attempt to give
+some conception of the character of the Ossianic cycle. The age and the
+heroes around whom that cycle revolves have, in the history of Ireland,
+a definite position in time; their battles, characters, several
+achievements, relationships, and pedigrees; their Duns, and
+trysting-places, and tombs; their wives, musicians, and bards; their
+tributes, and sufferings, and triumphs; their internecine and other
+wars--are all fully and clearly described in the Ossianic cycle. They
+still remain demanding adequate treatment, when we arrive at the age of
+Conn [Note: See page 20.], Art, and Cormac, kings of Tara in the second
+and third centuries of the Christian era. All have been forgotten for
+the sake of a vague representation of the more sublime aspects of the
+cycle, and the meretricious seductions of a form of composition easy to
+write and easy to read, and to which the unwary or unwise often award
+praise to which it has no claim.
+
+On the other hand, chapter xi. purports only to be a representation of
+the feelings excited by this literature, and for every assertion there
+is authority in the cycle. Chapter xii., however, is a translation from
+the original. Every idea which it contains, except one, has been taken
+from different parts of the Ossianic poems, and all together expressthe
+graver attitude of the mind of Ossian towards the new faith. That idea,
+occurring in a separate paragraph in the middle of the page, though
+prevalent as a sentiment throughout all the conversations of Ossian with
+St. Patrick, has been, as it stands, taken from a meditation on life by
+St. Columbanus, one of the early Irish Saints--a meditation which,
+for subtle thought, for musical resigned sadness, tender brooding
+reflection, and exquisite Latin, is one of the masterpieces of mediaeval
+composition.
+
+To the casual reader of the bardic literature the preservation of an
+ordered historical sequence, amidst that riotous wealth of imaginative
+energy, may appear an impossibility. Can we believe that forestine
+luxuriance not to have overgrown all highways, that flood of
+superabundant song not have submerged all landmarks? Be the cause what
+it may, the fact remains that they did not. The landmarks of history
+stand clear and fixed, each in its own place unremoved; and through that
+forest-growth the highways of history run on beneath over-arching, not
+interfering, boughs. The age of the predominance of Ulster does not
+clash with the age of the predominance of Tara; the Temairian kings are
+not mixed with the contemporary Fians. The chaos of the Nibelungen is
+not found here, nor the confusion of the Scotch ballads blending all the
+ages into one.
+
+It is not imaginative strength that produces confusion, but imaginative
+weakness. The strong imagination which perceives definitely and realises
+vividly will not tolerate that obscurity so dear to all those who
+worship the eidola of the cave. Of each of these ages, the primary
+impressions were made in the bardic mind during the life-time of the
+heroes who gave to the epoch its character; and a strong impression made
+in such a mind could not have been easily dissipated or obscured. For it
+must be remembered, that the bardic literature of Ireland was committed
+to the custody of guardians whose character we ought not to forget. The
+bards were not the people, but a class. They were not so much a class
+as an organisation and fraternity acknowledging the authority of one
+elected chief. They were not loose wanderers, but a power in the State,
+having duties and privileges. The ard-ollav ranked next to the king, and
+his eric was kingly. Thus there was an educated body of public opinion
+entrusted with the preservation of the literature and history of the
+country, and capable of repressing the aberrations of individuals.
+
+But the question arises, Did they so repress such perversions of history
+as their wandering undisciplined members might commit? Too much, of
+course, must not reasonably be expected. It was an age of creative
+thought, and such thought is difficult to control; but that one of the
+prime objects and prime works of the bards, as an organisation, was to
+preserve a record of a certain class of historical facts is certain. The
+succession of the kings and of the great princely families was one of
+these. The tribal system, with the necessity of affinity as a ground of
+citizenship, demanded such a preservation of pedigrees in every family,
+and particularly in the kingly houses. One of the chief objects of the
+triennial feis of Tara was the revision of such records by the general
+assembly of the bards, under the presidency of the Ard-Ollav of Ireland.
+In the more ancient times, such records were rhymed and alliterated, and
+committed to memory--a practice which, we may believe on the authority
+of Caesar, treating of the Gauls, continued long after the introduction
+of letters. Even at those local assemblies also, which corresponded to
+great central and national feis of Tara, the bards were accustomed to
+meet for that purpose. In a poem [Note: O'Curry's Manners and Customs,
+Vol. I., page 543.], descriptive of the fair [Note: On the full meaning
+of this word "fair," see Chap. xiii., Vol. I.] of Garman, we see this--
+
+ "Feasts with the great feasts of Temair,
+ Fairs with the fairs of Emania,
+ Annals there are verified."
+
+In the existing literature we see two great divisions. On the one hand
+the epical, a realm of the most riotous activity of thought; on the
+other, the annalistic and genealogical, bald and bare to the last
+degree, a mere skeleton. They represent the two great hemispheres of
+the bardic mind, the latter controlling the former. Hence the orderly
+sequence of the cyclic literature; hence the strong confining banks
+between which the torrent of song rolls down through those centuries in
+which the bardic imagination reached its height. The consentaneity
+of the annals and the literature furnishes a trustworthy guide to the
+general course of history, until its guidance is barred by _a priori_
+considerations of a weightier nature, or by the statements of writers,
+having sources of information not open to us. For instance, the
+stream of Irish history must, for philosophical reasons, be no further
+traceable than to that point at which it issues from the enchanted land
+of the Tuatha De Danan. At the limit at which the gods appear, men
+and history must disappear; while on the other hand, the statement of
+Tiherna, that the foundation of Emain Alacha by Kimbay is the first
+certain date in Irish history, renders it undesirable to attach more
+historical reality of characters, adorning the ages prior to B.C. 299,
+than we could to such characters as Romulus in Roman, or Theseus in
+Athenian history.
+
+I desire here to record my complete and emphatic dissent from the
+opinions advanced by a writer in Hermathena on the subject of the Ogham
+inscriptions, and the introduction into this country of the art of
+writing. A cypher, i.e., an alphabet derived from a pre-existing
+alphabet, the Ogham may or may not have been. I advance no opinion upon
+that, but an invention of the Christian time it most assuredly was not.
+No sympathetic and careful student of the Irish bardic literature can
+possibly come to such a conclusion. The bardic poems relating to
+the heroes of the ethnic times are filled with allusions to Ogham
+inscriptions on stone, and contain some references to books of timber;
+but in my own reading I have not met with a single passage in that
+literature alluding to books of parchment and to rounded letters.
+
+If the Ogham was derived from the Roman characters introduced by
+Christian missionaries, then these characters would be the more ancient,
+and Ogham the more modern; books and Roman characters would be the more
+poetical, and inscriptions on stone and timber in the Ogham characters
+the more prosaic. The bards relating the lives and deeds of the ancient
+heroes, would have ascribed to their times parchment books and the Roman
+characters, not stone and wood, and the Ogham.
+
+In these compositions, whenever they were reduced to the form in which
+we find them to-day, the ethnic character of the times and the ethnic
+character of the heroes are clearly and universally observed. The
+ancient, the remote, the archaic clings to this literature. As Homer
+does not allude to writing, though all scholars agree that he lived in
+a lettered age, so the old bards do not allude to parchment and
+Roman characters, though the Irish epics, as distinguished from their
+component parts, reached their fixed state and their final development
+in times subsequent to the introduction of Christianity.
+
+When and how a knowledge of letters reached this island we know not.
+From the analogy of Gaul, we may conclude that they were known for some
+time prior to their use by the bards. Caesar tells us that the Gaulish
+bards and druids did not employ letters for the preservation of their
+lore, but trusted to memory, assisted, doubtless, as in this country, by
+the mechanical and musical aid of verse. Whether the Ogham was a native
+alphabet or a derivative from another, it was at first employed only to
+a limited extent. Its chief use was to preserve the name of buried kings
+and heroes in the stone that was set above their tombs. It was, perhaps,
+invented, and certainly became fashionable on this account, straight
+strokes being more easily cut in stone than rounded or uncial
+characters. For the same reason it was generally employed by those who
+inscribed timber tablets, which formed the primitive book, ere they
+discovered or learned how to use pen, ink, and parchment. The use of
+Ogham was partially practised in the Christian period for sepultural
+purposes, being venerable and sacred from time. Hence the discovery of
+Ogham-inscribed stones in Christian cemeteries. On the other hand,
+the fact that the majority of these stones are discovered in raths and
+forts, i.e., the tombs of our Pagan ancestors, corroborates the fact
+implied in all the bardic literature, that the characters employed in
+the ethnic times were Oghamic, and affords another proof of the close
+conservative spirit of the bards in their transcription, compilation, or
+reformation of the old epics.
+
+The full force of the concurrent authority of the bardic literature to
+the above effect can only be felt by one who has read that literature
+with care. He will find in all the epics no trace of original invention,
+but always a studied and conscientious following of authority. This
+being so, he will conclude that the universal ascription of Ogham, and
+Ogham only, to the ethnic times, arises solely from the fact that such
+was the alphabet then employed.
+
+If letters were unknown in those times, the example of Homer shows how
+unlikely the later poets would have been to outrage so violently the
+whole spirit of the heroic literature. If rounded letters were then
+used, why the universal ascription of the late invented Ogham which,
+as we know from the cemeteries and other sources, was unpopular in the
+Christian age.
+
+Cryptic, too, it was not. The very passages quoted in Hermathena to
+support this opinion, so far from doing so prove actually the reverse.
+When Cuculain came down into Meath on his first [Note: Vol. I., page
+155.] foray, he found, on the lawn of the Dun of the sons of Nectan, a
+pillar stone with this inscription in Ogham--"Let no one pass without an
+offer of a challenge of single combat." The inscription was, of course,
+intended for all to read. Should there be any bardic passage in which
+Ogham inscriptions are alluded to as if an obscure form of writing, the
+natural explanation is, that this kind of writing was passing or had
+passed into desuetude at the time that particular passage was composed;
+but I have never met with any such. The ancient bard, who, in the
+Tan-bo-Cooalney, describes the slaughter of Cailitin and his sons by
+Cuculain, states that there was an inscription to that effect, written
+in Ogham, upon the stone over their tomb, beginning thus--"Take
+notice"--evidently intended for all to read. The tomb, by the way, was a
+rath--again showing the ethnic character of the alphabet.
+
+In the Annals of the Four Masters, at the date 1499 B.C., we read these
+words:--
+
+"THE FLEET OF THE SONS OF MILITH CAME TO IRELAND TO TAKE IT FROM THE
+TUATHA DE DANAN," i.e., the gods of the ethnic Irish.
+
+Without pausing to enquire into the reasonableness of the date, it will
+suffice now to state that at this point the bardic history of Ireland
+cleaves asunder into two great divisions--the mythological or divine on
+the one hand, and the historical or heroic-historical on the other.
+The first is an enchanted land--the world of the Tuatha De Danan--the
+country of the gods. There we see Mananan with his mountain-sundering
+sword, the Fray-garta; there Lu Lamfada, the deliverer, pondering over
+his mysteries; there Bove Derg and his fatal [Note: Every feast to which
+he came ended in blood. He was present at the death of Conairey Mor,
+Chap. xxxiii., Vol. I.] swine-herd, Lir and his ill-starred children,
+Mac Manar and his harp shedding death from its stricken wires, Angus Og,
+the beautiful, and he who was called the mighty father, Eochaidht [Note:
+Ay-o-chee, written Yeoha in Vol. I.] Mac Elathan, a land populous with
+those who had partaken of the feast of Goibneen, and whom, therefore,
+weapons could not slay, who had eaten [Note: In early Greek literature
+the province of history has been already separated from that of poetry.
+The ancient bardic lore and primaeval traditions were refined to suit
+the new and sensitive poetic taste. No commentator has been able to
+explain the nature of ambrosia. In the genuine bardic times, no such
+vague euphuism would have been tolerated as that of Homer on this
+subject. The nature of Olympian ambrosia would have been told in
+language as clear as that in which Homer describes the preparation of
+that Pramnian bowl for which Nestor and Machaon waited while Hecamede
+was grating over it the goat's milk cheese, or that in which the Irish
+bards described the ambrosia of the Tuatha De Danan, which, indeed, was
+no more poetic and awe-inspiring than plain bacon prepared by Mananan
+from his herd of enchanted pigs, living invisible like himself in the
+plains of Tir-na-n-Og, the land of the ever-young. On the other hand,
+there is a vagueness about the Feed Fia which would seem to indicate the
+growth of a more awe-stricken mood in describing things supernatural.
+The Faed Fia of the Greek gods has been refined by Homer into "much
+darkness," which, from an artistic point of view, one can hardly help
+imagining that Homer nodded as he wrote.] at the the table of Mananan,
+and would never grow old, who had invented for themselves the Faed Fia,
+and might not be seen of the gross eyes of men; there steeds like Anvarr
+crossing the wet sea like a firm plain; there ships whose rudder was the
+will, and whose sails and oars the wish, of those they bore [Note: Cf.
+The barks of the Phoenicians in the Odyssey.]; there hounds like that
+one of Ioroway, and spears like fiery flying serpents. These are the
+Tuatha De Danan [Note: A mystery still hangs over this three-formed
+name. The full expression, Tuatha De Danan, is that generally employed,
+less frequently Tuatha De, and sometimes, but not often, Tuatha. Tuatha
+also means people. In mediaeval times the name lost its sublime meaning,
+and came to mean merely "fairy," no greater significance, indeed,
+attaching to the invisible people of the island after Christianity had
+destroyed their godhood.], fairy princes, Tuatha; gods, De; of Dana,
+Danan, otherwise Ana and the Moreega, or great queen; mater [Note:
+Cormac's Glossary] deorum Hibernensium--"well she used to cherish [Note:
+Scholiast noting same Glossary.] the gods." Limitless, this divine
+population, dwelling in all the seas and estuaries, river and lakes,
+mountains and fairy dells, in that enchanted Erin which was theirs.
+
+But they have not started into existence suddenly, like the gods of
+Rome, nor is their genealogy confined to a single generation like those
+of Greece. Behind them extends a long line of ancestors, and a history
+reaching into the remotest depths of the past. As the Greek gods
+dethroned the Titans, so the Irish gods drove out or subjected the
+giants of the Fir-bolgs; but in the Irish mythology, we find both gods
+and giants descended from other ancient races of deities, called the
+Clanna Nemedh and the Fomoroh, and these a branch of a divine cycle; yet
+more ancient the race of Partholan, while Partholan himself is not the
+eldest.
+
+The history of the Italian gods is completely lost. For all that the
+early Roman literature tells us of their origin, they may have been
+either self-created or eternal. Rome was a seedling shaken from some
+old perished civilisation. The Romans created their own empire, but they
+inherited their gods. They supply no example of an Aryan nation evolving
+its own mythology and religion. Regal Rome, as we know from Niebuhr, was
+not the root from which our Rome sprang, but an old imperial city, from
+whose ashes sprang that Rome we all know so well. The mythology of the
+Latin writers came to them full-grown.
+
+The gods of Greece were a creation of the Greek mind, indeed; but of
+their ancestry, i.e., of their development from more ancient divine
+tribes, we know little. Like Pallas, they all but start into existence
+suddenly full-grown. Between the huge physical entities of the Greek
+theogonists and the Olympian gods, there intervenes but a single
+generation. For this loss of the Grecian mythology, and this
+substitution of Nox and Chaos for the remote ancestors of the Olympians,
+we have to thank the early Greek philosophers, and the general diffusion
+of a rude scientific knowledge, imparting a physical complexion to the
+mythological memory of the Greeks.
+
+In the theogony of the ancient inhabitants of this country, we have an
+example of a slowly-growing, slowly-changing mythology, such as no other
+nation in the world can supply. The ancestry of the Irish gods is not
+bounded by a single generation or by twenty. The Tuatha De Danan of the
+ancient Irish are the final outcome and last development of a mythology
+which we can see advancing step by step, one divine tribe pushing out
+another, one family of gods swallowing up another, or perishing under
+the hands of time and change, to make room for another. From Angus
+Og, the god of youth and love and beauty, whose fit home was the woody
+slopes of the Boyne, where it winds around Rosnaree, we count fourteen
+generations to Nemedh and four to Partholan, and Partholan is not the
+earliest. As the bards recorded with a zeal and minuteness, so far as I
+can see, without parallel, the histories of the families to which they
+were adscript, so also they recorded with equal patience and care the
+far-extending pedigrees of those other families--invisible indeed, but
+to them more real and more awe-inspiring--who dwelt by the sacred lakes
+and rivers, and in the folds of the fairy hills, and the great raths and
+cairns reared for them by pious hands.
+
+The extent, diversity, and populousness of the Irish mythological
+cycles, the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of that
+mythology of which the Tuatha De Danan, i.e., the gods of the historic
+period, were the final development, can only be rightly apprehended by
+one who reads the bardic literature as it deals with this subject. That
+literature, however, so far from having been printed and published, has
+not even been translated, but still moulders in the public libraries of
+Europe, those who, like myself, are not professed Irish scholars, being
+obliged to collect their information piece-meal from quotations and
+allusions of those who have written upon the subject in the English or
+Latin language. For to read the originals aright needs many years
+of labour, the Irish tongue presenting at different epochs the
+characteristics of distinct languages, while the peculiarities of
+ancient caligraphy, in the defaced and illegible manuscripts, form of
+themselves quite a large department of study. Stated succinctly, the
+mythological record of the bards, with its chronological decorations,
+runs thus:--
+
+AGE OF KEASAIR.
+
+2379 B.C. the gods of the KEASAIRIAN cycle, Bith, Lara, and Fintann,
+and their wives, KEASAIR, Barran and Balba; their sacred places, Carn
+Keshra, Keasair's tomb or temple, on the banks of the Boyle, Ard Laran
+on the Wexford Coast, Fert Fintann on the shores of Lough Derg.
+
+About the same time Lot Luaimenich, Lot of the Lower Shannon, an ancient
+sylvan deity.
+
+AGE OF PARTHOLAN AND THE EARLIEST FOMORIAN GODS.
+
+2057 B.C. a new spiritual dynasty, of which PARTHOLAN was father and
+king. Though their worship was extended over Ireland, which is shown by
+the many different places connected with their history, yet the hill
+of Tallaght, ten miles from Dublin, was where they were chiefly adored.
+Here to the present day are the mounds and barrows raised in honour of
+the deified heroes of this cycle, PARTHOLAN himself, his wife Delgna,
+his sons, Rury, Slaney, and Laighlinni, and among others, the father of
+Irish hospitality, bearing the expressive name of Beer. Now first appear
+the Fomoroh giant princes, under the leadership of curt Kical, son of
+Niul, son of Garf, son of U-Mor--a divine cycle intervening between
+KEASAIR and PARTHOLAN, but not of sufficient importance to secure a
+separate chapter and distinct place in the annals. Battles now between
+the Clan Partholan and the Fomoroh, on the plain of Ith, beside the
+river Finn, Co. Donegal, so called from Ith [Note: See Vol. I, p. 60],
+son of Brogan, the most ancient of the heroes, slain here by the Tuatha
+De Danan, but more anciently known by some lost Fomorian name; also at
+Iorrus Domnan, now Erris, Co. Mayo, where Kical and his Fomorians first
+reached Ireland. These battles are a parable--objective representations
+of a fact in the mental history of the ancient Irish--typifying the
+invisible war waged between Partholanian and Fomorian deities for the
+spiritual sovereignty of the Gael.
+
+AGE OF THE NEMEDIAN GODS AND SECOND CYCLE OF THE FOMORIANS.
+
+1700 B.C. age of the NEMEDIAN divinities, a later branch of the
+PARTHOLANIAN _vide post_ NEMEDIAN pedigree. NEMEDH, his wife Maca (first
+appearance of Macha, the war goddess, who gave her name to Armagh, i.e.,
+Ard Macha, the Height of Macha), Iarbanel; Fergus, the Red-sided, and
+Starn, sons of Nemedh; Beothah, son of Iarbanel; Erglann, son of Beoan,
+son of Starn; Simeon Brac, son of Starn; Ibath, son of Beothach; Britan
+Mael, son of Fergus. This must be remembered, that not one of the
+almost countless names that figure in the Irish mythology is of fanciful
+origin. They all represent antique heroes and heroines, their names
+being preserved in connection with those monuments which were raised for
+purposes of sepulture or cult.
+
+Wars now between the Clanna Nemedh and the second cycle of the Fomoroh,
+led this time by Faebar and More, sons of Dela, and Coning, son of
+Faebar; battles at Ros Freachan, now Rosreahan, barony of Murresk,
+Co. Mayo, at Slieve Blahma [Note: Slieve Blahma, now Slieve Bloom, a
+mountain range famous in our mythology; one of the peaks, Ard Erin,
+sacred to Eire, a goddess of the Tuatha De Danan, who has given her name
+to the island. The sites of all these mythological battles, where they
+are not placed in the haunted mountains, will be found to be a place
+of raths and cromlechs.] and Murbolg, in Dalaradia (Murbolg, i.e., the
+stronghold of the giants,) also at Tor Coning, now Tory Island.
+
+FIRBOLGS AND THIRD CYCLE OF THE FOMOROH.
+
+1525 B.C. Age of the FIRBOLGS and third cycle of the Fomorians, once
+gods, but expulsed from their sovereignty by the Tuatha De Danan, after
+which they loom through the heroic literature as giants of the elder
+time, overthrown by the gods. From the FIRBOLGS were descended, or
+claimed to have descended, the Connaught warriors who fought with Queen
+Meave against Cuculain, also the Clan Humor, appearing in the Second
+Volume, also the heroes of Ossian, the Fianna Eireen. Even in the time
+of Keating, Irish families traced thither their pedigrees. The great
+chiefs of the FIR-BOLGIC dynasty were the five sons of Dela, Gann,
+Genann, Sengann, Rury, and Slaney, with their wives Fuad, Edain, Anust,
+Cnucha, and Libra; also their last and most potent king, EOCAIDH MAC
+ERC, son of Ragnal, son of Genann, whose tomb or temple may be seen
+to-day at Ballysadare, Co. Sligo, on the edge of the sea.
+
+The Fomorians of this age were ruled over by Baler Beimenna and his wife
+Kethlenn. Their grandson was Lu Lamada, one of the noblest of the Irish
+gods.
+
+The last of the mythological cycles is that of the Tuatha De Danan,
+whose character, attributes, and history will, I hope, be rendered
+interesting and intelligible in my account of Cuculain and the Red
+Branch of Ulster.
+
+Irish history has suffered from rationalism almost more than from
+neglect and ignorance. The conjectures of the present century are
+founded upon mediaeval attempts to reduce to verisimilitude and
+historical probability what was by its nature quite incapable of such
+treatment. The mythology of the Irish nation, being relieved of the
+marvellous and sublime, was set down with circumstantial dates as a
+portion of the country's history by the literary men of the middle ages.
+Unable to excide from the national narrative those mythological beings
+who filled so great a place in the imagination of the times, and unable,
+as Christians, to describe them in their true character as gods, or, as
+patriots, in the character which they believed them to possess, namely,
+demons, they rationalized the whole of the mythological period with
+names, dates, and ordered generations, putting men for gods, flesh and
+blood for that invisible might, till the page bristled with names and
+dates, thus formulating, as annals, what was really the theogony and
+mythology of their country. The error of the mediaeval historians is
+shared by the not wiser moderns. In the generations of the gods we seem
+to see prehistoric racial divisions and large branches of the Aryan
+family, an error which results from a neglect of the bardic literature,
+and a consequently misdirected study of the annals.
+
+As history, the pre-Milesian record contains but a limited supply of
+objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish gods,
+these much abused chronicles are as true as the roll of the kings of
+England.
+
+These divine nations, with their many successive generations and
+dynasties, constitute a single family; they are all inter-connected and
+spring from common sources, and where the literature permits us to see
+more clearly, the earlier races exhibit a common character. Like a human
+clan, the elements of this divine family grew and died, and shed forth
+seedlings which, in time, over-grew and killed the parent stock. Great
+names became obscure and passed away, and new ones grew and became
+great. Gods, worshipped by the whole nation, declined and became
+topical, and minor deities expanding, became national. Gods lost their
+immortality, and were remembered as giants of the old time--mighty men,
+which were of yore, men of renown.
+
+ "The gods which were of old time rest in their tombs,"
+
+sang the Egyptians, consciously ascribing mortality even to gods.
+Such was Mac Ere, King of Fir-bolgs. His temple [Note: Strand near
+Ballysadare, Co. Sligo], beside the sea at Iorrus Domnan [Note:
+Keating--evidently quoting a bardic historian], became his tomb. Daily
+the salt tide embraces the feet of the great tumulus, regal amongst its
+smaller comrades, where the last king of Fir-bolgs was worshipped by
+his people. "Good [Note: Temple--vide post.] were the years of the
+sovereignty of Mac Ere. There was no wet or tempestuous weather
+in Ireland, nor was there any unfruitful year." Such were all the
+predecessors of the children of Dana--gods which were of old times,
+that rest in their tombs; and the days, too, of the Tuatha De Danan were
+numbered. They, too, smitten by a more celestial light, vanished from
+their hills, like Ossian lamenting over his own heroes; those others
+still mightier, might say:--
+
+ "Once every step which we took might be heard throughout the
+ firmament. Now, all have gone, they have melted into the air."
+
+But that divine tree, though it had its branches in fairy-land, had
+its roots in the soil of Erin. An unceasing translation of heroes
+into Tir-na-n-og went on through time, the fairy-world of the bards,
+receiving every century new inhabitants, whose humbler human origin
+being forgotten, were supplied there with both wives and children. The
+apotheosis of great men went forward, tirelessly; the hero of one epoch
+becoming the god of the next, until the formation of the Tuatha De
+Danan, who represent the gods of the historic ages. Had the advent of
+exact genealogy been delayed, and the creative imagination of the bards
+suffered to work on for a couple of centuries longer, unchecked by the
+historical conscience, Cuculain's human origin would, perhaps, have been
+forgotten, and he would have been numbered amongst the Tuatha De Danan,
+probably, as the son of Lu Lamfada and the Moreega, his patron deities.
+It was, indeed, a favourite fancy of the bards that not Sualtam, but
+Lu Lamfada himself, was his father; this, however, in a spiritual or
+supernatural sense, for his age was far removed from that of the Tuatha
+De Danan, and falling well within the scope of the historic period.
+Even as late as the time of Alexander, the Greeks could believe a great
+contemporary warrior to be of divine origin, and the son of Zeus.
+
+When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their
+country, they naturally commenced with the enumeration of the elder
+gods. I at one time suspected that the long pedigrees running between
+those several divisions of the mythological period were the invention of
+mediaeval historians, anxious to spin out the national record, that it
+might reach to Shinar and the dispersion. Not only, however, was such
+fabrication completely foreign to the genius of the literature, but in
+the fragments of those early divine cycles, we see that each of these
+personages was at one time the centre of a literature, and holds a
+definite place as regards those who went before and came after.
+These pedigrees, as I said before, have no historical meaning, being
+pre-Milesian, and therefore absolutely prehistoric; but as the genealogy
+of the gods, and as representing the successive generations of that
+invisible family, whose history not one or ten bards, but the whole
+bardic and druidic organisation of the island, delighted to record,
+collate, and verify--those pedigrees are as reliable as that of any of
+the regal clans. They represent accurately the mythological panorama, as
+it unrolled itself slowly through the centuries before the
+imagination and spirit of our ancestors accurately that divine
+drama, millennium--lasting, with its exits and entrances of gods.
+Millennium-lasting, and more so, for it is plain that one divine
+generation represents on the average a much greater space of time than
+a generation of mortal men. The former probably represents the period
+which would elapse before a hero would become so divine, that is, so
+consecrated in the imagination of the country, as to be received into
+the family of the gods. Cuculain died in the era of the Incarnation,
+three hundred years, if not more, before the country even began to be
+Christianised, yet he is never spoken of as anything but a great hero,
+from which one of two things would follow, either that the apotheosis of
+heroes needed the lapse of centuries, or that, during the first,
+second, third, and fourth centuries, the historical conscience was so
+enlightened, and a positive definite knowledge of the past so universal,
+that the translation of heroes into the divine clans could no longer
+take place. The latter is indeed the more correct view; but the
+reader will, I think, agree with me that the divine generations, taken
+generally, represent more than the average space of man's life. To what
+remote unimagined distances of time those earlier cycles extend has been
+shown by an examination of the tombs of the lower Moy Tura. The ancient
+heroes there interred were those who, as Fir-bolgs, preceded the reign
+of the Tuath De Danan, coming long after the Clanna Nemedh in the divine
+cycle, who were themselves preceded by the children of Partholan, who
+were subsequent to the Queen Keasair. Such then being the position in
+the divine cycle of the Fir-bolgs, an examination of the Firbolgic
+raths on Moy Tura has revealed only implements of stone, proving
+demonstratively that the early divine cycles originated before the
+bronze age in Ireland, whenever that commenced. Those heroes who, as
+Fir-bolgs, received divine honours, lived in the age of stone. So far is
+it from being the case, that the mythological record has been extended
+and unduly stretched, to enable the monkish historians to connect the
+Irish pedigrees with those of the Mosaic record, that it has, I believe,
+been contracted for this purpose.
+
+The reader will be now prepared to peruse with some interest and
+understanding one or two of the mythological pedigrees. To these I have
+at times appended the dates, as given in the chronicles, to show how the
+early historians rationalised the pre-historic record.
+
+Angus Og, the Beautiful, represents the Greek Eros. He was surnamed
+Og, or young; Mac-an-Og, or the son of youth; Mac-an-Dagda, son of the
+Dagda. He was represented with a harp, and attended by bright birds,
+his own transformed kisses, at whose singing love arose in the hearts
+of youths and maidens. To him and to his father the great tumulus of New
+Grange, upon the Boyne, was sacred.
+
+ "I visited the Royal Brugh that stands
+ By the dark-rolling waters of the Boyne,
+ Where Angus Og magnificently dwells."
+
+He was the patron god of Diarmid, the Paris of Ossian's Fianna, and
+removed him into Tir-na-n-Og, when he died, having been ripped by the
+tusks of the wild boar on the peaks of Slieve Gulban.
+
+Lu Lamfada was the patron god of Cuculain. He was surnamed Ioldana, as
+the source of the sciences, and represented the Greek Apollo. The latter
+was argurgurotoxos [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original], but Lu
+was a sling bearing god. Of Fomorian descent on the mother's side,
+he joined his father's people, the Tuatha De Danan, in the great war
+against the Fomoroh. He is principally celebrated for his oppression of
+the sons of Turann, in vengeance for the murder of his father.
+
+ ANGUS OG, (circa 1500 B.C.) LU LAMFADA, (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ THE DAGDA, (Zeus) Cian,
+ son of son of
+ Elathan, Diancect, (god the healer)
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Esric,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+
+Amongst other Irish gods was Bove Derg, who dwelt invisible in the
+Galtee mountains, and in the hills above Lough Derg. The transformed
+children alluded to in Vol. I. were his grand-children. It was his
+goldsmith Len, who gave its ancient name to the Lakes of Killarney,
+Locha Lein. Here by the lake he worked, surrounded by rainbows and
+showers of fiery dew.
+
+Mananan was the god of the sea, of winds and storms, and most skilled
+in magic lore. He was friendly to Cuculain, and was invoked by seafaring
+men. He was called the Far Shee of the promontories.
+
+ BOVE DERG (circa 1500 B.C.) MANANAN (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Eocaidh Garf, Alloid,
+ son of son of
+ Duach Temen, Elathan,
+ son of son of
+ Bras, Dela,
+ son of son of
+ Dela, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Ned, Indaei,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of ALLDAEI.
+
+The Tuatha De Danan maybe counted literally by the hundred, each with a
+distinct history, and all descended from Alldaei.
+
+From Alldaei the pedigree runs back thus:--
+
+ Alldaei
+ son of
+ Tath,
+ son of
+ Tabarn,
+ son of
+ Enna,
+ son of
+ Baath,
+ son of
+ Ebat,
+ son of
+ Betah,
+ son of
+ Iarbanel,
+ son of
+ NEMEDH (circa 1700 B.C.)
+
+Nemedh, as I have said, forms one of the great epochs in the
+mythological record. As will be seen, he and the earlier Partholan have
+a common source:--
+
+ NEMEDH
+ son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Pamp,
+ son of
+ Tath, PARTHOLAN (2000 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Sru,
+ son of
+ Esru,
+ son of
+ Pramant.
+
+The connection between Keasair, the earliest of the Irish gods, and
+the rest of the cycle, I have not discovered, but am confident of its
+existence.
+
+How this divine cycle can be expunged from the history of Ireland I am
+at a loss to see. The account which a nation renders of itself must, and
+always does, stand at the head of every history.
+
+How different is this from the history and genealogy of the Greek gods
+which runs thus:--
+
+ The Olympian gods,
+ Titans,
+ Physical entities, Nox, Chaos, &c.
+
+The Greek gods, undoubtedly, had a long ancestry extending into the
+depths of the past, but the sudden advent of civilisation broke up
+the bardic system before the historians could become philosophical, or
+philosophers interested in antiquities.
+
+But the Irish history corrects our view with regard to other matters
+connected with the gods of the Aryan nations of Europe also.
+
+All the nations of Europe lived at one time under the bardic and druidic
+system, and under that system imagined their gods and elaborated their
+various theogonies, yet, in no country in Europe has a bardic literature
+been preserved except in Ireland, for no thinking man can believe Homer
+to have been a product of that rude type of civilisation of which he
+sings. This being the case, modern philosophy, accounting for the origin
+of the classical deities by guesses and _a priori_ reasonings, has
+almost universally adopted that explanation which I have, elsewhere,
+called Wordsworthian, and which derives them directly from the
+imagination personifying the aspects of nature.
+
+ "In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretched
+ On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
+ With music lulled his indolent repose,
+ And in some fit of weariness if he,
+ When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
+ A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
+ Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched,
+ Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
+ A beardless youth who touched a golden lute
+ And filled the illumined groves with ravishment--
+ ***
+ "Sunbeams upon distant hills,
+ Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
+ Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
+ Into fleet oreads, sporting visibly."
+
+This is pretty, but untrue. In all the ancient Irish literature we find
+the connection of the gods, both those who survived into the historic
+times, and those whom they had dethroned, with the raths and cairns
+perpetually and almost universally insisted upon. The scene of the
+destruction of the Firbolgs will be found to be a place of tombs, the
+metropolis of the Fomorians a place of tombs, and a place of tombs the
+sacred home of the Tuatha along the shores of the Boyne. Doubtless, they
+are represented also as dwelling in the hills, lakes, and rivers, but
+still the connection between the great raths and cairns and the gods
+is never really forgotten. When the floruit of a god has expired, he
+is assigned a tomb in one of the great tumuli. No one can peruse this
+ancient literature without seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods,
+_videlicet_ heroes, passing, through the imagination and through the
+region of poetic representation, into the world of the supernatural.
+When a king died, his people raised his ferta, set up his stone, and
+engraved upon it, at least in later times, his name in ogham. They
+celebrated his death with funeral lamentations and funeral games, and
+listened to the bards chanting his prowess, his liberality, and his
+beauty. In the case of great warriors, these games and lamentations
+became periodical. It is distinctly recorded in many places, for
+instance in connection with Taylti, who gave her name to Taylteen and
+Garman, who gave her name to Loch Garman, now Wexford, and with Lu
+Lamfada, whose annual worship gave its name to the Kalends of August.
+Gradually, as his actual achievements became more remote, and the
+imagination of the bards, proportionately, more unrestrained, he would
+pass into the world of the supernatural. Even in the case of a hero
+so surrounded with historic light as Cuculain we find a halo, as of
+godhood, often settling around him. His gray warsteed had already passed
+into the realm of mythical representation, as a second avatar of the
+Liath Macha, the grey war-horse of the war-goddess Macha. This could be
+believed, even in the days when the imagination was controlled by the
+annalists and tribal heralds.
+
+The gods of the Irish were their deified ancestors. They were not the
+offspring of the poetic imagination, personifying the various aspects of
+nature. Traces, indeed, we find of their influence over the operations
+of nature, but they are, upon the whole, slight and unimportant.
+From nature they extract her secrets by their necromantic and magical
+labours, but nature is as yet too great to be governed and impelled by
+them. The Irish Apollo had not yet entered into the sun.
+
+Like every country upon which imperial Rome did not leave the impress
+of her genius, Ireland, in these ethnic times, attained only a
+partial unity. The chief king indeed presided at Tara, and enjoyed the
+reputation and emoluments flowing to him on that account, but, upon the
+whole, no Irish king exercised more than a local sovereignty; they were
+all reguli, petty kings, and their direct authority was small. This
+being the case, it would appear to me that in the more ancient times
+the death of a king would not be an event which would disturb a very
+extensive district, and that, though his tomb might be considerable, it
+would not be gigantic.
+
+Now on the banks of the Boyne, opposite Rosnaree, there stands a
+tumulus, said to be the greatest in Europe. It covers acres of ground,
+being of proportionate height. The earth is confined by a compact stone
+wall about twelve feet high. The central chamber, made of huge irregular
+pebbles, is about twenty feet from ground to roof, communicating with
+the outer air by a flagged passage. Immense pebbles, drawn from the
+County of Antrim, stand around it, each of which, even to move at
+all, would require the labour of many men, assisted with mechanical
+appliances. It is, of course, impossible to make an accurate estimate of
+the expenditure of labour necessary for the construction of such a work,
+but it would seem to me to require thousands of men working for years.
+Can we imagine that a petty king of those times could, after his
+death, when probably his successor had enough to do to sustain his new
+authority, command such labour merely to provide for himself a tomb. If
+this tomb were raised to the hero whose name it bears immediately after
+his death, and in his mundane character, he must have been such a king
+as never existed in Ireland, even in the late Christian times.
+Even Brian of the Tributes himself, could not have commanded such a
+sepulture, or anything like it, living though he did, probably, two
+thousand years later than that Eocaidh Mac Elathan, whenever he did
+live. There is a _nodus_ here needing a god to solve it.
+
+Returning now to what would most likely take place after the interment
+of a hero, we may well imagine that the size of his tomb would be in
+proportion to the love which he inspired, where no accidental causes
+would interfere with the gratification of that feeling. Of one of his
+heroes, Ossian, sings--
+
+ "We made his cairn great and high
+ Like a king's."
+
+After that there would be periodical meetings in his honour, the
+celebration of games, solemn recitations by bards, singing his aristeia
+[Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original]. Gradually the new wine
+would burst the old bottles. The ever-active, eager-loving imagination
+would behold the champion grown to heroic proportions, the favourite of
+the gods, the performer of superhuman feats. The tomb, which was once
+commensurate with the love and reverence which he inspired, would seem
+so now no longer. The tribal bards, wandering or attending the great
+fairs and assemblies, would disperse among strangers and neighbours a
+knowledge of his renown. In the same cemetery or neighbourhood their
+might be other tombs of heroes now forgotten, while he, whose fame was
+in every bardic mouth in all that region, was honoured only with a tomb
+no greater than theirs. The mere king or champion, grown into a topical
+hero, would need a greater tomb.
+
+Ere long again, owing to the bardic fraternity, who, though coming from
+Innishowen or Cape Clear, formed a single community, the topical hero
+would, in some cases, where his character was such as would excite
+deeper reverence and greater fame, grow into a national hero, and a
+still nobler tomb be required, in order that the visible memorial might
+prove commensurate with the imaginative conception.
+
+Now all this time the periodic celebrations, the games, and
+lamentations, and songs would be assuming a more solemn character. Awe
+would more and more mingle with the other feelings inspired by his name.
+Certain rites and a certain ritual would attend those annual games
+and lamentations, which would formerly not have been suitable, and
+eventually, when the hero, slowly drawing nearer through generations,
+if not centuries, at last reached Tir-na-n-Og, and was received into
+the family of the gods, a religious feeling of a different nature would
+mingle with the more secular celebration of his memory, and his rath or
+cairn would assume in their eyes a new character.
+
+To an ardent imaginative people the complete extinction by death of a
+much-loved hero would even at first be hardly possible. That the tomb
+which held his ashes should be looked upon as the house of the hero must
+have been, even shortly after his interment, a prevailing sentiment,
+whether expressed or not. Also, the feeling must have been present,
+that the hero in whose honour they performed the annual games, and
+periodically chanted the remembrance of whose achievements, saw and
+heard those things that were done in his honour. But as the celebration
+became greater and more solemn, this feeling would become more strong,
+and as the tomb, from a small heap of stones or low mound, grew into an
+enormous and imposing rath, the belief that this was the hero's house,
+in which he invisibly dwelt, could not be avoided, even before they
+ceased to regard him as a disembodied hero; and after the hero had
+mingled with the divine clans, and was numbered amongst the gods, the
+idea that the rath was a tomb could not logically be entertained. As
+a god, was he not one of those who had eaten of the food provided by
+Mananan, and therefore never died. The rath would then become his house
+or temple. As matter of fact, the bardic writings teem with this idea.
+From reason and probability, we would with some certainty conclude that
+the great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of some Irish god; but
+that it was so, we know as a fact. The father and king of the gods
+is alluded to as dwelling there, going out from thence, and returning
+again, and there holding his invisible court.
+
+ "Behold the _Sid_ before your eyes,
+ It is manifest to you that it is a king's mansion."
+[Note: O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History, page 505.]
+
+ "Bove Derg went to visit the Dagda at the Brugh of Mac-An-Og."
+[Note: "Dream of Angus," Revue Celtique, Vol. III., page 349.]
+
+Here also dwelt Angus Og, the son of the Dagda. In this, his spiritual
+court or temple, he is represented as having entertained Oscar and
+the Ossianic heroes, and thither he conducted [Note: Publications of
+Ossianic Society, Vol. III., page 201.] the spirit of Diarmid, that he
+might have him for ever there.
+
+In the etymology also we see the origin of the Irish gods. A grave in
+Irish is Sid, the disembodied spirit is Sidhe, and this latter word
+glosses Tuatha De Danan.
+
+The fact that the grave of a hero developed slowly into the temple of
+a god, explains certain obscurities in the annals and literature. As
+a hero was exalted into a god, so in turn a god sank into a hero,
+or rather into the race of the giants. The elder gods, conquered and
+destroyed by the younger, could no longer be regarded as really divine,
+for were they not proved to be mortal? The development of the temple
+from the tomb was not forgotten, the whole country being filled with
+such tombs and incipient temples, from the great Brugh on the Boyne to
+the smallest mound in any of the cemeteries. Thus, when the elder gods
+lost their spiritual sovereignty, and their destruction at the hands of
+the younger took the form of great battles, then as the god was forced
+to become a giant, so his temple was remembered to be a tomb. Doubtless,
+in his own territory, divine honours were still paid him; but in the
+national imagination and in the classical literature and received
+history, he was a giant of the olden time, slain by the gods, and
+interred in the rath which bore his name. Such was the great Mac Erc,
+King of Fir-bolgs.
+
+Again, when the mediaeval Christians ceased to regard the Tuatha De
+Danan as devils, and proceeded to rationalise the divine record as the
+ethnic bards had rationalised the history of the early gods; the Tuatha
+De Danan, shorn of immortality, became ancient heroes who had lived
+their day and died, and the greater raths, no longer the houses of the
+gods, figure in that literature irrationally rational, as their tombs.
+Thus we are gravely informed [Note: Annals of Four Masters.] that "the
+Dagda Mor, after the second battle of Moy Tura, retired to the Brugh on
+the Boyne, where he died from the venom of the wounds inflicted on him
+by Kethlenn"--the Fomorian amazon--"and was there interred." Even in
+this passage the writer seems to have been unable to dispossess his mind
+quite of the traditional belief that the Brugh was the Dagda's house.
+
+The peculiarity of this mound, in addition to its size, is the
+spaciousness of the central chamber. This was that germ which, but for
+the overthrow of the bardic religion, would have developed into a temple
+in the classic sense of the word. A two-fold motive would have impelled
+the growing civilisation in this direction. A desire to make the house
+of the god as spacious within as it was great without, and a desire to
+transfer his worship, or the more esoteric and solemn part of it, from
+without to within. Either the absence of architectural knowledge, or
+the force of conservatism, or the advent of the Christian missionaries,
+checked any further development on these lines.
+
+Elsewhere the tomb, instead of developing as a tumulus or barrow,
+produced the effect of greatness by huge circumvallations of earth, and
+massive walls of stone. Such is the temple of Ned the war-god, called
+Aula Neid, the court or palace of Ned, near the Foyle in the North. Had
+the ethnic civilisation of Ireland been suffered to develop according to
+its own laws, it is probable that, as the roofed central chamber of the
+cairn would have grown until it filled the space occupied by the mound,
+so the open-walled temple would have developed into a covered building,
+by the elevation of the walls, and their gradual inclination to the
+centre.
+
+The bee-hive houses of the monks, the early churches, and the round
+towers are a development of that architecture which constructed the
+central chambers of the raths. In this fact lies, too, the explanation
+of the cyclopean style of building which characterizes our most ancient
+buildings. The cromlech alone, formed in very ancient times the central
+chamber of the cairn; it is found in the centre of the raths on Moy
+Tura, belonging to the stone age and that of the Firbolgs. When the
+cromlech fell into disuse, the arched chamber above the ashes of the
+hero was constructed with enormous stones, as a substitute for the
+majestic appearance presented by the massive slab and supporting pillars
+of the more ancient cromlech, and the early stone buildings preserved
+the same characteristic to a certain extent.
+
+The same sentiment which caused the mediaeval Christians to disinter and
+enshrine the bones of their saints, and subsequently to re-enshrine
+them with greater art and more precious materials, caused the ethnic
+worshippers of heroes to erect nobler tombs over the inurned relics
+of those whom they revered, as the meanness of the tomb was seen to
+misrepresent and humiliate the sublimity of the conception. But the
+Christians could never have imagined their saints to have been anything
+but men--a fact which caused the retention and preservation of the
+relics. When the Gentiles exalted their hero into a god, the charred
+bones were forgotten or ascribed to another. The hero then became
+immortal in his own right; he had feasted with Mananan and eaten his
+life-giving food, and would not know death.
+
+When the mortal character of the hero was forgotten, his house or temple
+might be erected anywhere. The great Raths of the Boyne--a place grown
+sacred from causes which we may not now learn--represented, probably,
+heroes and heroines, who died and were interred in many different parts
+of the country.
+
+To recapitulate, the Dagda Mor was a divine title given to a hero named
+Eocaidh, who lived many centuries before the birth of Christ, and in the
+depths of the pre-historic ages. He was the mortal scion or ward of
+an elder god, Elathan, and was interred in some unknown grave--marked,
+perhaps, by a plain pillar stone, or small insignificant cairn.
+
+The great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of the divine or
+supernatural period of his spiritual or imagined career after death, and
+was a development by steps from that small unremembered grave where once
+his warriors hid the inurned ashes of the hero.
+
+What is true of one branch of the Aryan family is true of all.
+Sentiments of such universality and depth must have been common to all.
+If this be so, the Olympian Zeus himself was once some rude chieftain
+dwelling in Thrace or Macedonia, and his sublime temple of Doric
+architecture traceable to some insignificant cairn or flagged cist in
+Greece, or some earlier home of the Hellenic race, and his name not
+Zeus, but another; and Kronos, that god whom he, as a living wight,
+adored, and under whose protection and favour he prospered.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Early Bardic Literature, Ireland, by
+Standish O'Grady
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Early Bardic Literature, Ireland.
+by Standish O'Grady
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+Title: Early Bardic Literature, Ireland.
+
+Author: Standish O'Grady
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8109]
+[This file was first posted on June 15, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND. ***
+
+
+
+
+Credit: Ar dTeanga Fein (www.adft.org)
+
+
+
+EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND.
+
+by
+
+Standish O'Grady
+
+11 Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Scattered over the surface of every country in Europe may be found
+sepulchral monuments, the remains of pre-historic times and
+nations, and of a phase of life will civilisation which has long
+since passed away. No country in Europe is without its cromlechs
+and dolmens, huge earthen tumuli, great flagged sepulchres, and
+enclosures of tall pillar-stones. The men by whom these works were
+made, so interesting in themselves, and so different from anything
+of the kind erected since, were not strangers and aliens, but our
+own ancestors, and out of their rude civilisation our own has
+slowly grown. Of that elder phase of European civilisation no
+record or tradition has been anywhere bequeathed to us. Of its
+nature, and the ideas and sentiments whereby it was sustained,
+nought may now be learned save by an examination of those tombs
+themselves, and of the dumb remnants, from time to time exhumed out
+of their soil--rude instruments of clay, flint, brass, and gold,
+and by speculations and reasonings founded upon these archaeological
+gleanings, meagre and sapless.
+
+For after the explorer has broken up, certainly desecrated, and
+perhaps destroyed, those noble sepulchral raths; after he has
+disinterred the bones laid there once by pious hands, and the urn
+with its unrecognisable ashes of king or warrior, and by the
+industrious labour of years hoarded his fruitless treasure of stone
+celt and arrow-head, of brazen sword and gold fibula and torque;
+and after the savant has rammed many skulls with sawdust, measuring
+their capacity, and has adorned them with some obscure label, and
+has tabulated and arranged the implements and decorations of flint
+and metal in the glazed cases of the cold gaunt museum, the
+imagination, unsatisfied and revolted, shrinks back from all that
+he has done. Still we continue to inquire, receiving from him no
+adequate response, Who were those ancient chieftains and warriors
+for whom an affectionate people raised those strange tombs? What
+life did they lead? What deeds perform? How did their personality
+affect the minds of their people and posterity? How did our
+ancestors look upon those great tombs, certainly not reared to be
+forgotten, and how did they--those huge monumental pebbles and
+swelling raths--enter into and affect the civilisation or religion
+of the times?
+
+We see the cromlech with its massive slab and immense supporting
+pillars, but we vainly endeavour to imagine for whom it was first
+erected, and how that greater than cyclopean house affected the
+minds of those who made it, or those who were reared in its
+neighbourhood or within reach of its influence. We see the stone
+cist with its great smooth flags, the rocky cairn, and huge barrow
+and massive walled cathair, but the interest which they invariably
+excite is only aroused to subside again unsatisfied. From this
+department of European antiquities the historian retires baffled,
+and the dry savant is alone master of the field, but a field which,
+as cultivated by him alone, remains barren or fertile only in
+things the reverse of exhilarating. An antiquarian museum is more
+melancholy than a tomb.
+
+But there is one country in Europe in which, by virtue of a
+marvellous strength and tenacity of the historical intellect, and
+of filial devotedness to the memory of their ancestors, there have
+been preserved down into the early phases of mediaeval civilisation,
+and then committed to the sure guardianship of manuscript, the hymns,
+ballads, stories, and chronicles, the names, pedigrees, achievements,
+and even characters, of those ancient kings and warriors over whom
+those massive cromlechs were erected and great cairns piled. There
+is not a conspicuous sepulchral monument in Ireland, the traditional
+history of which is not recorded in our ancient literature, and of
+the heroes in whose honour they were raised. In the rest of Europe
+there is not a single barrow, dolmen, or cist of which the ancient
+traditional history is recorded; in Ireland there is hardly one
+of which it is not. And these histories are in many cases as rich
+and circumstantial as that of men of the greatest eminence who have
+lived in modern times. Granted that the imagination which for
+centuries followed with eager interest the lives of these heroes,
+beheld as gigantic what was not so, as romantic and heroic what was
+neither one nor the other, still the great fact remains, that it
+was beside and in connection with the mounds and cairns that this
+history was elaborated, and elaborated concerning them and
+concerning the heroes to whom they were sacred.
+
+On the plain of Tara, beside the little stream Nemanna, itself
+famous as that which first turned a mill-wheel in Ireland, there
+lies a barrow, not itself very conspicuous in the midst of others,
+all named and illustrious in the ancient literature of the country.
+The ancient hero there interred is to the student of the Irish
+bardic literature a figure as familiar and clearly seen as any
+personage in the Biographia Britannica. We know the name he bore as
+a boy and the name he bore as a man. We know the names of his
+father and his grandfather, and of the father of his grandfather,
+of his mother, and the father and mother of his mother, and the
+pedigrees and histories of each of these. We know the name of his
+nurse, and of his children, and of his wife, and the character of
+his wife, and of the father and mother of his wife, and where they
+lived and were buried. We know all the striking events of his
+boyhood and manhood, the names of his horses and his weapons, his
+own character and his friends, male and female. We know his
+battles, and the names of those whom he slew in battle, and how he
+was himself slain, and by whose hands. We know his physical and
+spiritual characteristics, the device upon his shield, and how that
+was originated, carved, and painted, by whom. We know the colour of
+his hair, the date of his birth and of his death, and his
+relations, in time and otherwise, with the remainder of the princes
+and warriors with whom, in that mound-raising period of our
+history, he was connected, in hostility or friendship; and all this
+enshrined in ancient song, the transmitted traditions of the people
+who raised that barrow, and who laid within it sorrowing their
+brave ruler and, defender. That mound is the tomb of Cuculain, once
+king of the district in which Dundalk stands to-day, and the ruins
+of whose earthen fortification may still be seen two miles from
+that town.
+
+This is a single instance, and used merely as an example, but one
+out of a multitude almost as striking. There is not a king of
+Ireland, described as such in the ancient annals, whose barrow is
+not mentioned in these or other compositions, and every one of
+which may at the present day be identified where the ignorant
+plebeian or the ignorant patrician has not destroyed them. The
+early History of Ireland clings around and grows out of the Irish
+barrows until, with almost the universality of that primeval forest
+from which Ireland took one of its ancient names, the whole isle
+and all within it was clothed with a nobler raiment, invisible, but
+not the less real, of a full and luxuriant history, from whose
+presence, all-embracing, no part was free. Of the many poetical and
+rhetorical titles lavished upon this country, none is truer than
+that which calls her the Isle of Song. Her ancient history passed
+unceasingly into the realm of artistic representation; the history
+of one generation became the poetry of the next, until the whole
+island was illuminated and coloured by the poetry of the bards.
+Productions of mere fancy and imagination these songs are not,
+though fancy and imagination may have coloured and shaped all their
+subject-matter, but the names are names of men and women who once
+lived and died in Ireland, and over whom their people raised the
+swelling rath and reared the rocky cromlech. In the sepulchral
+monuments their names were preserved, and in the performance of
+sacred rites, and the holding of games, fairs, and assemblies in
+their honour, the memory of their achievements kept fresh, till the
+traditions that clung around these places were inshrined in tales
+which were finally incorporated in the Leabhar na Huidhre and the
+Book of Leinster.
+
+Pre-historic narrative is of two kinds--in one the imagination is
+at work consciously, in the other unconsciously. Legends of the
+former class are the product of a lettered and learned age. The
+story floats loosely in a world of imagination. The other sort of
+pre-historic narrative clings close to the soil, and to visible and
+tangible objects. It may be legend, but it is legend believed in as
+history never consciously invented, and growing out of certain
+spots of the earth's surface, and supported by and drawing its life
+from the soil like a natural growth.
+
+Such are the early Irish tales that cling around the mounds and
+cromlechs as that by which they are sustained, which was originally
+their source, and sustained them afterwards in a strong enduring
+life. It is evident that these cannot be classed with stories that
+float vaguely in an ideal world, which may happen in one place as
+well as another, and in which the names might be disarrayed without
+changing the character and consistency of the tale, and its
+relations, in time or otherwise, with other tales.
+
+Foreigners are surprised to find the Irish claim for their own
+country an antiquity and a history prior to that of the
+neighbouring countries. Herein lie the proof and the explanation.
+The traditions and history of the mound-raising period have in
+other countries passed away. Foreign conquest, or less intrinsic
+force of imagination, and pious sentiment have suffered them to
+fall into oblivion; but in Ireland they have been all preserved in
+their original fulness and vigour, hardly a hue has faded, hardly a
+minute circumstance or articulation been suffered to decay.
+
+The enthusiasm with which the Irish intellect seized upon the grand
+moral life of Christianity, and ideals so different from, and so
+hostile to, those of the heroic age, did not consume the traditions
+or destroy the pious and reverent spirit in which men still looked
+back upon those monuments of their own pagan teachers and kings,
+and the deep spirit of patriotism and affection with which the
+mind still clung to the old heroic age, whose types were warlike
+prowess, physical beauty, generosity, hospitality, love of family
+and nation, and all those noble attributes which constituted the
+heroic character as distinguished from the saintly. The Danish
+conquest, with its profound modification of Irish society, and
+consequent disruption of old habits and conditions of life, did not
+dissipate it; nor the more dangerous conquest of the Normans, with
+their own innate nobility of character, chivalrous daring, and
+continental grace and civilisation; nor the Elizabethan convulsions
+and systematic repression and destruction of all native phases of
+thought and feeling. Through all these storms, which successively
+assailed the heroic literature of ancient Ireland, it still held
+itself undestroyed. There were still found generous minds to
+shelter and shield the old tales and ballads, to feel the nobleness
+of that life of which they were the outcome, and to resolve that
+the soil of Ireland should not, so far as they had the power to
+prevent it, be denuded of its raiment of history and historic
+romance, or reduced again to primeval nakedness. The fruit of this
+persistency and unquenched love of country and its ancient
+traditions, is left to be enjoyed by us. There is not through the
+length and breadth of the country a conspicuous rath or barrow of
+which we cannot find the traditional history preserved in this
+ancient literature. The mounds of Tara, the great barrows along the
+shores of the Boyne, the raths of Slieve Mish, and Rathcrogan, and
+Teltown, the stone caiseals of Aran and Innishowen, and those that
+alone or in smaller groups stud the country over, are all, or
+nearly all, mentioned in this ancient literature, with the names
+and traditional histories of those over whom they were raised.
+
+There is one thing to be learned from all this, which is, that we,
+at least, should not suffer these ancient monuments to be
+destroyed, whose history has been thus so astonishingly preserved.
+The English farmer may tear down the barrow which is unfortunate
+enough to be situated within his bounds. Neither he nor his
+neighbours know or can tell anything about its ancient history; the
+removed earth will help to make his cattle fatter and improve his
+crops, the stones will be useful to pave his roads and build his
+fences, and the savant can enjoy the rest; but the Irish farmer
+and landlord should not do or suffer this.
+
+The instinctive reverence of the peasantry has hitherto been a
+great preservative; but the spread of education has to a
+considerable extent impaired this kindly sentiment, and the
+progress of scientific farming, and the anxiety of the Royal Irish
+Academy to collect antiquarian trifles, have already led to the
+reckless destruction of too many. I think that no one who reads the
+first two volumes of this history would greatly care to bear a hand
+in the destruction of that tomb at Tara, in which long since his
+people laid the bones of Cuculain; and I think, too, that they
+would not like to destroy any other monument of the same age, when
+they know that the history of its occupant and its own name are
+preserved in the ancient literature, and that they may one day
+learn all that is to be known concerning it. I am sure that if the
+case were put fairly to the Irish landlords and country gentlemen,
+they would neither inflict nor permit this outrage upon the
+antiquities of their country. The Irish country gentleman prides
+himself on his love of trees, and entertains a very wholesome
+contempt for the mercantile boor who, on purchasing an old place,
+chops down the best timber for the market. And yet a tree, though
+cut down, may be replaced. One elm tree is as good as another, and
+the thinned wood, by proper treatment, will be as dense as ever;
+but the ancient mound, once carted away, can never be replaced any
+more. When the study of the Irish literary records is revived, as
+it certainly will be revived, the old history of each of these
+raths and cromlechs will be brought again into the light, and one
+new interest of a beautiful and edifying nature attached to the
+landscape, and affecting wholly for good the minds of our people.
+
+Irishmen are often taunted with the fact that their history is yet
+unwritten, but that the Irish, as a nation, have been careless of
+their past is refuted by the facts which I have mentioned. A people
+who alone in Europe preserved, not in dry chronicles alone, but
+illuminated and adorned with all that fancy could suggest in
+ballad, and tale, and rude epic, the history of the mound-raising
+period, are not justly liable to this taunt. Until very modern
+times, history was the one absorbing pursuit of the Irish secular
+intellect, the delight of the noble, and the solace of the vile.
+
+At present, indeed, the apathy on this subject is, I believe,
+without parallel in the world. It would seem as if the Irish,
+extreme in all things, at one time thought of nothing but their
+history, and, at another, thought of everything but it. Unlike
+those who write on other subjects, the author of a work on Irish
+history has to labour simultaneously at a two-fold task--he has to
+create the interest to which he intends to address himself.
+
+The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties
+from which the corresponding period in the histories of other
+countries is free. The surrounding nations escape the difficulty by
+having nothing to record. The Irish historian is immersed in
+perplexity on account of the mass of material ready to his hand.
+The English have lost utterly all record of those centuries before
+which the Irish historian stands with dismay and hesitation, not
+through deficiency of materials, but through their excess. Had
+nought but the chronicles been preserved the task would have been
+simple. We would then have had merely to determine approximately
+the date of the introduction of letters, and allowing a margin on
+account of the bardic system and the commission of family and
+national history to the keeping of rhymed and alliterated verse,
+fix upon some reasonable point, and set down in order, the old
+successions of kings and the battles and other remarkable events.
+But in Irish history there remains, demanding treatment, that other
+immense mass of literature of an imaginative nature, illuminating
+with anecdote and tale the events and personages mentioned simply
+and without comment by the chronicler. It is this poetic literature
+which constitutes the stumbling-block, as it constitutes also the
+glory, of early Irish history, for it cannot be rejected and it
+cannot be retained. It cannot be rejected, because it contains
+historical matter which is consonant with and illuminates the dry
+lists of the chronologist, and it cannot be retained, for popular
+poetry is not history; and the task of distinguishing In such
+literature the fact from the fiction--where there is certainly fact
+and certainly fiction--is one of the most difficult to which the
+intellect can apply itself. That this difficulty has not been
+hitherto surmounted by Irish writers is no just reproach. For the
+last century, intellects of the highest attainments, trained and
+educated to the last degree, have been vainly endeavouring to solve
+a similar question in the far less copious and less varied heroic
+literature of Greece. Yet the labours of Wolfe, Grote, Mahaffy,
+Geddes, and Gladstone, have not been sufficient to set at rest the
+small question, whether it was one man or two or many who composed
+the Iliad and Odyssey, while the reality of the achievements of
+Achilles and even his existence might be denied or asserted by a
+scholar without general reproach. When this is the case with regard
+to the great heroes of the Iliad, I fancy it will be some time
+before the same problem will have been solved for the minor
+characters, and as it affects Thersites, or that eminent artist
+who dwelt at home in Hyla, being by far the most excellent of
+leather cutters. When, therefore, Greek still meets Greek in an
+interminable and apparently bloodless contest over the disputed
+body of the Iliad, and still no end appears, surely it would be
+madness for any one to sit down and gaily distinguish true from
+false in the immense and complex mass of the Irish bardic
+literature, having in his ears this century-lasting struggle over a
+single Greek poem and a single small phase of the pre-historic life
+of Hellas.
+
+In the Irish heroic literature, the presence or absence of the
+marvellous supplies _no test whatsoever_ as to the general truth or
+falsehood of the tale in which they appear. The marvellous is
+supplied with greater abundance in the account of the battle of
+Clontarf, and the wars of the O'Briens with the Normans, than in
+the tale in which is described the foundation of Emain Macha by
+Kimbay. Exact-thinking, scientific France has not hesitated to
+paint the battles of Louis XIV. with similar hues; and England,
+though by no means fertile in angelic interpositions, delights to
+adorn the barren tracts of her more popular histories with
+apocryphal anecdotes.
+
+How then should this heroic literature of Ireland be treated in
+connection with the history of the country? The true method would
+certainly be to print it exactly as it is without excision or
+condensation. Immense it is, and immense it must remain. No men
+living, and no men to live, will ever so exhaust the meaning of any
+single tale as to render its publication unnecessary for the study
+of others. The order adopted should be that which the bards
+themselves deter mined, any other would be premature, and I think
+no other will ever take its place. At the commencement should stand
+the passage from the Book of Invasions, describing the occupation
+of the isle by Queen Keasair and her companions, and along with it
+every discoverable tale or poem dealing with this event and those
+characters. After that, all that remains of the cycle of which
+Partholan was the protagonist. Thirdly, all that relates to Nemeth
+and his sons, their wars with curt Kical the bow-legged, and all
+that relates to the Fomoroh of the Nemedian epoch, then first
+moving dimly in the forefront of our history. After that, the great
+Fir-bolgic cycle, a cycle janus-faced, looking on one side to the
+mythological period and the wars of the gods, and on the other, to
+the heroic, and more particularly to the Ultonian cycle. In the
+next place, the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of
+the Irish gods who, having conquered the Fir-bolgs, like the Greek
+gods of the age of gold dwelt visibly in the island until the
+coming of the Clan Milith, out of Spain. In the sixth, the Milesian
+invasion, and every accessible statement concerning the sons and
+kindred of Milesius. In the seventh, the disconnected tales dealing
+with those local heroes whose history is not connected with the
+great cycles, but who in the _fasti_ fill the spaces between the
+divine period and the heroic. In the eighth, the heroic cycles, the
+Ultonian, the Temairian, and the Fenian, and after these the
+historic tales that, without forming cycles, accompany the course
+of history down to the extinction of Irish independence, and the
+transference to aliens of all the great sources of authority in the
+island.
+
+This great work when completed will be of that kind of which no
+other European nation can supply an example. Every public library
+in the world will find it necessary to procure a copy. The
+chronicles will then cease to be so closely and exclusively
+studied. Every history of ancient Ireland will consist of more or
+less intelligent comments upon and theories formed in connection
+with this great series--theories which, in general, will only be
+formed in order to be destroyed. What the present age demands upon
+the subject of antique Irish history--an exact and scientific
+treatment of the facts supplied by our native authorities--will be
+demanded for ever. It will never be supplied. The history of
+Ireland will be contained in this huge publication. In it the poet
+will find endless themes of song, the philosopher strange workings
+of the human mind, the archeologist a mass of information,
+marvellous in amount and quality, with regard to primitive ideas
+and habits of life, and the rationalist materials for framing a
+scientific history of Ireland, which will be acceptable in
+proportion to the readableness of his style, and the mode in which
+his views may harmonize with the prevailing humour and complexion
+of his contemporaries.
+
+Such a work it is evident could not be effected by a single
+individual. It must be a public and national undertaking, carried
+out under the supervision of the Royal Irish Academy, at the
+expense of the country.
+
+The publication of the Irish bardic remains in the way that I have
+mentioned, is the only true and valuable method of presenting the
+history of Ireland to the notice of the world. The mode which I
+have myself adopted, that other being out of the question, is open
+to many obvious objections; but in the existing state of the Irish
+mind on the subject, no other is possible to an individual writer.
+I desire to make this heroic period once again a portion of the
+imagination of the country, and its chief characters as familiar in
+the minds of our people as they once were. As mere history, and
+treated in the method in which history is generally written at the
+present day, a work dealing with the early Irish kings and heroes
+would certainly not secure an audience. Those who demand such a
+treatment forget that there is not in the country an interest on
+the subject to which to appeal. A work treating of early Irish
+kings, in the same way in which the historians of neighbouring
+countries treat of their own early kings, would be, to the Irish
+public generally, unreadable. It might enjoy the reputation of
+being well written, and as such receive an honourable place in
+half-a-dozen public libraries, but it would be otherwise left
+severely alone. It would never make its way through that frozen
+zone which, on this subject, surrounds the Irish mind.
+
+On the other hand, Irishmen are as ready as others to feel an
+interest in a human character, having themselves the ordinary
+instincts, passions, and curiosities of human nature. If I can
+awake an interest in the career of even a single ancient Irish
+king, I shall establish a train of thoughts, which will advance
+easily from thence to the state of society in which he lived, and
+the kings and heroes who surrounded, preceded, or followed him.
+Attention and interest once fully aroused, concerning even one
+feature of this landscape of ancient history, could be easily
+widened and extended in its scope.
+
+Now, if nothing remained of early Irish history save the dry
+_fasti_ of the chronicles and the Brehon laws, this would, I think,
+be a perfectly legitimate object of ambition, and would be
+consonant with my ideal of what the perfect flower of historical
+literature should be, to illuminate a tale embodying the former by
+hues derived from the Senchus Mor.
+
+But in Irish literature there has been preserved, along with the
+_fasti_ and the laws, this immense mass of ancient ballad, tale,
+and epic, whose origin is lost in the mists of extreme antiquity,
+and in which have been preserved the characters, relationships,
+adventures, and achievements of the vast majority of the personages
+whose names, in a gaunt nakedness, fill the books of the
+chroniclers. Around each of the greater heroes there groups itself
+a mass of bardic literature, varying in tone and statement, but
+preserving a substantial unity as to the general character and the
+more important achievements of the hero, and also, a fact upon
+which their general historical accuracy may be based with
+confidence, exhibiting a knowledge of that same prior and
+subsequent history recorded in the _fasti_. The literature which
+groups itself around a hero exhibits not only an unity with itself,
+but an acquaintance with the general course of the history of the
+country, and with preceding and succeeding kings.
+
+The students of Irish literature do not require to be told this;
+for those who are not, I would give a single instance as an
+illustration.
+
+In the battle of Gabra, fought in the third century, and in which
+Oscar, perhaps the greatest of all the Irish heroes heading the
+Fianna Eireen, contended against Cairbry of the Liffey, King of
+Ireland, and his troops, Cairbry on his side announces to his
+warriors that he would rather perish in this battle than suffer one
+of the Fianna to survive; but while he spoke--
+
+ "Barran suddenly exclaimed--
+ 'Remember Mall Mucreema, remember Art.
+
+ "'Our ancestors fell there
+ By force of the treachery of the Fians;
+ Remember the hard tributes,
+ Remember the extraordinary pride.'"
+
+Here the poet, singing only of the events of the battle of Gabra,
+shows that he was well-acquainted with all the relations subsisting
+for a long time between the Fians and the Royal family. The battle
+of Mucreema was fought by Cairbry's grandfather, Art, against Lewy
+Mac Conn and the Fianna Eireen.
+
+Again, in the tale of the battle of Moy Leana, in which Conn of the
+Hundred Battles, the father of this same Art, is the principal
+character, the author of the tale mentions many times circumstances
+relating to his father, Felimy Rectmar, and his grandfather, Tuhall
+Tectmar. Such is the whole of the Irish literature, not vague,
+nebulous, and shifting, but following the course of the _fasti_,
+and regulated and determined by them. This argument has been used
+by Mr. Gladstone with great confidence, in order to show the
+substantial historical truthfulness of the Iliad, and that it is in
+fact a portion of a continuous historic sequence.
+
+Now this being admitted, that the course of Irish history, as laid
+down by the chroniclers, was familiar to the authors of the tales
+and heroic ballads, one of two things must be admitted, either that
+the events and kings did succeed one another in the order mentioned
+by the chroniclers, or that what the chroniclers laid down was then
+taken as the theme of song by the bards, and illuminated and
+adorned according to their wont.
+
+The second of these suppositions is one which I think few will
+adopt. Can we believe it possible that the bards, who actually
+supported themselves by the amount of pleasure which they gave
+their audiences, would have forsaken those subjects which were
+already popular, and those kings and heroes whose splendour and
+achievements must have affected, profoundly, the popular
+imagination, in order to invent stories to illuminate fabricated
+names. The thing is quite impossible. A practice which we can trace
+to the edge of that period whose historical character may be proved
+to demonstration, we may conclude to have extended on into the
+period immediately preceding that. When bards illuminated with
+stories and marvellous circumstances the battle of Clontarf and the
+battle of Moyrath, we may believe their predecessors to have done
+the same for the earlier centuries. The absence of an imaginative
+literature other than historical shows also that the literature
+must have followed, regularly, the course of the history, and was
+not an archaeological attempt to create an interest in names and
+events which were found in the chronicles. It is, therefore, a
+reasonable conclusion that the bardic literature, where it reveals
+a clear sequence in the order of events, and where there is no
+antecedent improbability, supplies a trustworthy guide to the
+general course of our history.
+
+So far as the clear light of history reaches, so far may these
+tales be proved to be historical. It is, therefore, reasonable to
+suppose that the same consonance between them and the actual course
+of events which subsisted during the period which lies in clear
+light, marked also that other preceding period of which the light
+is no longer dry.
+
+The earliest manuscript of these tales is the Leabhar [Note: Leabar
+na Heera.] na Huidhre, a work of the eleventh century, so that we
+may feel sure that we have them in a condition unimpaired by the
+revival of learning, or any archaeological restoration or
+improvement. Now, of some of these there have been preserved copies
+in other later MSS., which differ very little from the copies
+preserved in the Leabhar na Huidhre, from which we may conclude
+that these tales had arrived at a fixed state, and a point at which
+it was considered wrong to interfere with the text.
+
+The feast of Bricrind is one of the tales preserved in this
+manuscript. The author of the tale in its present form, whenever he
+lived, composed it, having before him original books which he
+collated, using his judgment at times upon the materials to his
+hand. At one stage he observes that the books are at variance on a
+certain point, namely, that at which Cuculain, Conal the
+Victorious, and Laery Buada go to the lake of Uath in order to be
+judged by him. Some of the books, according to the author, stated
+that on this occasion the two latter behaved unfairly, but he
+agreed with those books which did not state this.
+
+We have, therefore, a tale penned in the eleventh century, composed
+at some time prior to this, and itself collected, not from oral
+tradition, but from books. These considerations would, therefore,
+render it extremely probable that the tales of the Ultonian period,
+with which the Leabhar na Huidhre is principally concerned, were
+committed to writing at a very early period.
+
+To strengthen still further the general historic credibility of
+these tales, and to show how close to the events and heroes
+described must have been the bards who originally composed them, I
+would urge the following considerations.
+
+With the advent of Christianity the mound-raising period passed
+away. The Irish heroic tales have their source in, and draw their
+interest from, the mounds and those laid in them. It would,
+therefore, be extremely improbable that the bards of the Christian
+period, when the days of rath and cairn had departed, would modify,
+to any considerable extent, the literature produced in conditions
+of society which had passed away.
+
+Again, with the advent of Christianity, and the hold which the new
+faith took upon the finest and boldest minds in the country, it is
+plain that the golden age of bardic composition ended. The loss to
+the bards was direct, by the withdrawal of so much intellect from
+their ranks, and indirect, by the general substitution of other
+ideas for those whose ministers they themselves were. It is,
+therefore, probable that the age of production and creation, with
+regard to the ethnic history, ceased about the fifth and sixth
+centuries, and that, about that time, men began to gather up into a
+collected form the floating literature connected with the pagan
+period. The general current of mediaeval opinion attributes the
+collection of tales and ballads now known as the Tan-Bo-Cooalney to
+St. Ciaran, the great founder of the monastery of Clonmacnoise.
+
+But if this be the case, we are enabled to take another step in the
+history of this most valuable literature. The tales of the Leabhar
+na Huidhre are in prose, but prose whose source and original is
+poetry. The author, from time to time, as if quoting an authority,
+breaks out with verse; and I think there is no Irish tale in
+existence without these rudimentary traces of a prior metrical
+cycle. The style and language are quite different, and indicate two
+distinct epochs. The prose tale is founded upon a metrical
+original, and composed in the meretricious style then in fashion,
+while the old metrical excerpts are pure and simple. This is
+sufficient, in a country like Ireland in those primitive times, to
+necessitate a considerable step into the past, if we desire to get
+at the originals upon which the prose tales were founded.
+
+For in ancient Ireland the conservatism of the people was very
+great. It is the case in all primitive societies. Individual,
+initiative, personal enterprise are content to work within a very
+small sphere. In agriculture, laws, customs, and modes of literary
+composition, primitive and simple societies are very adverse to
+change.
+
+When we see how closely the Christian compilers followed the early
+authorities, we can well believe that in the ethnic times no mind
+would have been sufficiently daring or sacrilegious to alter or
+pervert those epics which were in their eyes at the same time true
+and sacred.
+
+In the perusal of the Irish literature, we see that the strength of
+this conservative instinct has been of the greatest service in the
+preservation of the early monuments in their purity. So much is
+this the case, that in many tales the most flagrant contradictions
+appear, the author or scribe being unwilling to depart at all from
+that which he found handed down. For instance, in the "Great Breach
+of Murthemney," we find Laeg at one moment killed, and in the next
+riding black Shanglan off the field. From this conservatism and
+careful following of authority, and the _littera scripta_, or word
+once spoken, I conclude that the distance in time between the prose
+tale and the metrical originals was very great, and, unless under
+such exceptional circumstances as the revolution caused by the
+introduction of Christianity, could not have been brought about
+within hundreds of years. Moreover, this same conservatism would
+have caused the tales concerning heroes to grow very slowly once
+they were actually formed. All the noteworthy events of the hero's
+life and his characteristics must have formed the original of the
+tales concerning him, which would have been composed during his
+life, or not long after his death.
+
+I have not met a single tale, whether in verse or prose, in which
+it is not clearly seen that the author was not following
+authorities before him. Such traces of invention or decoration as
+may be met with are not suffered to interfere with the conduct of
+the tale and the statement of facts. They fill empty niches and
+adorn vacant places. For instance, if a king is represented as
+crossing the sea, we find that the causes leading to this, the
+place whence he set out, his companions, &c., are derived from the
+authorities, but the bard, at the same time, permits himself to
+give what seems to him to be an eloquent or beautiful description
+of the sea, and the appearance presented by the many-oared galleys.
+And yet the last transcription or recension of the majority of the
+tales was effected in Christian times, and in an age characterised
+by considerable classical attainments--a time when the imagination
+might have been expected to shake itself loose from old restraints,
+and freely invent. _A fortiori_, the more ancient bards, those of
+the ruder ethnic times, would have clung still closer to authority,
+deriving all their imaginative representations from preceding
+minstrels. There was no conscious invention at any time. Each cycle
+and tale grew from historic roots, and was developed from actual
+fact. So much may indeed be said for the more ancient tales, but
+the Ultonian cycle deals with events well within the historic
+period.
+
+The era of Concobar Mac Nessa and the Red Branch knights of Ulster
+was long subsequent to the floruerunt of the Irish gods and their
+Titan-like opponents of this latter period, the names alone can be
+fairly held to be historic. What swells out the Irish chronicles to
+such portentous dimensions is the history of the gods and giants
+rationalised by mediaeval historians. Unable to ignore or excide
+what filled so much of the imagination of the country, and unable,
+as Christians, to believe in the divinity of the Tuatha De Danan
+and their predecessors, they rationalised all the pre-Milesian
+record. But the disappearance of the gods does not yet bring us
+within the penumbra of history. After the death of the sons of
+Milesius we find a long roll of kings. These were all topical
+heroes, founders of nations, and believed, by the tribes and tribal
+confederacies which they founded, to have been in their day the
+chief kings of Ireland. The point fixed upon by the accurate and
+sceptical Tiherna as the starting-point of trustworthy Irish
+history, was one long subsequent to the floruerunt of the gods; and
+the age of Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights was more than two
+centuries later than that of Kimbay and the foundation of Emain
+Macha. The floruit of Cuculain, therefore, falls completely within
+the historical penumbra, and the more carefully the enormous, and
+in the main mutually consistent and self-supporting, historical
+remains dealing with this period are studied, the more will this be
+believed. The minuteness, accuracy, extent, and verisimilitude of
+the literature, chronicles, pedigrees, &c., relating to this
+period, will cause the student to wonder more and more as he
+examines and collates, seeing the marvellous self-consistency and
+consentaneity of such a mass of varied recorded matter. The age,
+indeed, breathes sublimity, and abounds with the marvellous, the
+romantic, and the grotesque. But as I have already stated, the
+presence or absence of these qualities has no crucial significance.
+Love and reverence and the poetic imagination always effect such
+changes in the object of their passion. They are the essential
+condition of the transference of the real into the world of art.
+AEval, of Carriglea, the fairy queen of Munster, is one of the most
+important characters in the history of the battle of Clontarf, the
+character of which, and of the events that preceded and followed
+its occurrence, and the chieftains and warriors who fought on one
+side and the other, are identical, whether described by the bard
+singing, or by the monkish chronicler jotting down in plain prose
+the fasti for the year. The reader of these volumes can make such
+deductions as he pleases, on this account, from the bardic history
+of the Red Branch, and clip the wings of the tale, so that it may
+with him travel pedestrian. I know there are others, like myself,
+who will not hesitate for once to let the fancy roam and luxuriate
+in the larger spaces and freer airs of ancient song, nor fear that
+their sanity will be imperilled by the shouting of semi-divine
+heroes, and the sight of Cuculain entering battles with the Tuatha
+De Danan around him.
+
+I hope on some future occasion to examine more minutely the
+character and place in literature of the Irish bardic remains, and
+put forward here these general considerations, from which the
+reader may presume that the Ultonian cycle, dealing as it does with
+Cuculain and his contemporaries, is in the main true to the facts
+of the time, and that his history, and that of the other heroes who
+figure in these volumes, is, on the whole, and omitting the
+marvellous, sufficiently reliable. I would ask the reader, who may
+be inclined to think that the principal character is too chivalrous
+and refined for the age, to peruse for himself the tale named the
+"Great Breach of Murthemney." He will there, and in many other
+tales and poems besides, see that the noble and pathetic interest
+which attaches to his character is substantially the same as I have
+represented in these volumes. But unless the student has read the
+whole of the Ultonian cycle, he should be cautious in condemning a
+departure in my work from any particular version of an event which
+he may have himself met. Of many minor events there are more than
+one version, and many scenes and assertions which he may think of
+importance would yet, by being related, cause inconsistency and
+contradiction. Of the nature of the work in which all should be
+introduced I have already given my opinion.
+
+For the rest, I have related one or two great events in the life of
+Cuculain in such a way as to give a description as clear and
+correct as possible of his own character and history as related by
+the bards, of those celebrated men and women who were his
+contemporaries and of his relations with them, of the gods and
+supernatural powers in whom the people then believed, and of the
+state of civilisation which then prevailed. If I have done my task
+well, the reader will have been supplied, without any intensity of
+application on his part--a condition of the public mind upon which
+no historian of this country should count--with some knowledge of
+ancient Irish history, and with an interest in the subject which
+may lead him to peruse for himself that ancient literature, and to
+read works of a more strictly scientific nature upon the subject
+than those which I have yet written. But until such an interest is
+aroused, it is useless to swell the mass of valuable critical
+matter, which everyone at present is very well content to leave
+unread.
+
+In the first volume, however, I have committed this error, that I
+did not permit it to be seen with sufficient clearness that the
+characters and chief events of the tale are absolutely historic;
+and that much of the colouring, inasmuch as its source must have
+been the centuries immediately succeeding the floruerunt of those
+characters, is also reliable as history, while the remainder is
+true to the times and the state of society which then obtained. The
+story seems to progress too much in the air, too little in time and
+space, and seems to be more of the nature of legend and romance
+than of actual historic fact seen through an imaginative medium.
+Such is the history of Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights--historic
+fact seen through the eyes of a loving wonder.
+
+Indeed, I must confess that the blaze of bardic light which
+illuminates those centuries at first so dazzled the eye and
+disturbed the judgment, that I saw only the literature, only the
+epic and dramatic interest, and did not see as I should the
+distinctly historical character of the age around which that
+literature revolves, wrongly deeming that a literature so noble,
+and dealing with events so remote, must have originated mainly or
+altogether in the imagination. All the borders of the epic
+representation at which, in the first volume, I have aimed, seem to
+melt, and wander away vaguely on every side into space and time. I
+have now taken care to remedy that defect, supplying to the unset
+picture the clear historical frame to which it is entitled. I will
+also request the reader, when the two volumes may diverge in tone
+or statement, to attach greater importance to the second, as the
+result of wider and more careful reading and more matured
+reflection.
+
+A great English poet, himself a severe student, pronounced the
+early history of his own country to be a mere scuffling of kites
+and crows, as indeed are all wars which lack the sacred bard, and
+the sacred bard is absent where the kites and crows pick out his
+eyes. That the Irish kings and heroes should succeed one another,
+surrounded by a blaze of bardic light, in which both themselves and
+all those who were contemporaneous with them are seen clearly and
+distinctly, was natural in a country where in each little realm or
+sub-kingdom the ard-ollav was equal in dignity to the king, which
+is proved by the equivalence of their cries. The dawn of English
+history is in the seventh century--a late dawn, dark and sombre,
+without a ray of cheerful sunshine; that of Ireland dates reliably
+from a point before the commencement of the Christian era luminous
+with that light which never was on sea or land--thronged with
+heroic forms of men and women--terrible with the presence of the
+supernatural and its over-arching power.
+
+Educated Irishmen are ignorant of, and indifferent to, their
+history; yet from the hold of that history they cannot shake
+themselves free. It still haunts the imagination, like Mordecai at
+Haman's gate, a cause of continual annoyance and vexation. An
+Irishman can no more release himself from his history than he can
+absolve himself from social and domestic duties. He may outrage it,
+but he cannot placidly ignore. Hence the uneasy, impatient feeling
+with which the subject is generally regarded.
+
+I think that I do not exaggerate when I say that the majority of
+educated Irishmen would feel grateful to the man who informed them
+that the history of their country was valueless and unworthy of
+study, that the pre-Christian history was a myth, the post-Christian
+mere annals, the mediaeval a scuffling of kites and crows, and the
+modern alone deserving of some slight consideration. That writer
+will be in Ireland most praised who sets latest the commencement
+of our history. Without study he will be pronounced sober and
+rational before the critic opens the book. So anxious is the Irish
+mind to see that effaced which it is conscious of having neglected.
+
+There are two compositions which affect an interest comparable to
+that which Ireland claims for her bardic literature, One is the
+Ossian of MacPherson, the other the Nibelungen Lied.
+
+If we are to suppose Macpherson faithfully to have written down,
+printed, and published the floating disconnected poems which he
+found lingering in the Scotch highlands, how small, comparatively,
+would be their value as indications of antique thought and feeling,
+reduced then for the first time to writing, sixteen hundred years
+after the time of Ossian and his heroes, in a country not the home
+of those heroes, and destitute of the regular bardic organisation.
+The Ossianic tales and poems still told and sung by the Irish
+peasantry at the present day in the country of Ossian and Oscar,
+would be, if collected even now, quite as valuable, if not more so.
+Truer to the antique these latter are, for in them the cycles are
+not blended. The Red Branch heroes are not confused with Ossian's
+Fianna.
+
+But MacPherson's Ossian is not a translation. In the publications
+of the Irish Ossianic poetry we see what that poetry really was--
+rude, homely, plain-spoken, leagues removed from the nebulous
+sublimity of MacPherson.
+
+With regard to the other, the Germans, who naturally desire to
+refer its composition to as remote a date as possible, and who
+arguing from no scientific data, but only style, ascribe the
+authorship of the Nibelungen to a poet living in the latter part of
+the twelfth century. Be it remembered, that the poem does not
+purport to be a collection of the scattered fragments of a cycle,
+but an original composition, then actually imagined and written. It
+does not even purport to deal with the ethnic times. _Its heroes
+are Christian heroes. They attend Mass._ The poem is not true, even
+to the leading features of the late period of history in which it
+is placed, if it have any habitat in the world of history at all.
+Attila, who died A.D. 450, and Theodoric, who did not die until the
+succeeding century, meet as coevals.
+
+Turn we now from the sole boast of Germany to one out of a hundred
+in the Irish bardic literature. The Tan-bo-Cooalney was transcribed
+into the Leabhar na Huidhre in the eleventh century a manuscript
+whose date has been established by the consentaneity of Irish,
+French, and German scholarship. Mark, it was transcribed, not
+composed. The scribe records the fact:--
+
+ "Ego qui scripsi hanc historian aut vero fabulam, quibusdam fidem
+ in hac historia aut fabula non commodo."
+
+The Tan-bo-Cooalney was therefore _transcribed_ by an ancient
+penman to the parchment of a still existing manuscript, in the
+century before that in which the German epic is presumed, from
+style only, and in the opinion of Germans, to have been _composed_.
+
+The same scribe adds this comment with regard to its contents:--
+
+ "Qaedam autem poetica figmenta, quaedam ad delectationem
+ stultorum."
+
+Such scorn could not have been felt by one living in an age of
+bardic production. That independence and originality of thought,
+which caused Milton to despise the poets of the Restoration, are
+impossible in the simple stages of civilisation. The scribe who
+appended this very interesting comment to the subject of his own
+handiwork must have been removed by centuries from the date of its
+compilation. That the tale was, in his time, an ancient one, is
+therefore rendered extremely probable, the scribe himself
+indicating how completely out of sympathy he is with this form of
+literature, its antiquity and peculiar archaeological interest
+being, doubtless, the cause of the transcription.
+
+Again, a close study of its contents, as of the contents of all the
+Irish historic tales, proves that in its present form, whenever
+that form was superadded, it is but a representation in prose of a
+pre-existing metrical original. Under this head I have already made
+some remarks, which, I shall request the reader to re-peruse [Note:
+Pages 23 to 27]
+
+Once more, it deals with a particular event in Irish history, and
+with distinct and definite kings, heroes, and bards, who flourished
+in the epoch of which it treats. In the synchronisms of Tiherna, in
+the metrical chronology of Flann, in all the various historical
+compositions produced in various parts of the country, the main
+features and leading characters of the Tan-bo-Cooalney suffer no
+material change, while the minor divergencies show that the
+chronology of the annals and annalistic poems were not drawn from
+the tale, but owe their origin to other sources. Moreover, this
+epic is but a portion of the great Ultonian or Red Branch cycle,
+all the parts of which pre-suppose and support one another; and
+that cycle is itself a portion of the history of Ireland, and
+pre-supposes other preceding and succeeding cyles, preceding and
+succeeding kings. The event of which this epic treats occurred at
+the time of the Incarnation, and its characters are the leading
+Irish kings and warriors of that date. Such is the Tan-bo-Cooalney.
+
+This being so, how have the English literary classes recognised, or
+how treated, our claim to the possession of an antique literature
+of peculiar historical interest, and by reason of that antiquity, a
+matter of concern to all Aryan nations? The conquest has not more
+constituted the English Parliament guardian and trustee of Ireland,
+for purposes of legislation and government, than it has vested the
+welfare and fame of our literature and antiquities in the hands of
+English scholarship. London is the headquarters of the intellectualism
+and of the literary and historical culture of the Empire. It is the
+sole dispenser of fame. It alone influences the mind of the country
+and guides thought and sentiment. It can make and mar reputations.
+What it scorns or ignores, the world, too, ignores and scorns. How
+then has the native literature of Ireland been treated by the
+representatives of English scholarship and literary culture? Mr.
+Carlyle is the first man of letters of the day, his the highest
+name as a critic upon, and historian of, the past life of Europe.
+Let us hear him upon this subject, admittedly of European
+importance.
+
+Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. III., page 136. "Not only as the oldest
+Tradition of Modern Europe does it--the Nibelungen--possess a high
+antiquarian interest, but farther, and even in the shape we now see
+it under, unless the epics of the son of Fingal had some sort of
+authenticity, it is our oldest poem also."
+
+Poor Ireland, with her hundred ancient epics, standing at the door
+of the temple of fame, or, indeed, quite behind the vestibule out
+of the way! To see the Swabian enter in, crowned, to a flourish of
+somewhat barbarous music, was indeed bad enough, but Mr. MacPherson!
+
+They manage these things rather better in France, _vide passim_ "La
+Revue Celtique."
+
+Of the literary value of the bardic literature I fear to write at
+all, lest I should not know how to make an end. Rude indeed it is,
+but great. Like the central chamber of that huge tumulus [Note: New
+Grange anciently Cnobgha, and now also Knowth.] on the Boyne,
+overarched with massive unhewn rocks, its very ruggedness strikes
+an awe which the orderly arrangement of smaller and more reasonable
+thoughts, cut smooth by instruments inherited from classic times,
+fails so often to inspire. The labour of the Attic chisel may be
+seen since its invention in every other literary workshop of
+Europe, and seen in every other laboratory of thought the
+transmitted divine fire of the Hebrew. The bardic literature of
+Erin stands alone, as distinctively and genuinely Irish as the race
+itself, or the natural aspects of the island. Rude indeed it is,
+but like the hills which its authors tenanted with gods, holding
+dells [Note: Those sacred hills will generally be found to have
+this character.] of the most perfect beauty, springs of the most
+touching pathos. On page 33, Vol. I., will be seen a poem [Note:
+Publications of Ossianic Society, page 303, Vol. IV.] by Fionn upon
+the spring-time, made, as the old unknown historian says, to prove
+his poetic powers--a poem whose antique language relegates it to a
+period long prior to the tales of the Leabhar na Huidhre, one
+which, if we were to meet side by side with the "Ode to Night," by
+Alcman, in the Greek anthology, we would not be surprised; or those
+lines on page 203, Vol. I., the song of Cuculain, forsaken by his
+people, watching the frontier of his country--
+
+ "Alone in defence of the Ultonians,
+ Solitary keeping ward over the province"
+
+or the death [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, Vol. I.] of
+Oscar, on pages 34 and 35, Vol. I., an excerpt condensed from the
+Battle of Gabra. Innumerable such tender and thrilling passages.
+
+To all great nations their history presents itself under the aspect
+of poetry; a drama exciting pity and terror; an epic with unbroken
+continuity, and a wide range of thought, when the intellect is
+satisfied with coherence and unity, and the imagination by extent
+and diversity. Such is the bardic history of Ireland, but with this
+literary defect. A perfect epic is only possible when the critical
+spirit begins to be in the ascendant, for with the critical spirit
+comes that distrust and apathy towards the spontaneous literature
+of early times, which permit some great poet so to shape and alter
+the old materials as to construct a harmonious and internally
+consistent tale, observing throughout a sense of proportion and a
+due relation of the parts. Such a clipping and alteration of the
+authorities would have seemed sacrilege to earlier bards. In
+mediaeval Ireland there was, indeed, a subtle spirit of criticism;
+but under its influence, being as it was of scholastic origin, no
+great singing men appeared, re-fashioning the old rude epics; and
+yet, the very shortcomings of the Irish tales, from a literary
+point of view, increase their importance from a historical. Of
+poetry, as distinguised from metrical composition, these ancient
+bards knew little. The bardic literature, profoundly poetic though
+it be, in the eyes of our ancestors was history, and never was
+anything else. As history it was originally composed, and as
+history bound in the chains of metre, that it might not be lost or
+dissipated passing through the minds of men, and as history it was
+translated into prose and committed to parchment. Accordingly, no
+tale is without its defects as poetry, possessing therefore
+necessarily, a corresponding value as history. But that there was
+in the country, in very early times, a high and rare poetic culture
+of the lyric kind, native in its character, ethnic in origin,
+unaffected by scholastic culture which, as we know, took a
+different direction; that one exquisite poem, in which the father
+of Ossian praises the beauty of the springtime in anapaestic
+[Note: Cettemain | cain ree! | ro sair | an cuct |
+"He, Fionn MacCool, learned the three compositions which distinguish
+the poets, the TEINM LAEGHA, the IMUS OF OSNA, and the DICEDUE
+DICCENAIB, and it was then Fionn composed this poem to prove
+his poetry." In which of these three forms of metre the Ode to
+the spring-time is written I know not. Its form throughout is
+distinctly anapaestic.--S. O'G.] verse, would, even though it
+stood alone, both by the fact of its composition and the fact
+of its preservation, fully prove.
+
+Much and careful study, indeed, it requires, if we would compel
+these ancient epics to yield up their greatness or their beauty, or
+even their logical coherence and imaginative unity--broken,
+scattered portions as they all are of that one enormous epic, the
+bardic history of Ireland. At the best we read without the key. The
+magic of the names is gone, or can only be partially recovered by
+the most tender and sympathetic study. Indeed, without reading all
+or many, we will not understand the superficial meaning of even
+one. For instance, in one of the many histories of Cuculain's many
+battles, we read this--
+
+"It was said that Lu Mac AEthleen was assisting him."
+
+This at first seems meaningless, the bard seeing no necessity for
+throwing further light on the subject; but, as we wander through
+the bardic literature, gradually the conception of this Lu grows
+upon the mind--the destroyer of the sons of Turann--the implacably
+filial--the expulsor of the Fomoroh--the source of all the
+sciences--the god of the Tuatha De Danan--the protector and
+guardian of Cuculain--Lu Lamfada, son of Cian, son of Diancect, son
+of Esric, son of Dela, son of Ned the war-god, whose tomb or
+temple, Aula Neid, may still be seen beside the Foyle. This
+enormous and seemingly chaotic mass of literature is found at all
+times to possess an inner harmony, a consistency and logical unity,
+to be apprehended only by careful study.
+
+So read, the sublimity strikes through the rude representation.
+Astonished at himself, the student, who at first thinks that he has
+chanced upon a crowd of barbarians, ere long finds himself in the
+august presence of demi-gods and heroes.
+
+A noble moral tone pervades the whole. Courage, affection, and truth
+are native to all who live in this world. Under the dramatic image
+of Ossian wrangling with the Talkend, [Note: St. Patrick, on account
+of the tonsured crown.] the bards, themselves vainly fighting against
+the Christian life, a hundred times repeat through the lips of Ossian
+like a refrain--
+
+ "We, the Fianna of Erin, never uttered falsehood,
+ Lying was never attributed to us;
+ By courage and the strength of our hands
+ We used to come out of every difficulty."
+
+Again: Fergus, the bard, inciting Oscar to his last battle--in that
+poem called the Rosc Catha of Oscar:--
+
+ "Place thy hand on thy gentle forehead
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+[Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, p. 159; vol. i.]
+
+And again, elsewhere in the Ossianic poetry:--
+
+ "Oscar, who never wronged bard or woman."
+
+Strange to say, too, they inculcated chastity (see p. 257; vol.
+i.), an allusion taken from the "youthful adventures of Cuculain,"
+Leabhar na Huidhre.
+
+The following ancient rann contains the four qualifications of a
+bard:--
+
+ "Purity of hand, bright, without wounding,
+ Purity of mouth, without poisonous satire,
+ Purity of learning, without reproach,
+ Purity, as a husband, in wedlock."
+
+Moreover, through all this literature sounds a high clear note of
+chivalry, in this contrasting favourably with the Iliad, where no
+man foregoes an advantage. Cuculain having slain the sons of Neara,
+"thought it unworthy of him to take possession of their chariot and
+horses." [Note: P. 155; vol. i.] Goll Mac Morna, in the Fenian or
+Ossianic cycle, declares to Conn Cedcathah [Note: Conn of the
+hundred battles.] that from his youth up he never attacked an enemy
+by night or under any disadvantage, and many times we read of
+heroes preferring to die rather than outrage their geisa. [Note:
+Certain vows taken with their arms on being knighted.]
+
+A noble literature indeed it is, having too this strange interest,
+that though mainly characterised by a great plainness and
+simplicity of thought, and, in the earlier stages, of expression,
+we feel, oftentimes, a sudden weirdness, a strange glamour shoots
+across the poem when the tale seems to open for a moment into
+mysterious depths, druidic secrets veiled by time, unsunned caves
+of thought, indicating a still deeper range of feeling, a still
+lower and wider reach of imagination. A youth came once to the
+Fianna Eireen encamped at Locha Lein [Note: The Lakes of
+Killarney.], leading a hound dazzling white, like snow. It was the
+same, the bard simply states, that was once a yew tree, flourishing
+fifty summers in the woods of Ioroway. Elsewhere, he is said to
+have been more terrible than the sun upon his flaming wheels. What
+meant this yew tree and the hound? Stray allusions I have met, but
+no history. The spirit of Coelte, visiting one far removed in time
+from the great captain of the Fianna, with a different name and
+different history, cries:--
+
+ "I was with thee, with Finn"--
+
+giving no explanation.
+
+To MacPherson, however, I will do this justice, that he had the
+merit to perceive, even in the debased and floating ballads of the
+highlands, traces of some past greatness and sublimity of thought,
+and to understand, he, for the first time, how much more they meant
+than what met the ear. But he saw, too, that the historical origin
+of the ballads, and the position in time and place of the heroes
+whom they praised, had been lost in that colony removed since the
+time of St. Columba from its old connection with the mother
+country. Thus released from the curb of history, he gave free rein
+to the imagination, and in the conventional literary language of
+sublimity, gave full expression to the feelings that arose within
+him, as to him, pondering over those ballads, their gigantesque
+element developed into a greatness and solemnity, and their
+vagueness and indeterminateness into that misty immensity and weird
+obscurity which, as constituent factors in a poem, not as
+back-ground, form one of the elements of the false sublime. Either
+not seeing the literary necessity of definiteness, or having no
+such abundant and ordered literature as we possess, upon which to
+draw for details, and being too conscientious to invent facts,
+however he might invent language, he published his epics of Ossian--
+false indeed to the original, but true to himself, and to the
+feelings excited by meditation upon them. This done, he had not
+sufficient courage to publish also the rude, homely, and often
+vulgar ballads--a step which, in that hard critical age, would have
+been to expose himself and his country to swift contempt. The
+thought of the great lexicographer riding rough-shod over the poor
+mountain songs which he loved, and the fame which he had already
+acquired, deterred and dissuaded him, if he had ever any such
+intention, until the opportunity was past.
+
+MacPherson feared English public opinion, and fearing lied. He
+declared that to be a translation which was original work, thus
+relegating himself for ever to a dubious renown, and depriving his
+country of the honest fame of having preserved through centuries,
+by mere oral transmission, a portion, at least, of the antique
+Irish literature. To the magnanimity of his own heroes he could not
+attain:--
+
+ "Oscar, Oscar, who feared not armies--
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+
+Of some such error as MacPherson's I have myself, with less excuse,
+been guilty, in chapters xi. and xii., Vol. I., where I attempt to
+give some conception of the character of the Ossianic cycle. The
+age and the heroes around whom that cycle revolves have, in the
+history of Ireland, a definite position in time; their battles,
+characters, several achievements, relationships, and pedigrees;
+their Duns, and trysting-places, and tombs; their wives, musicians,
+and bards; their tributes, and sufferings, and triumphs; their
+internecine and other wars--are all fully and clearly described in
+the Ossianic cycle. They still remain demanding adequate treatment,
+when we arrive at the age of Conn [Note: See page 20.], Art, and
+Cormac, kings of Tara in the second and third centuries of the
+Christian era. All have been forgotten for the sake of a vague
+representation of the more sublime aspects of the cycle, and the
+meretricious seductions of a form of composition easy to write and
+easy to read, and to which the unwary or unwise often award praise
+to which it has no claim.
+
+On the other hand, chapter xi. purports only to be a representation
+of the feelings excited by this literature, and for every assertion
+there is authority in the cycle. Chapter xii., however, is a
+translation from the original. Every idea which it contains, except
+one, has been taken from different parts of the Ossianic poems, and
+all together expressthe graver attitude of the mind of Ossian
+towards the new faith. That idea, occurring in a separate paragraph
+in the middle of the page, though prevalent as a sentiment
+throughout all the conversations of Ossian with St. Patrick, has
+been, as it stands, taken from a meditation on life by St.
+Columbanus, one of the early Irish Saints--a meditation which, for
+subtle thought, for musical resigned sadness, tender brooding
+reflection, and exquisite Latin, is one of the masterpieces of
+mediaeval composition.
+
+To the casual reader of the bardic literature the preservation of
+an ordered historical sequence, amidst that riotous wealth of
+imaginative energy, may appear an impossibility. Can we believe
+that forestine luxuriance not to have overgrown all highways, that
+flood of superabundant song not have submerged all landmarks? Be
+the cause what it may, the fact remains that they did not. The
+landmarks of history stand clear and fixed, each in its own place
+unremoved; and through that forest-growth the highways of history
+run on beneath over-arching, not interfering, boughs. The age of
+the predominance of Ulster does not clash with the age of the
+predominance of Tara; the Temairian kings are not mixed with the
+contemporary Fians. The chaos of the Nibelungen is not found here,
+nor the confusion of the Scotch ballads blending all the ages into
+one.
+
+It is not imaginative strength that produces confusion, but
+imaginative weakness. The strong imagination which perceives
+definitely and realises vividly will not tolerate that obscurity so
+dear to all those who worship the eidola of the cave. Of each of
+these ages, the primary impressions were made in the bardic mind
+during the life-time of the heroes who gave to the epoch its
+character; and a strong impression made in such a mind could not
+have been easily dissipated or obscured. For it must be remembered,
+that the bardic literature of Ireland was committed to the custody
+of guardians whose character we ought not to forget. The bards were
+not the people, but a class. They were not so much a class as an
+organisation and fraternity acknowledging the authority of one
+elected chief. They were not loose wanderers, but a power in the
+State, having duties and privileges. The ard-ollav ranked next to
+the king, and his eric was kingly. Thus there was an educated body
+of public opinion entrusted with the preservation of the literature
+and history of the country, and capable of repressing the
+aberrations of individuals.
+
+But the question arises, Did they so repress such perversions of
+history as their wandering undisciplined members might commit?
+Too much, of course, must not reasonably be expected. It was an
+age of creative thought, and such thought is difficult to control;
+but that one of the prime objects and prime works of the bards, as
+an organisation, was to preserve a record of a certain class of
+historical facts is certain. The succession of the kings and of the
+great princely families was one of these. The tribal system, with
+the necessity of affinity as a ground of citizenship, demanded such
+a preservation of pedigrees in every family, and particularly in
+the kingly houses. One of the chief objects of the triennial feis
+of Tara was the revision of such records by the general assembly of
+the bards, under the presidency of the Ard-Ollav of Ireland. In the
+more ancient times, such records were rhymed and alliterated, and
+committed to memory--a practice which, we may believe on the
+authority of Caesar, treating of the Gauls, continued long after
+the introduction of letters. Even at those local assemblies also,
+which corresponded to great central and national feis of Tara, the
+bards were accustomed to meet for that purpose. In a poem [Note:
+O'Curry's Manners and Customs, Vol. I., page 543.], descriptive of
+the fair [Note: On the full meaning of this word "fair," see Chap.
+xiii., Vol. I.] of Garman, we see this--
+
+ "Feasts with the great feasts of Temair,
+ Fairs with the fairs of Emania,
+ Annals there are verified."
+
+In the existing literature we see two great divisions. On the one
+hand the epical, a realm of the most riotous activity of thought;
+on the other, the annalistic and genealogical, bald and bare to the
+last degree, a mere skeleton. They represent the two great
+hemispheres of the bardic mind, the latter controlling the former.
+Hence the orderly sequence of the cyclic literature; hence the
+strong confining banks between which the torrent of song rolls down
+through those centuries in which the bardic imagination reached its
+height. The consentaneity of the annals and the literature
+furnishes a trustworthy guide to the general course of history,
+until its guidance is barred by _a priori_ considerations of a
+weightier nature, or by the statements of writers, having sources
+of information not open to us. For instance, the stream of Irish
+history must, for philosophical reasons, be no further traceable
+than to that point at which it issues from the enchanted land of
+the Tuatha De Danan. At the limit at which the gods appear, men and
+history must disappear; while on the other hand, the statement of
+Tiherna, that the foundation of Emain Alacha by Kimbay is the first
+certain date in Irish history, renders it undesirable to attach
+more historical reality of characters, adorning the ages prior to
+B.C. 299, than we could to such characters as Romulus in Roman, or
+Theseus in Athenian history.
+
+I desire here to record my complete and emphatic dissent from the
+opinions advanced by a writer in Hermathena on the subject of the
+Ogham inscriptions, and the introduction into this country of the
+art of writing. A cypher, i.e., an alphabet derived from a
+pre-existing alphabet, the Ogham may or may not have been. I
+advance no opinion upon that, but an invention of the Christian
+time it most assuredly was not. No sympathetic and careful student
+of the Irish bardic literature can possibly come to such a
+conclusion. The bardic poems relating to the heroes of the ethnic
+times are filled with allusions to Ogham inscriptions on stone, and
+contain some references to books of timber; but in my own reading I
+have not met with a single passage in that literature alluding to
+books of parchment and to rounded letters.
+
+If the Ogham was derived from the Roman characters introduced by
+Christian missionaries, then these characters would be the more
+ancient, and Ogham the more modern; books and Roman characters
+would be the more poetical, and inscriptions on stone and timber in
+the Ogham characters the more prosaic. The bards relating the lives
+and deeds of the ancient heroes, would have ascribed to their times
+parchment books and the Roman characters, not stone and wood, and
+the Ogham.
+
+In these compositions, whenever they were reduced to the form in
+which we find them to-day, the ethnic character of the times and
+the ethnic character of the heroes are clearly and universally
+observed. The ancient, the remote, the archaic clings to this
+literature. As Homer does not allude to writing, though all
+scholars agree that he lived in a lettered age, so the old bards do
+not allude to parchment and Roman characters, though the Irish
+epics, as distinguished from their component parts, reached their
+fixed state and their final development in times subsequent to the
+introduction of Christianity.
+
+When and how a knowledge of letters reached this island we know
+not. From the analogy of Gaul, we may conclude that they were
+known for some time prior to their use by the bards. Caesar tells
+us that the Gaulish bards and druids did not employ letters for the
+preservation of their lore, but trusted to memory, assisted,
+doubtless, as in this country, by the mechanical and musical aid of
+verse. Whether the Ogham was a native alphabet or a derivative
+from another, it was at first employed only to a limited extent.
+Its chief use was to preserve the name of buried kings and heroes
+in the stone that was set above their tombs. It was, perhaps,
+invented, and certainly became fashionable on this account,
+straight strokes being more easily cut in stone than rounded or
+uncial characters. For the same reason it was generally employed by
+those who inscribed timber tablets, which formed the primitive
+book, ere they discovered or learned how to use pen, ink, and
+parchment. The use of Ogham was partially practised in the
+Christian period for sepultural purposes, being venerable and
+sacred from time. Hence the discovery of Ogham-inscribed stones in
+Christian cemeteries. On the other hand, the fact that the majority
+of these stones are discovered in raths and forts, i.e., the tombs
+of our Pagan ancestors, corroborates the fact implied in all the
+bardic literature, that the characters employed in the ethnic times
+were Oghamic, and affords another proof of the close conservative
+spirit of the bards in their transcription, compilation, or
+reformation of the old epics.
+
+The full force of the concurrent authority of the bardic literature
+to the above effect can only be felt by one who has read that
+literature with care. He will find in all the epics no trace of
+original invention, but always a studied and conscientious
+following of authority. This being so, he will conclude that the
+universal ascription of Ogham, and Ogham only, to the ethnic times,
+arises solely from the fact that such was the alphabet then
+employed.
+
+If letters were unknown in those times, the example of Homer shows
+how unlikely the later poets would have been to outrage so
+violently the whole spirit of the heroic literature. If rounded
+letters were then used, why the universal ascription of the late
+invented Ogham which, as we know from the cemeteries and other
+sources, was unpopular in the Christian age.
+
+Cryptic, too, it was not. The very passages quoted in Hermathena
+to support this opinion, so far from doing so prove actually the
+reverse. When Cuculain came down into Meath on his first [Note:
+Vol. I., page 155.] foray, he found, on the lawn of the Dun of the
+sons of Nectan, a pillar stone with this inscription in Ogham--"Let
+no one pass without an offer of a challenge of single combat." The
+inscription was, of course, intended for all to read. Should there
+be any bardic passage in which Ogham inscriptions are alluded to as
+if an obscure form of writing, the natural explanation is, that
+this kind of writing was passing or had passed into desuetude at
+the time that particular passage was composed; but I have never met
+with any such. The ancient bard, who, in the Tan-bo-Cooalney,
+describes the slaughter of Cailitin and his sons by Cuculain,
+states that there was an inscription to that effect, written in
+Ogham, upon the stone over their tomb, beginning thus--"Take
+notice"--evidently intended for all to read. The tomb, by the way,
+was a rath--again showing the ethnic character of the alphabet.
+
+In the Annals of the Four Masters, at the date 1499 B.C., we read
+these words:--
+
+"THE FLEET OF THE SONS OF MILITH CAME TO IRELAND TO TAKE IT FROM
+THE TUATHA DE DANAN," i.e., the gods of the ethnic Irish.
+
+Without pausing to enquire into the reasonableness of the date, it
+will suffice now to state that at this point the bardic history of
+Ireland cleaves asunder into two great divisions--the mythological
+or divine on the one hand, and the historical or heroic-historical
+on the other. The first is an enchanted land--the world of the
+Tuatha De Danan--the country of the gods. There we see Mananan with
+his mountain-sundering sword, the Fray-garta; there Lu Lamfada, the
+deliverer, pondering over his mysteries; there Bove Derg and his
+fatal [Note: Every feast to which he came ended in blood. He was
+present at the death of Conairey Mor, Chap. xxxiii., Vol. I.]
+swine-herd, Lir and his ill-starred children, Mac Manar and his
+harp shedding death from its stricken wires, Angus Og, the
+beautiful, and he who was called the mighty father, Eochaidht
+[Note: Ay-o-chee, written Yeoha in Vol. I.] Mac Elathan, a land
+populous with those who had partaken of the feast of Goibneen, and
+whom, therefore, weapons could not slay, who had eaten [Note: In
+early Greek literature the province of history has been already
+separated from that of poetry. The ancient bardic lore and
+primaeval traditions were refined to suit the new and sensitive
+poetic taste. No commentator has been able to explain the nature of
+ambrosia. In the genuine bardic times, no such vague euphuism would
+have been tolerated as that of Homer on this subject. The nature of
+Olympian ambrosia would have been told in language as clear as that
+in which Homer describes the preparation of that Pramnian bowl for
+which Nestor and Machaon waited while Hecamede was grating over it
+the goat's milk cheese, or that in which the Irish bards described
+the ambrosia of the Tuatha De Danan, which, indeed, was no more
+poetic and awe-inspiring than plain bacon prepared by Mananan from
+his herd of enchanted pigs, living invisible like himself in the
+plains of Tir-na-n-Og, the land of the ever-young. On the other
+hand, there is a vagueness about the Feed Fia which would seem to
+indicate the growth of a more awe-stricken mood in describing
+things supernatural. The Faed Fia of the Greek gods has been
+refined by Homer into "much darkness," which, from an artistic
+point of view, one can hardly help imagining that Homer nodded as
+he wrote.] at the the table of Mananan, and would never grow old,
+who had invented for themselves the Faed Fia, and might not be seen
+of the gross eyes of men; there steeds like Anvarr crossing the wet
+sea like a firm plain; there ships whose rudder was the will, and
+whose sails and oars the wish, of those they bore [Note: Cf. The
+barks of the Phoenicians in the Odyssey.]; there hounds like that
+one of Ioroway, and spears like fiery flying serpents. These are
+the Tuatha De Danan [Note: A mystery still hangs over this
+three-formed name. The full expression, Tuatha De Danan, is that
+generally employed, less frequently Tuatha De, and sometimes, but
+not often, Tuatha. Tuatha also means people. In mediaeval times the
+name lost its sublime meaning, and came to mean merely "fairy," no
+greater significance, indeed, attaching to the invisible people of
+the island after Christianity had destroyed their godhood.], fairy
+princes, Tuatha; gods, De; of Dana, Danan, otherwise Ana and the
+Moreega, or great queen; mater [Note: Cormac's Glossary] deorum
+Hibernensium--"well she used to cherish [Note: Scholiast noting
+same Glossary.] the gods." Limitless, this divine population,
+dwelling in all the seas and estuaries, river and lakes, mountains
+and fairy dells, in that enchanted Erin which was theirs.
+
+But they have not started into existence suddenly, like the gods of
+Rome, nor is their genealogy confined to a single generation like
+those of Greece. Behind them extends a long line of ancestors, and
+a history reaching into the remotest depths of the past. As the
+Greek gods dethroned the Titans, so the Irish gods drove out or
+subjected the giants of the Fir-bolgs; but in the Irish mythology,
+we find both gods and giants descended from other ancient races of
+deities, called the Clanna Nemedh and the Fomoroh, and these a
+branch of a divine cycle; yet more ancient the race of Partholan,
+while Partholan himself is not the eldest.
+
+The history of the Italian gods is completely lost. For all that
+the early Roman literature tells us of their origin, they may have
+been either self-created or eternal. Rome was a seedling shaken
+from some old perished civilisation. The Romans created their own
+empire, but they inherited their gods. They supply no example of
+an Aryan nation evolving its own mythology and religion. Regal
+Rome, as we know from Niebuhr, was not the root from which our
+Rome sprang, but an old imperial city, from whose ashes sprang
+that Rome we all know so well. The mythology of the Latin writers
+came to them full-grown.
+
+The gods of Greece were a creation of the Greek mind, indeed; but
+of their ancestry, i.e., of their development from more ancient
+divine tribes, we know little. Like Pallas, they all but start into
+existence suddenly full-grown. Between the huge physical entities
+of the Greek theogonists and the Olympian gods, there intervenes
+but a single generation. For this loss of the Grecian mythology,
+and this substitution of Nox and Chaos for the remote ancestors of
+the Olympians, we have to thank the early Greek philosophers, and
+the general diffusion of a rude scientific knowledge, imparting a
+physical complexion to the mythological memory of the Greeks.
+
+In the theogony of the ancient inhabitants of this country, we have
+an example of a slowly-growing, slowly-changing mythology, such as
+no other nation in the world can supply. The ancestry of the Irish
+gods is not bounded by a single generation or by twenty. The Tuatha
+De Danan of the ancient Irish are the final outcome and last
+development of a mythology which we can see advancing step by step,
+one divine tribe pushing out another, one family of gods swallowing
+up another, or perishing under the hands of time and change, to
+make room for another. From Angus Og, the god of youth and love and
+beauty, whose fit home was the woody slopes of the Boyne, where it
+winds around Rosnaree, we count fourteen generations to Nemedh and
+four to Partholan, and Partholan is not the earliest. As the bards
+recorded with a zeal and minuteness, so far as I can see, without
+parallel, the histories of the families to which they were
+adscript, so also they recorded with equal patience and care the
+far-extending pedigrees of those other families--invisible indeed,
+but to them more real and more awe-inspiring--who dwelt by the
+sacred lakes and rivers, and in the folds of the fairy hills, and
+the great raths and cairns reared for them by pious hands.
+
+The extent, diversity, and populousness of the Irish mythological
+cycles, the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of
+that mythology of which the Tuatha De Danan, i.e., the gods of the
+historic period, were the final development, can only be rightly
+apprehended by one who reads the bardic literature as it deals with
+this subject. That literature, however, so far from having been
+printed and published, has not even been translated, but still
+moulders in the public libraries of Europe, those who, like myself,
+are not professed Irish scholars, being obliged to collect their
+information piece-meal from quotations and allusions of those who
+have written upon the subject in the English or Latin language. For
+to read the originals aright needs many years of labour, the Irish
+tongue presenting at different epochs the characteristics of
+distinct languages, while the peculiarities of ancient caligraphy,
+in the defaced and illegible manuscripts, form of themselves quite
+a large department of study. Stated succinctly, the mythological
+record of the bards, with its chronological decorations, runs thus:--
+
+AGE OF KEASAIR.
+
+2379 B.C. the gods of the KEASAIRIAN cycle, Bith, Lara, and
+Fintann, and their wives, KEASAIR, Barran and Balba; their sacred
+places, Carn Keshra, Keasair's tomb or temple, on the banks of the
+Boyle, Ard Laran on the Wexford Coast, Fert Fintann on the shores
+of Lough Derg.
+
+About the same time Lot Luaimenich, Lot of the Lower Shannon, an
+ancient sylvan deity.
+
+AGE OF PARTHOLAN AND THE EARLIEST FOMORIAN GODS.
+
+2057 B.C. a new spiritual dynasty, of which PARTHOLAN was father
+and king. Though their worship was extended over Ireland, which is
+shown by the many different places connected with their history,
+yet the hill of Tallaght, ten miles from Dublin, was where they
+were chiefly adored. Here to the present day are the mounds and
+barrows raised in honour of the deified heroes of this cycle,
+PARTHOLAN himself, his wife Delgna, his sons, Rury, Slaney, and
+Laighlinni, and among others, the father of Irish hospitality,
+bearing the expressive name of Beer. Now first appear the Fomoroh
+giant princes, under the leadership of curt Kical, son of Niul, son
+of Garf, son of U-Mor--a divine cycle intervening between KEASAIR
+and PARTHOLAN, but not of sufficient importance to secure a
+separate chapter and distinct place in the annals. Battles now
+between the Clan Partholan and the Fomoroh, on the plain of Ith,
+beside the river Finn, Co. Donegal, so called from Ith [Note: See
+Vol. I, p. 60], son of Brogan, the most ancient of the heroes,
+slain here by the Tuatha De Danan, but more anciently known by some
+lost Fomorian name; also at Iorrus Domnan, now Erris, Co. Mayo,
+where Kical and his Fomorians first reached Ireland. These battles
+are a parable--objective representations of a fact in the mental
+history of the ancient Irish--typifying the invisible war waged
+between Partholanian and Fomorian deities for the spiritual
+sovereignty of the Gael.
+
+AGE OF THE NEMEDIAN GODS AND SECOND CYCLE OF THE FOMORIANS.
+
+1700 B.C. age of the NEMEDIAN divinities, a later branch of the
+PARTHOLANIAN _vide post_ NEMEDIAN pedigree. NEMEDH, his wife Maca
+(first appearance of Macha, the war goddess, who gave her name to
+Armagh, i.e., Ard Macha, the Height of Macha), Iarbanel; Fergus,
+the Red-sided, and Starn, sons of Nemedh; Beothah, son of Iarbanel;
+Erglann, son of Beoan, son of Starn; Simeon Brac, son of Starn;
+Ibath, son of Beothach; Britan Mael, son of Fergus. This must be
+remembered, that not one of the almost countless names that figure
+in the Irish mythology is of fanciful origin. They all represent
+antique heroes and heroines, their names being preserved in
+connection with those monuments which were raised for purposes of
+sepulture or cult.
+
+Wars now between the Clanna Nemedh and the second cycle of the
+Fomoroh, led this time by Faebar and More, sons of Dela, and
+Coning, son of Faebar; battles at Ros Freachan, now Rosreahan,
+barony of Murresk, Co. Mayo, at Slieve Blahma [Note: Slieve
+Blahma, now Slieve Bloom, a mountain range famous in our mythology;
+one of the peaks, Ard Erin, sacred to Eire, a goddess of the Tuatha
+De Danan, who has given her name to the island. The sites of all
+these mythological battles, where they are not placed in the
+haunted mountains, will be found to be a place of raths and
+cromlechs.] and Murbolg, in Dalaradia (Murbolg, i.e., the
+stronghold of the giants,) also at Tor Coning, now Tory Island.
+
+FIRBOLGS AND THIRD CYCLE OF THE FOMOROH.
+
+1525 B.C. Age of the FIRBOLGS and third cycle of the Fomorians,
+once gods, but expulsed from their sovereignty by the Tuatha De
+Danan, after which they loom through the heroic literature as
+giants of the elder time, overthrown by the gods. From the FIRBOLGS
+were descended, or claimed to have descended, the Connaught
+warriors who fought with Queen Meave against Cuculain, also the
+Clan Humor, appearing in the Second Volume, also the heroes of
+Ossian, the Fianna Eireen. Even in the time of Keating, Irish
+families traced thither their pedigrees. The great chiefs of the
+FIR-BOLGIC dynasty were the five sons of Dela, Gann, Genann,
+Sengann, Rury, and Slaney, with their wives Fuad, Edain, Anust,
+Cnucha, and Libra; also their last and most potent king, EOCAIDH
+MAC ERC, son of Ragnal, son of Genann, whose tomb or temple may be
+seen to-day at Ballysadare, Co. Sligo, on the edge of the sea.
+
+The Fomorians of this age were ruled over by Baler Beimenna and
+his wife Kethlenn. Their grandson was Lu Lamada, one of the
+noblest of the Irish gods.
+
+The last of the mythological cycles is that of the Tuatha De Danan,
+whose character, attributes, and history will, I hope, be rendered
+interesting and intelligible in my account of Cuculain and the Red
+Branch of Ulster.
+
+Irish history has suffered from rationalism almost more than from
+neglect and ignorance. The conjectures of the present century are
+founded upon mediaeval attempts to reduce to verisimilitude and
+historical probability what was by its nature quite incapable of
+such treatment. The mythology of the Irish nation, being relieved
+of the marvellous and sublime, was set down with circumstantial
+dates as a portion of the country's history by the literary men of
+the middle ages. Unable to excide from the national narrative those
+mythological beings who filled so great a place in the imagination
+of the times, and unable, as Christians, to describe them in their
+true character as gods, or, as patriots, in the character which
+they believed them to possess, namely, demons, they rationalized
+the whole of the mythological period with names, dates, and ordered
+generations, putting men for gods, flesh and blood for that
+invisible might, till the page bristled with names and dates, thus
+formulating, as annals, what was really the theogony and mythology
+of their country. The error of the mediaeval historians is shared
+by the not wiser moderns. In the generations of the gods we seem to
+see prehistoric racial divisions and large branches of the Aryan
+family, an error which results from a neglect of the bardic
+literature, and a consequently misdirected study of the annals.
+
+As history, the pre-Milesian record contains but a limited supply
+of objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish
+gods, these much abused chronicles are as true as the roll of the
+kings of England.
+
+These divine nations, with their many successive generations and
+dynasties, constitute a single family; they are all inter-connected
+and spring from common sources, and where the literature permits
+us to see more clearly, the earlier races exhibit a common
+character. Like a human clan, the elements of this divine family
+grew and died, and shed forth seedlings which, in time, over-grew
+and killed the parent stock. Great names became obscure and passed
+away, and new ones grew and became great. Gods, worshipped by the
+whole nation, declined and became topical, and minor deities
+expanding, became national. Gods lost their immortality, and were
+remembered as giants of the old time--mighty men, which were of
+yore, men of renown.
+
+ "The gods which were of old time rest in their tombs,"
+
+sang the Egyptians, consciously ascribing mortality even to gods.
+Such was Mac Ere, King of Fir-bolgs. His temple [Note: Strand near
+Ballysadare, Co. Sligo], beside the sea at Iorrus Domnan [Note:
+Keating--evidently quoting a bardic historian], became his tomb.
+Daily the salt tide embraces the feet of the great tumulus, regal
+amongst its smaller comrades, where the last king of Fir-bolgs was
+worshipped by his people. "Good [Note: Temple--vide post.] were the
+years of the sovereignty of Mac Ere. There was no wet or
+tempestuous weather in Ireland, nor was there any unfruitful year."
+Such were all the predecessors of the children of Dana--gods which
+were of old times, that rest in their tombs; and the days, too, of
+the Tuatha De Danan were numbered. They, too, smitten by a more
+celestial light, vanished from their hills, like Ossian lamenting
+over his own heroes; those others still mightier, might say:--
+
+ "Once every step which we took might be heard throughout the
+ firmament. Now, all have gone, they have melted into the air."
+
+But that divine tree, though it had its branches in fairy-land, had
+its roots in the soil of Erin. An unceasing translation of heroes
+into Tir-na-n-og went on through time, the fairy-world of the
+bards, receiving every century new inhabitants, whose humbler human
+origin being forgotten, were supplied there with both wives and
+children. The apotheosis of great men went forward, tirelessly; the
+hero of one epoch becoming the god of the next, until the formation
+of the Tuatha De Danan, who represent the gods of the historic
+ages. Had the advent of exact genealogy been delayed, and the
+creative imagination of the bards suffered to work on for a couple
+of centuries longer, unchecked by the historical conscience,
+Cuculain's human origin would, perhaps, have been forgotten, and he
+would have been numbered amongst the Tuatha De Danan, probably, as
+the son of Lu Lamfada and the Moreega, his patron deities. It was,
+indeed, a favourite fancy of the bards that not Sualtam, but Lu
+Lamfada himself, was his father; this, however, in a spiritual or
+supernatural sense, for his age was far removed from that of the
+Tuatha De Danan, and falling well within the scope of the historic
+period. Even as late as the time of Alexander, the Greeks could
+believe a great contemporary warrior to be of divine origin, and
+the son of Zeus.
+
+When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their
+country, they naturally commenced with the enumeration of the elder
+gods. I at one time suspected that the long pedigrees running
+between those several divisions of the mythological period were the
+invention of mediaeval historians, anxious to spin out the national
+record, that it might reach to Shinar and the dispersion. Not only,
+however, was such fabrication completely foreign to the genius of
+the literature, but in the fragments of those early divine cycles,
+we see that each of these personages was at one time the centre of
+a literature, and holds a definite place as regards those who went
+before and came after. These pedigrees, as I said before, have no
+historical meaning, being pre-Milesian, and therefore absolutely
+prehistoric; but as the genealogy of the gods, and as representing
+the successive generations of that invisible family, whose history
+not one or ten bards, but the whole bardic and druidic organisation
+of the island, delighted to record, collate, and verify--those
+pedigrees are as reliable as that of any of the regal clans. They
+represent accurately the mythological panorama, as it unrolled
+itself slowly through the centuries before the imagination and
+spirit of our ancestors accurately that divine drama, millennium--
+lasting, with its exits and entrances of gods. Millennium-lasting,
+and more so, for it is plain that one divine generation represents
+on the average a much greater space of time than a generation of
+mortal men. The former probably represents the period which would
+elapse before a hero would become so divine, that is, so
+consecrated in the imagination of the country, as to be received
+into the family of the gods. Cuculain died in the era of the
+Incarnation, three hundred years, if not more, before the country
+even began to be Christianised, yet he is never spoken of as
+anything but a great hero, from which one of two things would
+follow, either that the apotheosis of heroes needed the lapse of
+centuries, or that, during the first, second, third, and fourth
+centuries, the historical conscience was so enlightened, and a
+positive definite knowledge of the past so universal, that the
+translation of heroes into the divine clans could no longer take
+place. The latter is indeed the more correct view; but the reader
+will, I think, agree with me that the divine generations, taken
+generally, represent more than the average space of man's life. To
+what remote unimagined distances of time those earlier cycles
+extend has been shown by an examination of the tombs of the lower
+Moy Tura. The ancient heroes there interred were those who, as
+Fir-bolgs, preceded the reign of the Tuath De Danan, coming long
+after the Clanna Nemedh in the divine cycle, who were themselves
+preceded by the children of Partholan, who were subsequent to the
+Queen Keasair. Such then being the position in the divine cycle of
+the Fir-bolgs, an examination of the Firbolgic raths on Moy Tura
+has revealed only implements of stone, proving demonstratively that
+the early divine cycles originated before the bronze age in
+Ireland, whenever that commenced. Those heroes who, as Fir-bolgs,
+received divine honours, lived in the age of stone. So far is it
+from being the case, that the mythological record has been extended
+and unduly stretched, to enable the monkish historians to connect
+the Irish pedigrees with those of the Mosaic record, that it has, I
+believe, been contracted for this purpose.
+
+The reader will be now prepared to peruse with some interest and
+understanding one or two of the mythological pedigrees. To these I
+have at times appended the dates, as given in the chronicles, to
+show how the early historians rationalised the pre-historic record.
+
+Angus Og, the Beautiful, represents the Greek Eros. He was surnamed
+Og, or young; Mac-an-Og, or the son of youth; Mac-an-Dagda, son of
+the Dagda. He was represented with a harp, and attended by bright
+birds, his own transformed kisses, at whose singing love arose in
+the hearts of youths and maidens. To him and to his father the
+great tumulus of New Grange, upon the Boyne, was sacred.
+
+ "I visited the Royal Brugh that stands
+ By the dark-rolling waters of the Boyne,
+ Where Angus Og magnificently dwells."
+
+He was the patron god of Diarmid, the Paris of Ossian's Fianna, and
+removed him into Tir-na-n-Og, when he died, having been ripped by
+the tusks of the wild boar on the peaks of Slieve Gulban.
+
+Lu Lamfada was the patron god of Cuculain. He was surnamed Ioldana,
+as the source of the sciences, and represented the Greek Apollo.
+The latter was argurgurotoxos [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the
+original], but Lu was a sling bearing god. Of Fomorian descent
+on the mother's side, he joined his father's people, the Tuatha
+De Danan, in the great war against the Fomoroh. He is principally
+celebrated for his oppression of the sons of Turann, in vengeance
+for the murder of his father.
+
+ANGUS OG, (circa 1500 B.C.) LU LAMFADA, (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+THE DAGDA, (Zeus) Cian,
+ son of son of
+Elathan, Diancect, (god the healer)
+ son of son of
+Dela, Esric,
+ son of son of
+Ned, Dela,
+ son of son of
+Indaei, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of
+ ALLDAEI.
+
+Amongst other Irish gods was Bove Derg, who dwelt invisible in
+the Galtee mountains, and in the hills above Lough Derg. The
+transformed children alluded to in Vol. I. were his grand-children.
+It was his goldsmith Len, who gave its ancient name to the Lakes of
+Killarney, Locha Lein. Here by the lake he worked, surrounded by
+rainbows and showers of fiery dew.
+
+Mananan was the god of the sea, of winds and storms, and most
+skilled in magic lore. He was friendly to Cuculain, and was invoked
+by seafaring men. He was called the Far Shee of the promontories.
+
+BOVE DERG (circa 1500 B.C.) MANANAN (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+Eocaidh Garf, Alloid,
+ son of son of
+Duach Temen, Elathan,
+ son of son of
+Bras, Dela,
+ son of son of
+Dela, Ned,
+ son of son of
+Ned, Indaei,
+ son of son of
+Indaei,
+ son of
+ ALLDAEI.
+
+The Tuatha De Danan maybe counted literally by the hundred, each
+with a distinct history, and all descended from Alldaei.
+
+From Alldaei the pedigree runs back thus:--
+
+ Alldaei
+ son of
+ Tath,
+ son of
+ Tabarn,
+ son of
+ Enna,
+ son of
+ Baath,
+ son of
+ Ebat,
+ son of
+ Betah,
+ son of
+ Iarbanel,
+ son of
+ NEMEDH (circa 1700 B.C.)
+
+Nemedh, as I have said, forms one of the great epochs in the
+mythological record. As will be seen, he and the earlier Partholan
+have a common source:--
+
+NEMEDH
+ son of
+Sera,
+ son of
+Pamp,
+ son of
+Tath, PARTHOLAN (2000 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Sru,
+ son of
+ Esru,
+ son of
+ Pramant.
+
+The connection between Keasair, the earliest of the Irish gods, and
+the rest of the cycle, I have not discovered, but am confident of
+its existence.
+
+How this divine cycle can be expunged from the history of Ireland I
+am at a loss to see. The account which a nation renders of itself
+must, and always does, stand at the head of every history.
+
+How different is this from the history and genealogy of the Greek
+gods which runs thus:--
+
+ The Olympian gods,
+ Titans,
+ Physical entities, Nox, Chaos, &c.
+
+The Greek gods, undoubtedly, had a long ancestry extending into the
+depths of the past, but the sudden advent of civilisation broke up
+the bardic system before the historians could become philosophical,
+or philosophers interested in antiquities.
+
+But the Irish history corrects our view with regard to other
+matters connected with the gods of the Aryan nations of Europe
+also.
+
+All the nations of Europe lived at one time under the bardic and
+druidic system, and under that system imagined their gods and
+elaborated their various theogonies, yet, in no country in Europe
+has a bardic literature been preserved except in Ireland, for no
+thinking man can believe Homer to have been a product of that rude
+type of civilisation of which he sings. This being the case, modern
+philosophy, accounting for the origin of the classical deities by
+guesses and _a priori_ reasonings, has almost universally adopted
+that explanation which I have, elsewhere, called Wordsworthian, and
+which derives them directly from the imagination personifying the
+aspects of nature.
+
+ "In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretched
+ On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
+ With music lulled his indolent repose,
+ And in some fit of weariness if he,
+ When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
+ A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
+ Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched,
+ Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
+ A beardless youth who touched a golden lute
+ And filled the illumined groves with ravishment--
+ ***
+ "Sunbeams upon distant hills,
+ Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
+ Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
+ Into fleet oreads, sporting visibly."
+
+This is pretty, but untrue. In all the ancient Irish literature we
+find the connection of the gods, both those who survived into the
+historic times, and those whom they had dethroned, with the raths
+and cairns perpetually and almost universally insisted upon. The
+scene of the destruction of the Firbolgs will be found to be a
+place of tombs, the metropolis of the Fomorians a place of tombs,
+and a place of tombs the sacred home of the Tuatha along the shores
+of the Boyne. Doubtless, they are represented also as dwelling in
+the hills, lakes, and rivers, but still the connection between the
+great raths and cairns and the gods is never really forgotten. When
+the floruit of a god has expired, he is assigned a tomb in one of
+the great tumuli. No one can peruse this ancient literature without
+seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods, _videlicet_ heroes,
+passing, through the imagination and through the region of poetic
+representation, into the world of the supernatural. When a king
+died, his people raised his ferta, set up his stone, and engraved
+upon it, at least in later times, his name in ogham. They
+celebrated his death with funeral lamentations and funeral games,
+and listened to the bards chanting his prowess, his liberality, and
+his beauty. In the case of great warriors, these games and
+lamentations became periodical. It is distinctly recorded in many
+places, for instance in connection with Taylti, who gave her name
+to Taylteen and Garman, who gave her name to Loch Garman, now
+Wexford, and with Lu Lamfada, whose annual worship gave its name to
+the Kalends of August. Gradually, as his actual achievements became
+more remote, and the imagination of the bards, proportionately,
+more unrestrained, he would pass into the world of the supernatural.
+Even in the case of a hero so surrounded with historic light as
+Cuculain we find a halo, as of godhood, often settling around him.
+His gray warsteed had already passed into the realm of mythical
+representation, as a second avatar of the Liath Macha, the grey
+war-horse of the war-goddess Macha. This could be believed, even
+in the days when the imagination was controlled by the annalists
+and tribal heralds.
+
+The gods of the Irish were their deified ancestors. They were not
+the offspring of the poetic imagination, personifying the various
+aspects of nature. Traces, indeed, we find of their influence over
+the operations of nature, but they are, upon the whole, slight and
+unimportant. From nature they extract her secrets by their
+necromantic and magical labours, but nature is as yet too great to
+be governed and impelled by them. The Irish Apollo had not yet
+entered into the sun.
+
+Like every country upon which imperial Rome did not leave the
+impress of her genius, Ireland, in these ethnic times, attained
+only a partial unity. The chief king indeed presided at Tara, and
+enjoyed the reputation and emoluments flowing to him on that
+account, but, upon the whole, no Irish king exercised more than a
+local sovereignty; they were all reguli, petty kings, and their
+direct authority was small. This being the case, it would appear to
+me that in the more ancient times the death of a king would not be
+an event which would disturb a very extensive district, and that,
+though his tomb might be considerable, it would not be gigantic.
+
+Now on the banks of the Boyne, opposite Rosnaree, there stands a
+tumulus, said to be the greatest in Europe. It covers acres of
+ground, being of proportionate height. The earth is confined by a
+compact stone wall about twelve feet high. The central chamber,
+made of huge irregular pebbles, is about twenty feet from ground to
+roof, communicating with the outer air by a flagged passage.
+Immense pebbles, drawn from the County of Antrim, stand around it,
+each of which, even to move at all, would require the labour of
+many men, assisted with mechanical appliances. It is, of course,
+impossible to make an accurate estimate of the expenditure of
+labour necessary for the construction of such a work, but it would
+seem to me to require thousands of men working for years. Can we
+imagine that a petty king of those times could, after his death,
+when probably his successor had enough to do to sustain his new
+authority, command such labour merely to provide for himself a
+tomb. If this tomb were raised to the hero whose name it bears
+immediately after his death, and in his mundane character, he must
+have been such a king as never existed in Ireland, even in the late
+Christian times. Even Brian of the Tributes himself, could not have
+commanded such a sepulture, or anything like it, living though he
+did, probably, two thousand years later than that Eocaidh Mac
+Elathan, whenever he did live. There is a _nodus_ here needing a
+god to solve it.
+
+Returning now to what would most likely take place after the
+interment of a hero, we may well imagine that the size of his tomb
+would be in proportion to the love which he inspired, where no
+accidental causes would interfere with the gratification of that
+feeling. Of one of his heroes, Ossian, sings--
+
+ "We made his cairn great and high
+ Like a king's."
+
+After that there would be periodical meetings in his honour, the
+celebration of games, solemn recitations by bards, singing his
+aristeia [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original]. Gradually
+the new wine would burst the old bottles. The ever-active,
+eager-loving imagination would behold the champion grown to
+heroic proportions, the favourite of the gods, the performer of
+superhuman feats. The tomb, which was once commensurate with the
+love and reverence which he inspired, would seem so now no longer.
+The tribal bards, wandering or attending the great fairs and
+assemblies, would disperse among strangers and neighbours a
+knowledge of his renown. In the same cemetery or neighbourhood
+their might be other tombs of heroes now forgotten, while he,
+whose fame was in every bardic mouth in all that region, was
+honoured only with a tomb no greater than theirs. The mere king
+or champion, grown into a topical hero, would need a greater tomb.
+
+Ere long again, owing to the bardic fraternity, who, though coming
+from Innishowen or Cape Clear, formed a single community, the
+topical hero would, in some cases, where his character was such as
+would excite deeper reverence and greater fame, grow into a
+national hero, and a still nobler tomb be required, in order that
+the visible memorial might prove commensurate with the imaginative
+conception.
+
+Now all this time the periodic celebrations, the games, and
+lamentations, and songs would be assuming a more solemn character.
+Awe would more and more mingle with the other feelings inspired by
+his name. Certain rites and a certain ritual would attend those
+annual games and lamentations, which would formerly not have been
+suitable, and eventually, when the hero, slowly drawing nearer
+through generations, if not centuries, at last reached Tir-na-n-Og,
+and was received into the family of the gods, a religious feeling
+of a different nature would mingle with the more secular
+celebration of his memory, and his rath or cairn would assume in
+their eyes a new character.
+
+To an ardent imaginative people the complete extinction by death of
+a much-loved hero would even at first be hardly possible. That the
+tomb which held his ashes should be looked upon as the house of
+the hero must have been, even shortly after his interment, a
+prevailing sentiment, whether expressed or not. Also, the feeling
+must have been present, that the hero in whose honour they
+performed the annual games, and periodically chanted the
+remembrance of whose achievements, saw and heard those things that
+were done in his honour. But as the celebration became greater and
+more solemn, this feeling would become more strong, and as the
+tomb, from a small heap of stones or low mound, grew into an
+enormous and imposing rath, the belief that this was the hero's
+house, in which he invisibly dwelt, could not be avoided, even
+before they ceased to regard him as a disembodied hero; and after
+the hero had mingled with the divine clans, and was numbered
+amongst the gods, the idea that the rath was a tomb could not
+logically be entertained. As a god, was he not one of those who had
+eaten of the food provided by Mananan, and therefore never died.
+The rath would then become his house or temple. As matter of fact,
+the bardic writings teem with this idea. From reason and
+probability, we would with some certainty conclude that the great
+tumulus of New Grange was the temple of some Irish god; but that it
+was so, we know as a fact. The father and king of the gods is
+alluded to as dwelling there, going out from thence, and returning
+again, and there holding his invisible court.
+
+ "Behold the _Sid_ before your eyes,
+ It is manifest to you that it is a king's mansion."
+[Note: O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History, page 505.]
+
+ "Bove Derg went to visit the Dagda at the Brugh of Mac-An-Og."
+[Note: "Dream of Angus," Revue Celtique, Vol. III., page 349.]
+
+Here also dwelt Angus Og, the son of the Dagda. In this, his spiritual
+court or temple, he is represented as having entertained Oscar and
+the Ossianic heroes, and thither he conducted [Note: Publications of
+Ossianic Society, Vol. III., page 201.] the spirit of Diarmid, that
+he might have him for ever there.
+
+In the etymology also we see the origin of the Irish gods. A grave
+in Irish is Sid, the disembodied spirit is Sidhe, and this latter
+word glosses Tuatha De Danan.
+
+The fact that the grave of a hero developed slowly into the temple
+of a god, explains certain obscurities in the annals and
+literature. As a hero was exalted into a god, so in turn a god sank
+into a hero, or rather into the race of the giants. The elder gods,
+conquered and destroyed by the younger, could no longer be regarded
+as really divine, for were they not proved to be mortal? The
+development of the temple from the tomb was not forgotten, the
+whole country being filled with such tombs and incipient temples,
+from the great Brugh on the Boyne to the smallest mound in any of
+the cemeteries. Thus, when the elder gods lost their spiritual
+sovereignty, and their destruction at the hands of the younger took
+the form of great battles, then as the god was forced to become a
+giant, so his temple was remembered to be a tomb. Doubtless, in his
+own territory, divine honours were still paid him; but in the
+national imagination and in the classical literature and received
+history, he was a giant of the olden time, slain by the gods, and
+interred in the rath which bore his name. Such was the great Mac
+Erc, King of Fir-bolgs.
+
+Again, when the mediaeval Christians ceased to regard the Tuatha De
+Danan as devils, and proceeded to rationalise the divine record as
+the ethnic bards had rationalised the history of the early gods;
+the Tuatha De Danan, shorn of immortality, became ancient heroes
+who had lived their day and died, and the greater raths, no longer
+the houses of the gods, figure in that literature irrationally
+rational, as their tombs. Thus we are gravely informed [Note:
+Annals of Four Masters.] that "the Dagda Mor, after the second
+battle of Moy Tura, retired to the Brugh on the Boyne, where he
+died from the venom of the wounds inflicted on him by Kethlenn"--
+the Fomorian amazon--"and was there interred." Even in this passage
+the writer seems to have been unable to dispossess his mind quite
+of the traditional belief that the Brugh was the Dagda's house.
+
+The peculiarity of this mound, in addition to its size, is the
+spaciousness of the central chamber. This was that germ which, but
+for the overthrow of the bardic religion, would have developed into
+a temple in the classic sense of the word. A two-fold motive would
+have impelled the growing civilisation in this direction. A desire
+to make the house of the god as spacious within as it was great
+without, and a desire to transfer his worship, or the more esoteric
+and solemn part of it, from without to within. Either the absence
+of architectural knowledge, or the force of conservatism, or the
+advent of the Christian missionaries, checked any further
+development on these lines.
+
+Elsewhere the tomb, instead of developing as a tumulus or barrow,
+produced the effect of greatness by huge circumvallations of earth,
+and massive walls of stone. Such is the temple of Ned the war-god,
+called Aula Neid, the court or palace of Ned, near the Foyle in
+the North. Had the ethnic civilisation of Ireland been suffered to
+develop according to its own laws, it is probable that, as the
+roofed central chamber of the cairn would have grown until it
+filled the space occupied by the mound, so the open-walled temple
+would have developed into a covered building, by the elevation of
+the walls, and their gradual inclination to the centre.
+
+The bee-hive houses of the monks, the early churches, and the round
+towers are a development of that architecture which constructed the
+central chambers of the raths. In this fact lies, too, the
+explanation of the cyclopean style of building which characterizes
+our most ancient buildings. The cromlech alone, formed in very
+ancient times the central chamber of the cairn; it is found in the
+centre of the raths on Moy Tura, belonging to the stone age and
+that of the Firbolgs. When the cromlech fell into disuse, the
+arched chamber above the ashes of the hero was constructed with
+enormous stones, as a substitute for the majestic appearance
+presented by the massive slab and supporting pillars of the more
+ancient cromlech, and the early stone buildings preserved the same
+characteristic to a certain extent.
+
+The same sentiment which caused the mediaeval Christians to
+disinter and enshrine the bones of their saints, and subsequently
+to re-enshrine them with greater art and more precious materials,
+caused the ethnic worshippers of heroes to erect nobler tombs over
+the inurned relics of those whom they revered, as the meanness of
+the tomb was seen to misrepresent and humiliate the sublimity of
+the conception. But the Christians could never have imagined their
+saints to have been anything but men--a fact which caused the
+retention and preservation of the relics. When the Gentiles exalted
+their hero into a god, the charred bones were forgotten or ascribed
+to another. The hero then became immortal in his own right; he had
+feasted with Mananan and eaten his life-giving food, and would not
+know death.
+
+When the mortal character of the hero was forgotten, his house or
+temple might be erected anywhere. The great Raths of the Boyne--a
+place grown sacred from causes which we may not now learn--
+represented, probably, heroes and heroines, who died and were
+interred in many different parts of the country.
+
+To recapitulate, the Dagda Mor was a divine title given to a hero
+named Eocaidh, who lived many centuries before the birth of Christ,
+and in the depths of the pre-historic ages. He was the mortal scion
+or ward of an elder god, Elathan, and was interred in some unknown
+grave--marked, perhaps, by a plain pillar stone, or small
+insignificant cairn.
+
+The great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of the divine or
+supernatural period of his spiritual or imagined career after
+death, and was a development by steps from that small unremembered
+grave where once his warriors hid the inurned ashes of the hero.
+
+What is true of one branch of the Aryan family is true of all.
+Sentiments of such universality and depth must have been common to
+all. If this be so, the Olympian Zeus himself was once some rude
+chieftain dwelling in Thrace or Macedonia, and his sublime temple
+of Doric architecture traceable to some insignificant cairn or
+flagged cist in Greece, or some earlier home of the Hellenic race,
+and his name not Zeus, but another; and Kronos, that god whom he,
+as a living wight, adored, and under whose protection and favour he
+prospered.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND. ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Early Bardic Literature, Ireland.
+by Standish O'Grady
+
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+Title: Early Bardic Literature, Ireland.
+
+Author: Standish O'Grady
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8109]
+[This file was first posted on June 15, 2003]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND. ***
+
+
+
+
+Credit: Ar dTeanga Fein (www.adft.org)
+
+
+
+EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND.
+
+by
+
+Standish O'Grady
+
+11 Lower Fitzwilliam Street, Dublin
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Scattered over the surface of every country in Europe may be found
+sepulchral monuments, the remains of pre-historic times and
+nations, and of a phase of life will civilisation which has long
+since passed away. No country in Europe is without its cromlechs
+and dolmens, huge earthen tumuli, great flagged sepulchres, and
+enclosures of tall pillar-stones. The men by whom these works were
+made, so interesting in themselves, and so different from anything
+of the kind erected since, were not strangers and aliens, but our
+own ancestors, and out of their rude civilisation our own has
+slowly grown. Of that elder phase of European civilisation no
+record or tradition has been anywhere bequeathed to us. Of its
+nature, and the ideas and sentiments whereby it was sustained,
+nought may now be learned save by an examination of those tombs
+themselves, and of the dumb remnants, from time to time exhumed out
+of their soil--rude instruments of clay, flint, brass, and gold,
+and by speculations and reasonings founded upon these archaeological
+gleanings, meagre and sapless.
+
+For after the explorer has broken up, certainly desecrated, and
+perhaps destroyed, those noble sepulchral raths; after he has
+disinterred the bones laid there once by pious hands, and the urn
+with its unrecognisable ashes of king or warrior, and by the
+industrious labour of years hoarded his fruitless treasure of stone
+celt and arrow-head, of brazen sword and gold fibula and torque;
+and after the savant has rammed many skulls with sawdust, measuring
+their capacity, and has adorned them with some obscure label, and
+has tabulated and arranged the implements and decorations of flint
+and metal in the glazed cases of the cold gaunt museum, the
+imagination, unsatisfied and revolted, shrinks back from all that
+he has done. Still we continue to inquire, receiving from him no
+adequate response, Who were those ancient chieftains and warriors
+for whom an affectionate people raised those strange tombs? What
+life did they lead? What deeds perform? How did their personality
+affect the minds of their people and posterity? How did our
+ancestors look upon those great tombs, certainly not reared to be
+forgotten, and how did they--those huge monumental pebbles and
+swelling raths--enter into and affect the civilisation or religion
+of the times?
+
+We see the cromlech with its massive slab and immense supporting
+pillars, but we vainly endeavour to imagine for whom it was first
+erected, and how that greater than cyclopean house affected the
+minds of those who made it, or those who were reared in its
+neighbourhood or within reach of its influence. We see the stone
+cist with its great smooth flags, the rocky cairn, and huge barrow
+and massive walled cathair, but the interest which they invariably
+excite is only aroused to subside again unsatisfied. From this
+department of European antiquities the historian retires baffled,
+and the dry savant is alone master of the field, but a field which,
+as cultivated by him alone, remains barren or fertile only in
+things the reverse of exhilarating. An antiquarian museum is more
+melancholy than a tomb.
+
+But there is one country in Europe in which, by virtue of a
+marvellous strength and tenacity of the historical intellect, and
+of filial devotedness to the memory of their ancestors, there have
+been preserved down into the early phases of mediaeval civilisation,
+and then committed to the sure guardianship of manuscript, the hymns,
+ballads, stories, and chronicles, the names, pedigrees, achievements,
+and even characters, of those ancient kings and warriors over whom
+those massive cromlechs were erected and great cairns piled. There
+is not a conspicuous sepulchral monument in Ireland, the traditional
+history of which is not recorded in our ancient literature, and of
+the heroes in whose honour they were raised. In the rest of Europe
+there is not a single barrow, dolmen, or cist of which the ancient
+traditional history is recorded; in Ireland there is hardly one
+of which it is not. And these histories are in many cases as rich
+and circumstantial as that of men of the greatest eminence who have
+lived in modern times. Granted that the imagination which for
+centuries followed with eager interest the lives of these heroes,
+beheld as gigantic what was not so, as romantic and heroic what was
+neither one nor the other, still the great fact remains, that it
+was beside and in connection with the mounds and cairns that this
+history was elaborated, and elaborated concerning them and
+concerning the heroes to whom they were sacred.
+
+On the plain of Tara, beside the little stream Nemanna, itself
+famous as that which first turned a mill-wheel in Ireland, there
+lies a barrow, not itself very conspicuous in the midst of others,
+all named and illustrious in the ancient literature of the country.
+The ancient hero there interred is to the student of the Irish
+bardic literature a figure as familiar and clearly seen as any
+personage in the Biographia Britannica. We know the name he bore as
+a boy and the name he bore as a man. We know the names of his
+father and his grandfather, and of the father of his grandfather,
+of his mother, and the father and mother of his mother, and the
+pedigrees and histories of each of these. We know the name of his
+nurse, and of his children, and of his wife, and the character of
+his wife, and of the father and mother of his wife, and where they
+lived and were buried. We know all the striking events of his
+boyhood and manhood, the names of his horses and his weapons, his
+own character and his friends, male and female. We know his
+battles, and the names of those whom he slew in battle, and how he
+was himself slain, and by whose hands. We know his physical and
+spiritual characteristics, the device upon his shield, and how that
+was originated, carved, and painted, by whom. We know the colour of
+his hair, the date of his birth and of his death, and his
+relations, in time and otherwise, with the remainder of the princes
+and warriors with whom, in that mound-raising period of our
+history, he was connected, in hostility or friendship; and all this
+enshrined in ancient song, the transmitted traditions of the people
+who raised that barrow, and who laid within it sorrowing their
+brave ruler and, defender. That mound is the tomb of Cuculain, once
+king of the district in which Dundalk stands to-day, and the ruins
+of whose earthen fortification may still be seen two miles from
+that town.
+
+This is a single instance, and used merely as an example, but one
+out of a multitude almost as striking. There is not a king of
+Ireland, described as such in the ancient annals, whose barrow is
+not mentioned in these or other compositions, and every one of
+which may at the present day be identified where the ignorant
+plebeian or the ignorant patrician has not destroyed them. The
+early History of Ireland clings around and grows out of the Irish
+barrows until, with almost the universality of that primeval forest
+from which Ireland took one of its ancient names, the whole isle
+and all within it was clothed with a nobler raiment, invisible, but
+not the less real, of a full and luxuriant history, from whose
+presence, all-embracing, no part was free. Of the many poetical and
+rhetorical titles lavished upon this country, none is truer than
+that which calls her the Isle of Song. Her ancient history passed
+unceasingly into the realm of artistic representation; the history
+of one generation became the poetry of the next, until the whole
+island was illuminated and coloured by the poetry of the bards.
+Productions of mere fancy and imagination these songs are not,
+though fancy and imagination may have coloured and shaped all their
+subject-matter, but the names are names of men and women who once
+lived and died in Ireland, and over whom their people raised the
+swelling rath and reared the rocky cromlech. In the sepulchral
+monuments their names were preserved, and in the performance of
+sacred rites, and the holding of games, fairs, and assemblies in
+their honour, the memory of their achievements kept fresh, till the
+traditions that clung around these places were inshrined in tales
+which were finally incorporated in the Leabhar na Huidhré and the
+Book of Leinster.
+
+Pre-historic narrative is of two kinds--in one the imagination is
+at work consciously, in the other unconsciously. Legends of the
+former class are the product of a lettered and learned age. The
+story floats loosely in a world of imagination. The other sort of
+pre-historic narrative clings close to the soil, and to visible and
+tangible objects. It may be legend, but it is legend believed in as
+history never consciously invented, and growing out of certain
+spots of the earth's surface, and supported by and drawing its life
+from the soil like a natural growth.
+
+Such are the early Irish tales that cling around the mounds and
+cromlechs as that by which they are sustained, which was originally
+their source, and sustained them afterwards in a strong enduring
+life. It is evident that these cannot be classed with stories that
+float vaguely in an ideal world, which may happen in one place as
+well as another, and in which the names might be disarrayed without
+changing the character and consistency of the tale, and its
+relations, in time or otherwise, with other tales.
+
+Foreigners are surprised to find the Irish claim for their own
+country an antiquity and a history prior to that of the
+neighbouring countries. Herein lie the proof and the explanation.
+The traditions and history of the mound-raising period have in
+other countries passed away. Foreign conquest, or less intrinsic
+force of imagination, and pious sentiment have suffered them to
+fall into oblivion; but in Ireland they have been all preserved in
+their original fulness and vigour, hardly a hue has faded, hardly a
+minute circumstance or articulation been suffered to decay.
+
+The enthusiasm with which the Irish intellect seized upon the grand
+moral life of Christianity, and ideals so different from, and so
+hostile to, those of the heroic age, did not consume the traditions
+or destroy the pious and reverent spirit in which men still looked
+back upon those monuments of their own pagan teachers and kings,
+and the deep spirit of patriotism and affection with which the
+mind still clung to the old heroic age, whose types were warlike
+prowess, physical beauty, generosity, hospitality, love of family
+and nation, and all those noble attributes which constituted the
+heroic character as distinguished from the saintly. The Danish
+conquest, with its profound modification of Irish society, and
+consequent disruption of old habits and conditions of life, did not
+dissipate it; nor the more dangerous conquest of the Normans, with
+their own innate nobility of character, chivalrous daring, and
+continental grace and civilisation; nor the Elizabethan convulsions
+and systematic repression and destruction of all native phases of
+thought and feeling. Through all these storms, which successively
+assailed the heroic literature of ancient Ireland, it still held
+itself undestroyed. There were still found generous minds to
+shelter and shield the old tales and ballads, to feel the nobleness
+of that life of which they were the outcome, and to resolve that
+the soil of Ireland should not, so far as they had the power to
+prevent it, be denuded of its raiment of history and historic
+romance, or reduced again to primeval nakedness. The fruit of this
+persistency and unquenched love of country and its ancient
+traditions, is left to be enjoyed by us. There is not through the
+length and breadth of the country a conspicuous rath or barrow of
+which we cannot find the traditional history preserved in this
+ancient literature. The mounds of Tara, the great barrows along the
+shores of the Boyne, the raths of Slieve Mish, and Rathcrogan, and
+Teltown, the stone caiseals of Aran and Innishowen, and those that
+alone or in smaller groups stud the country over, are all, or
+nearly all, mentioned in this ancient literature, with the names
+and traditional histories of those over whom they were raised.
+
+There is one thing to be learned from all this, which is, that we,
+at least, should not suffer these ancient monuments to be
+destroyed, whose history has been thus so astonishingly preserved.
+The English farmer may tear down the barrow which is unfortunate
+enough to be situated within his bounds. Neither he nor his
+neighbours know or can tell anything about its ancient history; the
+removed earth will help to make his cattle fatter and improve his
+crops, the stones will be useful to pave his roads and build his
+fences, and the savant can enjoy the rest; but the Irish farmer
+and landlord should not do or suffer this.
+
+The instinctive reverence of the peasantry has hitherto been a
+great preservative; but the spread of education has to a
+considerable extent impaired this kindly sentiment, and the
+progress of scientific farming, and the anxiety of the Royal Irish
+Academy to collect antiquarian trifles, have already led to the
+reckless destruction of too many. I think that no one who reads the
+first two volumes of this history would greatly care to bear a hand
+in the destruction of that tomb at Tara, in which long since his
+people laid the bones of Cuculain; and I think, too, that they
+would not like to destroy any other monument of the same age, when
+they know that the history of its occupant and its own name are
+preserved in the ancient literature, and that they may one day
+learn all that is to be known concerning it. I am sure that if the
+case were put fairly to the Irish landlords and country gentlemen,
+they would neither inflict nor permit this outrage upon the
+antiquities of their country. The Irish country gentleman prides
+himself on his love of trees, and entertains a very wholesome
+contempt for the mercantile boor who, on purchasing an old place,
+chops down the best timber for the market. And yet a tree, though
+cut down, may be replaced. One elm tree is as good as another, and
+the thinned wood, by proper treatment, will be as dense as ever;
+but the ancient mound, once carted away, can never be replaced any
+more. When the study of the Irish literary records is revived, as
+it certainly will be revived, the old history of each of these
+raths and cromlechs will be brought again into the light, and one
+new interest of a beautiful and edifying nature attached to the
+landscape, and affecting wholly for good the minds of our people.
+
+Irishmen are often taunted with the fact that their history is yet
+unwritten, but that the Irish, as a nation, have been careless of
+their past is refuted by the facts which I have mentioned. A people
+who alone in Europe preserved, not in dry chronicles alone, but
+illuminated and adorned with all that fancy could suggest in
+ballad, and tale, and rude epic, the history of the mound-raising
+period, are not justly liable to this taunt. Until very modern
+times, history was the one absorbing pursuit of the Irish secular
+intellect, the delight of the noble, and the solace of the vile.
+
+At present, indeed, the apathy on this subject is, I believe,
+without parallel in the world. It would seem as if the Irish,
+extreme in all things, at one time thought of nothing but their
+history, and, at another, thought of everything but it. Unlike
+those who write on other subjects, the author of a work on Irish
+history has to labour simultaneously at a two-fold task--he has to
+create the interest to which he intends to address himself.
+
+The pre-Christian period of Irish history presents difficulties
+from which the corresponding period in the histories of other
+countries is free. The surrounding nations escape the difficulty by
+having nothing to record. The Irish historian is immersed in
+perplexity on account of the mass of material ready to his hand.
+The English have lost utterly all record of those centuries before
+which the Irish historian stands with dismay and hesitation, not
+through deficiency of materials, but through their excess. Had
+nought but the chronicles been preserved the task would have been
+simple. We would then have had merely to determine approximately
+the date of the introduction of letters, and allowing a margin on
+account of the bardic system and the commission of family and
+national history to the keeping of rhymed and alliterated verse,
+fix upon some reasonable point, and set down in order, the old
+successions of kings and the battles and other remarkable events.
+But in Irish history there remains, demanding treatment, that other
+immense mass of literature of an imaginative nature, illuminating
+with anecdote and tale the events and personages mentioned simply
+and without comment by the chronicler. It is this poetic literature
+which constitutes the stumbling-block, as it constitutes also the
+glory, of early Irish history, for it cannot be rejected and it
+cannot be retained. It cannot be rejected, because it contains
+historical matter which is consonant with and illuminates the dry
+lists of the chronologist, and it cannot be retained, for popular
+poetry is not history; and the task of distinguishing In such
+literature the fact from the fiction--where there is certainly fact
+and certainly fiction--is one of the most difficult to which the
+intellect can apply itself. That this difficulty has not been
+hitherto surmounted by Irish writers is no just reproach. For the
+last century, intellects of the highest attainments, trained and
+educated to the last degree, have been vainly endeavouring to solve
+a similar question in the far less copious and less varied heroic
+literature of Greece. Yet the labours of Wolfe, Grote, Mahaffy,
+Geddes, and Gladstone, have not been sufficient to set at rest the
+small question, whether it was one man or two or many who composed
+the Iliad and Odyssey, while the reality of the achievements of
+Achilles and even his existence might be denied or asserted by a
+scholar without general reproach. When this is the case with regard
+to the great heroes of the Iliad, I fancy it will be some time
+before the same problem will have been solved for the minor
+characters, and as it affects Thersites, or that eminent artist
+who dwelt at home in Hyla, being by far the most excellent of
+leather cutters. When, therefore, Greek still meets Greek in an
+interminable and apparently bloodless contest over the disputed
+body of the Iliad, and still no end appears, surely it would be
+madness for any one to sit down and gaily distinguish true from
+false in the immense and complex mass of the Irish bardic
+literature, having in his ears this century-lasting struggle over a
+single Greek poem and a single small phase of the pre-historic life
+of Hellas.
+
+In the Irish heroic literature, the presence or absence of the
+marvellous supplies _no test whatsoever_ as to the general truth or
+falsehood of the tale in which they appear. The marvellous is
+supplied with greater abundance in the account of the battle of
+Clontarf, and the wars of the O'Briens with the Normans, than in
+the tale in which is described the foundation of Emain Macha by
+Kimbay. Exact-thinking, scientific France has not hesitated to
+paint the battles of Louis XIV. with similar hues; and England,
+though by no means fertile in angelic interpositions, delights to
+adorn the barren tracts of her more popular histories with
+apocryphal anecdotes.
+
+How then should this heroic literature of Ireland be treated in
+connection with the history of the country? The true method would
+certainly be to print it exactly as it is without excision or
+condensation. Immense it is, and immense it must remain. No men
+living, and no men to live, will ever so exhaust the meaning of any
+single tale as to render its publication unnecessary for the study
+of others. The order adopted should be that which the bards
+themselves deter mined, any other would be premature, and I think
+no other will ever take its place. At the commencement should stand
+the passage from the Book of Invasions, describing the occupation
+of the isle by Queen Keasair and her companions, and along with it
+every discoverable tale or poem dealing with this event and those
+characters. After that, all that remains of the cycle of which
+Partholan was the protagonist. Thirdly, all that relates to Nemeth
+and his sons, their wars with curt Kical the bow-legged, and all
+that relates to the Fomoroh of the Nemedian epoch, then first
+moving dimly in the forefront of our history. After that, the great
+Fir-bolgic cycle, a cycle janus-faced, looking on one side to the
+mythological period and the wars of the gods, and on the other, to
+the heroic, and more particularly to the Ultonian cycle. In the
+next place, the immense mass of bardic literature which treats of
+the Irish gods who, having conquered the Fir-bolgs, like the Greek
+gods of the age of gold dwelt visibly in the island until the
+coming of the Clan Milith, out of Spain. In the sixth, the Milesian
+invasion, and every accessible statement concerning the sons and
+kindred of Milesius. In the seventh, the disconnected tales dealing
+with those local heroes whose history is not connected with the
+great cycles, but who in the _fasti_ fill the spaces between the
+divine period and the heroic. In the eighth, the heroic cycles, the
+Ultonian, the Temairian, and the Fenian, and after these the
+historic tales that, without forming cycles, accompany the course
+of history down to the extinction of Irish independence, and the
+transference to aliens of all the great sources of authority in the
+island.
+
+This great work when completed will be of that kind of which no
+other European nation can supply an example. Every public library
+in the world will find it necessary to procure a copy. The
+chronicles will then cease to be so closely and exclusively
+studied. Every history of ancient Ireland will consist of more or
+less intelligent comments upon and theories formed in connection
+with this great series--theories which, in general, will only be
+formed in order to be destroyed. What the present age demands upon
+the subject of antique Irish history--an exact and scientific
+treatment of the facts supplied by our native authorities--will be
+demanded for ever. It will never be supplied. The history of
+Ireland will be contained in this huge publication. In it the poet
+will find endless themes of song, the philosopher strange workings
+of the human mind, the archeologist a mass of information,
+marvellous in amount and quality, with regard to primitive ideas
+and habits of life, and the rationalist materials for framing a
+scientific history of Ireland, which will be acceptable in
+proportion to the readableness of his style, and the mode in which
+his views may harmonize with the prevailing humour and complexion
+of his contemporaries.
+
+Such a work it is evident could not be effected by a single
+individual. It must be a public and national undertaking, carried
+out under the supervision of the Royal Irish Academy, at the
+expense of the country.
+
+The publication of the Irish bardic remains in the way that I have
+mentioned, is the only true and valuable method of presenting the
+history of Ireland to the notice of the world. The mode which I
+have myself adopted, that other being out of the question, is open
+to many obvious objections; but in the existing state of the Irish
+mind on the subject, no other is possible to an individual writer.
+I desire to make this heroic period once again a portion of the
+imagination of the country, and its chief characters as familiar in
+the minds of our people as they once were. As mere history, and
+treated in the method in which history is generally written at the
+present day, a work dealing with the early Irish kings and heroes
+would certainly not secure an audience. Those who demand such a
+treatment forget that there is not in the country an interest on
+the subject to which to appeal. A work treating of early Irish
+kings, in the same way in which the historians of neighbouring
+countries treat of their own early kings, would be, to the Irish
+public generally, unreadable. It might enjoy the reputation of
+being well written, and as such receive an honourable place in
+half-a-dozen public libraries, but it would be otherwise left
+severely alone. It would never make its way through that frozen
+zone which, on this subject, surrounds the Irish mind.
+
+On the other hand, Irishmen are as ready as others to feel an
+interest in a human character, having themselves the ordinary
+instincts, passions, and curiosities of human nature. If I can
+awake an interest in the career of even a single ancient Irish
+king, I shall establish a train of thoughts, which will advance
+easily from thence to the state of society in which he lived, and
+the kings and heroes who surrounded, preceded, or followed him.
+Attention and interest once fully aroused, concerning even one
+feature of this landscape of ancient history, could be easily
+widened and extended in its scope.
+
+Now, if nothing remained of early Irish history save the dry
+_fasti_ of the chronicles and the Brehon laws, this would, I think,
+be a perfectly legitimate object of ambition, and would be
+consonant with my ideal of what the perfect flower of historical
+literature should be, to illuminate a tale embodying the former by
+hues derived from the Senchus Mor.
+
+But in Irish literature there has been preserved, along with the
+_fasti_ and the laws, this immense mass of ancient ballad, tale,
+and epic, whose origin is lost in the mists of extreme antiquity,
+and in which have been preserved the characters, relationships,
+adventures, and achievements of the vast majority of the personages
+whose names, in a gaunt nakedness, fill the books of the
+chroniclers. Around each of the greater heroes there groups itself
+a mass of bardic literature, varying in tone and statement, but
+preserving a substantial unity as to the general character and the
+more important achievements of the hero, and also, a fact upon
+which their general historical accuracy may be based with
+confidence, exhibiting a knowledge of that same prior and
+subsequent history recorded in the _fasti_. The literature which
+groups itself around a hero exhibits not only an unity with itself,
+but an acquaintance with the general course of the history of the
+country, and with preceding and succeeding kings.
+
+The students of Irish literature do not require to be told this;
+for those who are not, I would give a single instance as an
+illustration.
+
+In the battle of Gabra, fought in the third century, and in which
+Oscar, perhaps the greatest of all the Irish heroes heading the
+Fianna Eireen, contended against Cairbry of the Liffey, King of
+Ireland, and his troops, Cairbry on his side announces to his
+warriors that he would rather perish in this battle than suffer one
+of the Fianna to survive; but while he spoke--
+
+ "Barran suddenly exclaimed--
+ 'Remember Mall Mucreema, remember Art.
+
+ "'Our ancestors fell there
+ By force of the treachery of the Fians;
+ Remember the hard tributes,
+ Remember the extraordinary pride.'"
+
+Here the poet, singing only of the events of the battle of Gabra,
+shows that he was well-acquainted with all the relations subsisting
+for a long time between the Fians and the Royal family. The battle
+of Mucreema was fought by Cairbry's grandfather, Art, against Lewy
+Mac Conn and the Fianna Eireen.
+
+Again, in the tale of the battle of Moy Leana, in which Conn of the
+Hundred Battles, the father of this same Art, is the principal
+character, the author of the tale mentions many times circumstances
+relating to his father, Felimy Rectmar, and his grandfather, Tuhall
+Tectmar. Such is the whole of the Irish literature, not vague,
+nebulous, and shifting, but following the course of the _fasti_,
+and regulated and determined by them. This argument has been used
+by Mr. Gladstone with great confidence, in order to show the
+substantial historical truthfulness of the Iliad, and that it is in
+fact a portion of a continuous historic sequence.
+
+Now this being admitted, that the course of Irish history, as laid
+down by the chroniclers, was familiar to the authors of the tales
+and heroic ballads, one of two things must be admitted, either that
+the events and kings did succeed one another in the order mentioned
+by the chroniclers, or that what the chroniclers laid down was then
+taken as the theme of song by the bards, and illuminated and
+adorned according to their wont.
+
+The second of these suppositions is one which I think few will
+adopt. Can we believe it possible that the bards, who actually
+supported themselves by the amount of pleasure which they gave
+their audiences, would have forsaken those subjects which were
+already popular, and those kings and heroes whose splendour and
+achievements must have affected, profoundly, the popular
+imagination, in order to invent stories to illuminate fabricated
+names. The thing is quite impossible. A practice which we can trace
+to the edge of that period whose historical character may be proved
+to demonstration, we may conclude to have extended on into the
+period immediately preceding that. When bards illuminated with
+stories and marvellous circumstances the battle of Clontarf and the
+battle of Moyrath, we may believe their predecessors to have done
+the same for the earlier centuries. The absence of an imaginative
+literature other than historical shows also that the literature
+must have followed, regularly, the course of the history, and was
+not an archaeological attempt to create an interest in names and
+events which were found in the chronicles. It is, therefore, a
+reasonable conclusion that the bardic literature, where it reveals
+a clear sequence in the order of events, and where there is no
+antecedent improbability, supplies a trustworthy guide to the
+general course of our history.
+
+So far as the clear light of history reaches, so far may these
+tales be proved to be historical. It is, therefore, reasonable to
+suppose that the same consonance between them and the actual course
+of events which subsisted during the period which lies in clear
+light, marked also that other preceding period of which the light
+is no longer dry.
+
+The earliest manuscript of these tales is the Leabhar [Note: Leabar
+na Heera.] na Huidhré, a work of the eleventh century, so that we
+may feel sure that we have them in a condition unimpaired by the
+revival of learning, or any archaeological restoration or
+improvement. Now, of some of these there have been preserved copies
+in other later MSS., which differ very little from the copies
+preserved in the Leabhar na Huidhré, from which we may conclude
+that these tales had arrived at a fixed state, and a point at which
+it was considered wrong to interfere with the text.
+
+The feast of Bricrind is one of the tales preserved in this
+manuscript. The author of the tale in its present form, whenever he
+lived, composed it, having before him original books which he
+collated, using his judgment at times upon the materials to his
+hand. At one stage he observes that the books are at variance on a
+certain point, namely, that at which Cuculain, Conal the
+Victorious, and Laery Buada go to the lake of Uath in order to be
+judged by him. Some of the books, according to the author, stated
+that on this occasion the two latter behaved unfairly, but he
+agreed with those books which did not state this.
+
+We have, therefore, a tale penned in the eleventh century, composed
+at some time prior to this, and itself collected, not from oral
+tradition, but from books. These considerations would, therefore,
+render it extremely probable that the tales of the Ultonian period,
+with which the Leabhar na Huidhré is principally concerned, were
+committed to writing at a very early period.
+
+To strengthen still further the general historic credibility of
+these tales, and to show how close to the events and heroes
+described must have been the bards who originally composed them, I
+would urge the following considerations.
+
+With the advent of Christianity the mound-raising period passed
+away. The Irish heroic tales have their source in, and draw their
+interest from, the mounds and those laid in them. It would,
+therefore, be extremely improbable that the bards of the Christian
+period, when the days of rath and cairn had departed, would modify,
+to any considerable extent, the literature produced in conditions
+of society which had passed away.
+
+Again, with the advent of Christianity, and the hold which the new
+faith took upon the finest and boldest minds in the country, it is
+plain that the golden age of bardic composition ended. The loss to
+the bards was direct, by the withdrawal of so much intellect from
+their ranks, and indirect, by the general substitution of other
+ideas for those whose ministers they themselves were. It is,
+therefore, probable that the age of production and creation, with
+regard to the ethnic history, ceased about the fifth and sixth
+centuries, and that, about that time, men began to gather up into a
+collected form the floating literature connected with the pagan
+period. The general current of mediaeval opinion attributes the
+collection of tales and ballads now known as the Tân-Bo-Cooalney to
+St. Ciaran, the great founder of the monastery of Clonmacnoise.
+
+But if this be the case, we are enabled to take another step in the
+history of this most valuable literature. The tales of the Leabhar
+na Huidhré are in prose, but prose whose source and original is
+poetry. The author, from time to time, as if quoting an authority,
+breaks out with verse; and I think there is no Irish tale in
+existence without these rudimentary traces of a prior metrical
+cycle. The style and language are quite different, and indicate two
+distinct epochs. The prose tale is founded upon a metrical
+original, and composed in the meretricious style then in fashion,
+while the old metrical excerpts are pure and simple. This is
+sufficient, in a country like Ireland in those primitive times, to
+necessitate a considerable step into the past, if we desire to get
+at the originals upon which the prose tales were founded.
+
+For in ancient Ireland the conservatism of the people was very
+great. It is the case in all primitive societies. Individual,
+initiative, personal enterprise are content to work within a very
+small sphere. In agriculture, laws, customs, and modes of literary
+composition, primitive and simple societies are very adverse to
+change.
+
+When we see how closely the Christian compilers followed the early
+authorities, we can well believe that in the ethnic times no mind
+would have been sufficiently daring or sacrilegious to alter or
+pervert those epics which were in their eyes at the same time true
+and sacred.
+
+In the perusal of the Irish literature, we see that the strength of
+this conservative instinct has been of the greatest service in the
+preservation of the early monuments in their purity. So much is
+this the case, that in many tales the most flagrant contradictions
+appear, the author or scribe being unwilling to depart at all from
+that which he found handed down. For instance, in the "Great Breach
+of Murthemney," we find Laeg at one moment killed, and in the next
+riding black Shanglan off the field. From this conservatism and
+careful following of authority, and the _littera scripta_, or word
+once spoken, I conclude that the distance in time between the prose
+tale and the metrical originals was very great, and, unless under
+such exceptional circumstances as the revolution caused by the
+introduction of Christianity, could not have been brought about
+within hundreds of years. Moreover, this same conservatism would
+have caused the tales concerning heroes to grow very slowly once
+they were actually formed. All the noteworthy events of the hero's
+life and his characteristics must have formed the original of the
+tales concerning him, which would have been composed during his
+life, or not long after his death.
+
+I have not met a single tale, whether in verse or prose, in which
+it is not clearly seen that the author was not following
+authorities before him. Such traces of invention or decoration as
+may be met with are not suffered to interfere with the conduct of
+the tale and the statement of facts. They fill empty niches and
+adorn vacant places. For instance, if a king is represented as
+crossing the sea, we find that the causes leading to this, the
+place whence he set out, his companions, &c., are derived from the
+authorities, but the bard, at the same time, permits himself to
+give what seems to him to be an eloquent or beautiful description
+of the sea, and the appearance presented by the many-oared galleys.
+And yet the last transcription or recension of the majority of the
+tales was effected in Christian times, and in an age characterised
+by considerable classical attainments--a time when the imagination
+might have been expected to shake itself loose from old restraints,
+and freely invent. _A fortiori_, the more ancient bards, those of
+the ruder ethnic times, would have clung still closer to authority,
+deriving all their imaginative representations from preceding
+minstrels. There was no conscious invention at any time. Each cycle
+and tale grew from historic roots, and was developed from actual
+fact. So much may indeed be said for the more ancient tales, but
+the Ultonian cycle deals with events well within the historic
+period.
+
+The era of Concobar Mac Nessa and the Red Branch knights of Ulster
+was long subsequent to the floruerunt of the Irish gods and their
+Titan-like opponents of this latter period, the names alone can be
+fairly held to be historic. What swells out the Irish chronicles to
+such portentous dimensions is the history of the gods and giants
+rationalised by mediaeval historians. Unable to ignore or excide
+what filled so much of the imagination of the country, and unable,
+as Christians, to believe in the divinity of the Tuátha De Danan
+and their predecessors, they rationalised all the pre-Milesian
+record. But the disappearance of the gods does not yet bring us
+within the penumbra of history. After the death of the sons of
+Milesius we find a long roll of kings. These were all topical
+heroes, founders of nations, and believed, by the tribes and tribal
+confederacies which they founded, to have been in their day the
+chief kings of Ireland. The point fixed upon by the accurate and
+sceptical Tiherna as the starting-point of trustworthy Irish
+history, was one long subsequent to the floruerunt of the gods; and
+the age of Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights was more than two
+centuries later than that of Kimbay and the foundation of Emain
+Macha. The floruit of Cuculain, therefore, falls completely within
+the historical penumbra, and the more carefully the enormous, and
+in the main mutually consistent and self-supporting, historical
+remains dealing with this period are studied, the more will this be
+believed. The minuteness, accuracy, extent, and verisimilitude of
+the literature, chronicles, pedigrees, &c., relating to this
+period, will cause the student to wonder more and more as he
+examines and collates, seeing the marvellous self-consistency and
+consentaneity of such a mass of varied recorded matter. The age,
+indeed, breathes sublimity, and abounds with the marvellous, the
+romantic, and the grotesque. But as I have already stated, the
+presence or absence of these qualities has no crucial significance.
+Love and reverence and the poetic imagination always effect such
+changes in the object of their passion. They are the essential
+condition of the transference of the real into the world of art.
+AEval, of Carriglea, the fairy queen of Munster, is one of the most
+important characters in the history of the battle of Clontarf, the
+character of which, and of the events that preceded and followed
+its occurrence, and the chieftains and warriors who fought on one
+side and the other, are identical, whether described by the bard
+singing, or by the monkish chronicler jotting down in plain prose
+the fasti for the year. The reader of these volumes can make such
+deductions as he pleases, on this account, from the bardic history
+of the Red Branch, and clip the wings of the tale, so that it may
+with him travel pedestrian. I know there are others, like myself,
+who will not hesitate for once to let the fancy roam and luxuriate
+in the larger spaces and freer airs of ancient song, nor fear that
+their sanity will be imperilled by the shouting of semi-divine
+heroes, and the sight of Cuculain entering battles with the Tuátha
+De Danan around him.
+
+I hope on some future occasion to examine more minutely the
+character and place in literature of the Irish bardic remains, and
+put forward here these general considerations, from which the
+reader may presume that the Ultonian cycle, dealing as it does with
+Cuculain and his contemporaries, is in the main true to the facts
+of the time, and that his history, and that of the other heroes who
+figure in these volumes, is, on the whole, and omitting the
+marvellous, sufficiently reliable. I would ask the reader, who may
+be inclined to think that the principal character is too chivalrous
+and refined for the age, to peruse for himself the tale named the
+"Great Breach of Murthemney." He will there, and in many other
+tales and poems besides, see that the noble and pathetic interest
+which attaches to his character is substantially the same as I have
+represented in these volumes. But unless the student has read the
+whole of the Ultonian cycle, he should be cautious in condemning a
+departure in my work from any particular version of an event which
+he may have himself met. Of many minor events there are more than
+one version, and many scenes and assertions which he may think of
+importance would yet, by being related, cause inconsistency and
+contradiction. Of the nature of the work in which all should be
+introduced I have already given my opinion.
+
+For the rest, I have related one or two great events in the life of
+Cuculain in such a way as to give a description as clear and
+correct as possible of his own character and history as related by
+the bards, of those celebrated men and women who were his
+contemporaries and of his relations with them, of the gods and
+supernatural powers in whom the people then believed, and of the
+state of civilisation which then prevailed. If I have done my task
+well, the reader will have been supplied, without any intensity of
+application on his part--a condition of the public mind upon which
+no historian of this country should count--with some knowledge of
+ancient Irish history, and with an interest in the subject which
+may lead him to peruse for himself that ancient literature, and to
+read works of a more strictly scientific nature upon the subject
+than those which I have yet written. But until such an interest is
+aroused, it is useless to swell the mass of valuable critical
+matter, which everyone at present is very well content to leave
+unread.
+
+In the first volume, however, I have committed this error, that I
+did not permit it to be seen with sufficient clearness that the
+characters and chief events of the tale are absolutely historic;
+and that much of the colouring, inasmuch as its source must have
+been the centuries immediately succeeding the floruerunt of those
+characters, is also reliable as history, while the remainder is
+true to the times and the state of society which then obtained. The
+story seems to progress too much in the air, too little in time and
+space, and seems to be more of the nature of legend and romance
+than of actual historic fact seen through an imaginative medium.
+Such is the history of Concobar Mac Nessa and his knights--historic
+fact seen through the eyes of a loving wonder.
+
+Indeed, I must confess that the blaze of bardic light which
+illuminates those centuries at first so dazzled the eye and
+disturbed the judgment, that I saw only the literature, only the
+epic and dramatic interest, and did not see as I should the
+distinctly historical character of the age around which that
+literature revolves, wrongly deeming that a literature so noble,
+and dealing with events so remote, must have originated mainly or
+altogether in the imagination. All the borders of the epic
+representation at which, in the first volume, I have aimed, seem to
+melt, and wander away vaguely on every side into space and time. I
+have now taken care to remedy that defect, supplying to the unset
+picture the clear historical frame to which it is entitled. I will
+also request the reader, when the two volumes may diverge in tone
+or statement, to attach greater importance to the second, as the
+result of wider and more careful reading and more matured
+reflection.
+
+A great English poet, himself a severe student, pronounced the
+early history of his own country to be a mere scuffling of kites
+and crows, as indeed are all wars which lack the sacred bard, and
+the sacred bard is absent where the kites and crows pick out his
+eyes. That the Irish kings and heroes should succeed one another,
+surrounded by a blaze of bardic light, in which both themselves and
+all those who were contemporaneous with them are seen clearly and
+distinctly, was natural in a country where in each little realm or
+sub-kingdom the ard-ollav was equal in dignity to the king, which
+is proved by the equivalence of their cries. The dawn of English
+history is in the seventh century--a late dawn, dark and sombre,
+without a ray of cheerful sunshine; that of Ireland dates reliably
+from a point before the commencement of the Christian era luminous
+with that light which never was on sea or land--thronged with
+heroic forms of men and women--terrible with the presence of the
+supernatural and its over-arching power.
+
+Educated Irishmen are ignorant of, and indifferent to, their
+history; yet from the hold of that history they cannot shake
+themselves free. It still haunts the imagination, like Mordecai at
+Haman's gate, a cause of continual annoyance and vexation. An
+Irishman can no more release himself from his history than he can
+absolve himself from social and domestic duties. He may outrage it,
+but he cannot placidly ignore. Hence the uneasy, impatient feeling
+with which the subject is generally regarded.
+
+I think that I do not exaggerate when I say that the majority of
+educated Irishmen would feel grateful to the man who informed them
+that the history of their country was valueless and unworthy of
+study, that the pre-Christian history was a myth, the post-Christian
+mere annals, the mediaeval a scuffling of kites and crows, and the
+modern alone deserving of some slight consideration. That writer
+will be in Ireland most praised who sets latest the commencement
+of our history. Without study he will be pronounced sober and
+rational before the critic opens the book. So anxious is the Irish
+mind to see that effaced which it is conscious of having neglected.
+
+There are two compositions which affect an interest comparable to
+that which Ireland claims for her bardic literature, One is the
+Ossian of MacPherson, the other the Nibelungen Lied.
+
+If we are to suppose Macpherson faithfully to have written down,
+printed, and published the floating disconnected poems which he
+found lingering in the Scotch highlands, how small, comparatively,
+would be their value as indications of antique thought and feeling,
+reduced then for the first time to writing, sixteen hundred years
+after the time of Ossian and his heroes, in a country not the home
+of those heroes, and destitute of the regular bardic organisation.
+The Ossianic tales and poems still told and sung by the Irish
+peasantry at the present day in the country of Ossian and Oscar,
+would be, if collected even now, quite as valuable, if not more so.
+Truer to the antique these latter are, for in them the cycles are
+not blended. The Red Branch heroes are not confused with Ossian's
+Fianna.
+
+But MacPherson's Ossian is not a translation. In the publications
+of the Irish Ossianic poetry we see what that poetry really was--
+rude, homely, plain-spoken, leagues removed from the nebulous
+sublimity of MacPherson.
+
+With regard to the other, the Germans, who naturally desire to
+refer its composition to as remote a date as possible, and who
+arguing from no scientific data, but only style, ascribe the
+authorship of the Nibelungen to a poet living in the latter part of
+the twelfth century. Be it remembered, that the poem does not
+purport to be a collection of the scattered fragments of a cycle,
+but an original composition, then actually imagined and written. It
+does not even purport to deal with the ethnic times. _Its heroes
+are Christian heroes. They attend Mass._ The poem is not true, even
+to the leading features of the late period of history in which it
+is placed, if it have any habitat in the world of history at all.
+Attila, who died A.D. 450, and Theodoric, who did not die until the
+succeeding century, meet as coevals.
+
+Turn we now from the sole boast of Germany to one out of a hundred
+in the Irish bardic literature. The Tân-bo-Cooalney was transcribed
+into the Leabhar na Huidhré in the eleventh century a manuscript
+whose date has been established by the consentaneity of Irish,
+French, and German scholarship. Mark, it was transcribed, not
+composed. The scribe records the fact:--
+
+ "Ego qui scripsi hanc historian aut vero fabulam, quibusdam fidem
+ in hac historiâ aut fabulâ non commodo."
+
+The Tân-bo-Cooalney was therefore _transcribed_ by an ancient
+penman to the parchment of a still existing manuscript, in the
+century before that in which the German epic is presumed, from
+style only, and in the opinion of Germans, to have been _composed_.
+
+The same scribe adds this comment with regard to its contents:--
+
+ "Qaedam autem poetica figmenta, quaedam ad delectationem
+ stultorum."
+
+Such scorn could not have been felt by one living in an age of
+bardic production. That independence and originality of thought,
+which caused Milton to despise the poets of the Restoration, are
+impossible in the simple stages of civilisation. The scribe who
+appended this very interesting comment to the subject of his own
+handiwork must have been removed by centuries from the date of its
+compilation. That the tale was, in his time, an ancient one, is
+therefore rendered extremely probable, the scribe himself
+indicating how completely out of sympathy he is with this form of
+literature, its antiquity and peculiar archaeological interest
+being, doubtless, the cause of the transcription.
+
+Again, a close study of its contents, as of the contents of all the
+Irish historic tales, proves that in its present form, whenever
+that form was superadded, it is but a representation in prose of a
+pre-existing metrical original. Under this head I have already made
+some remarks, which, I shall request the reader to re-peruse [Note:
+Pages 23 to 27]
+
+Once more, it deals with a particular event in Irish history, and
+with distinct and definite kings, heroes, and bards, who flourished
+in the epoch of which it treats. In the synchronisms of Tiherna, in
+the metrical chronology of Flann, in all the various historical
+compositions produced in various parts of the country, the main
+features and leading characters of the Tân-bo-Cooalney suffer no
+material change, while the minor divergencies show that the
+chronology of the annals and annalistic poems were not drawn from
+the tale, but owe their origin to other sources. Moreover, this
+epic is but a portion of the great Ultonian or Red Branch cycle,
+all the parts of which pre-suppose and support one another; and
+that cycle is itself a portion of the history of Ireland, and
+pre-supposes other preceding and succeeding cyles, preceding and
+succeeding kings. The event of which this epic treats occurred at
+the time of the Incarnation, and its characters are the leading
+Irish kings and warriors of that date. Such is the Tân-bo-Cooalney.
+
+This being so, how have the English literary classes recognised, or
+how treated, our claim to the possession of an antique literature
+of peculiar historical interest, and by reason of that antiquity, a
+matter of concern to all Aryan nations? The conquest has not more
+constituted the English Parliament guardian and trustee of Ireland,
+for purposes of legislation and government, than it has vested the
+welfare and fame of our literature and antiquities in the hands of
+English scholarship. London is the headquarters of the intellectualism
+and of the literary and historical culture of the Empire. It is the
+sole dispenser of fame. It alone influences the mind of the country
+and guides thought and sentiment. It can make and mar reputations.
+What it scorns or ignores, the world, too, ignores and scorns. How
+then has the native literature of Ireland been treated by the
+representatives of English scholarship and literary culture? Mr.
+Carlyle is the first man of letters of the day, his the highest
+name as a critic upon, and historian of, the past life of Europe.
+Let us hear him upon this subject, admittedly of European
+importance.
+
+Miscellaneous Essays, Vol. III., page 136. "Not only as the oldest
+Tradition of Modern Europe does it--the Nibelungen--possess a high
+antiquarian interest, but farther, and even in the shape we now see
+it under, unless the epics of the son of Fingal had some sort of
+authenticity, it is our oldest poem also."
+
+Poor Ireland, with her hundred ancient epics, standing at the door
+of the temple of fame, or, indeed, quite behind the vestibule out
+of the way! To see the Swabian enter in, crowned, to a flourish of
+somewhat barbarous music, was indeed bad enough, but Mr. MacPherson!
+
+They manage these things rather better in France, _vide passim_ "La
+Révue Celtique."
+
+Of the literary value of the bardic literature I fear to write at
+all, lest I should not know how to make an end. Rude indeed it is,
+but great. Like the central chamber of that huge tumulus [Note: New
+Grange anciently Cnobgha, and now also Knowth.] on the Boyne,
+overarched with massive unhewn rocks, its very ruggedness strikes
+an awe which the orderly arrangement of smaller and more reasonable
+thoughts, cut smooth by instruments inherited from classic times,
+fails so often to inspire. The labour of the Attic chisel may be
+seen since its invention in every other literary workshop of
+Europe, and seen in every other laboratory of thought the
+transmitted divine fire of the Hebrew. The bardic literature of
+Erin stands alone, as distinctively and genuinely Irish as the race
+itself, or the natural aspects of the island. Rude indeed it is,
+but like the hills which its authors tenanted with gods, holding
+dells [Note: Those sacred hills will generally be found to have
+this character.] of the most perfect beauty, springs of the most
+touching pathos. On page 33, Vol. I., will be seen a poem [Note:
+Publications of Ossianic Society, page 303, Vol. IV.] by Fionn upon
+the spring-time, made, as the old unknown historian says, to prove
+his poetic powers--a poem whose antique language relegates it to a
+period long prior to the tales of the Leabhar na Huidhré, one
+which, if we were to meet side by side with the "Ode to Night," by
+Alcman, in the Greek anthology, we would not be surprised; or those
+lines on page 203, Vol. I., the song of Cuculain, forsaken by his
+people, watching the frontier of his country--
+
+ "Alone in defence of the Ultonians,
+ Solitary keeping ward over the province"
+
+or the death [Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, Vol. I.] of
+Oscar, on pages 34 and 35, Vol. I., an excerpt condensed from the
+Battle of Gabra. Innumerable such tender and thrilling passages.
+
+To all great nations their history presents itself under the aspect
+of poetry; a drama exciting pity and terror; an epic with unbroken
+continuity, and a wide range of thought, when the intellect is
+satisfied with coherence and unity, and the imagination by extent
+and diversity. Such is the bardic history of Ireland, but with this
+literary defect. A perfect epic is only possible when the critical
+spirit begins to be in the ascendant, for with the critical spirit
+comes that distrust and apathy towards the spontaneous literature
+of early times, which permit some great poet so to shape and alter
+the old materials as to construct a harmonious and internally
+consistent tale, observing throughout a sense of proportion and a
+due relation of the parts. Such a clipping and alteration of the
+authorities would have seemed sacrilege to earlier bards. In
+mediaeval Ireland there was, indeed, a subtle spirit of criticism;
+but under its influence, being as it was of scholastic origin, no
+great singing men appeared, re-fashioning the old rude epics; and
+yet, the very shortcomings of the Irish tales, from a literary
+point of view, increase their importance from a historical. Of
+poetry, as distinguised from metrical composition, these ancient
+bards knew little. The bardic literature, profoundly poetic though
+it be, in the eyes of our ancestors was history, and never was
+anything else. As history it was originally composed, and as
+history bound in the chains of metre, that it might not be lost or
+dissipated passing through the minds of men, and as history it was
+translated into prose and committed to parchment. Accordingly, no
+tale is without its defects as poetry, possessing therefore
+necessarily, a corresponding value as history. But that there was
+in the country, in very early times, a high and rare poetic culture
+of the lyric kind, native in its character, ethnic in origin,
+unaffected by scholastic culture which, as we know, took a
+different direction; that one exquisite poem, in which the father
+of Ossian praises the beauty of the springtime in anapaestic
+[Note: Cettemain | cain ree! | ro sair | an cuct |
+"He, Fionn MacCool, learned the three compositions which distinguish
+the poets, the TEINM LAEGHA, the IMUS OF OSNA, and the DICEDUE
+DICCENAIB, and it was then Fionn composed this poem to prove
+his poetry." In which of these three forms of metre the Ode to
+the spring-time is written I know not. Its form throughout is
+distinctly anapaestic.--S. O'G.] verse, would, even though it
+stood alone, both by the fact of its composition and the fact
+of its preservation, fully prove.
+
+Much and careful study, indeed, it requires, if we would compel
+these ancient epics to yield up their greatness or their beauty, or
+even their logical coherence and imaginative unity--broken,
+scattered portions as they all are of that one enormous epic, the
+bardic history of Ireland. At the best we read without the key. The
+magic of the names is gone, or can only be partially recovered by
+the most tender and sympathetic study. Indeed, without reading all
+or many, we will not understand the superficial meaning of even
+one. For instance, in one of the many histories of Cuculain's many
+battles, we read this--
+
+"It was said that Lu Mac AEthleen was assisting him."
+
+This at first seems meaningless, the bard seeing no necessity for
+throwing further light on the subject; but, as we wander through
+the bardic literature, gradually the conception of this Lu grows
+upon the mind--the destroyer of the sons of Turann--the implacably
+filial--the expulsor of the Fomoroh--the source of all the
+sciences--the god of the Tuátha De Danan--the protector and
+guardian of Cuculain--Lu Lamfáda, son of Cian, son of Diancéct, son
+of Esric, son of Dela, son of Ned the war-god, whose tomb or
+temple, Aula Neid, may still be seen beside the Foyle. This
+enormous and seemingly chaotic mass of literature is found at all
+times to possess an inner harmony, a consistency and logical unity,
+to be apprehended only by careful study.
+
+So read, the sublimity strikes through the rude representation.
+Astonished at himself, the student, who at first thinks that he has
+chanced upon a crowd of barbarians, ere long finds himself in the
+august presence of demi-gods and heroes.
+
+A noble moral tone pervades the whole. Courage, affection, and truth
+are native to all who live in this world. Under the dramatic image
+of Ossian wrangling with the Talkend, [Note: St. Patrick, on account
+of the tonsured crown.] the bards, themselves vainly fighting against
+the Christian life, a hundred times repeat through the lips of Ossian
+like a refrain--
+
+ "We, the Fianna of Erin, never uttered falsehood,
+ Lying was never attributed to us;
+ By courage and the strength of our hands
+ We used to come out of every difficulty."
+
+Again: Fergus, the bard, inciting Oscar to his last battle--in that
+poem called the Rosc Catha of Oscar:--
+
+ "Place thy hand on thy gentle forehead
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+[Note: Publications of Ossianic Society, p. 159; vol. i.]
+
+And again, elsewhere in the Ossianic poetry:--
+
+ "Oscar, who never wronged bard or woman."
+
+Strange to say, too, they inculcated chastity (see p. 257; vol.
+i.), an allusion taken from the "youthful adventures of Cuculain,"
+Leabhar na Huidhré.
+
+The following ancient rann contains the four qualifications of a
+bard:--
+
+ "Purity of hand, bright, without wounding,
+ Purity of mouth, without poisonous satire,
+ Purity of learning, without reproach,
+ Purity, as a husband, in wedlock."
+
+Moreover, through all this literature sounds a high clear note of
+chivalry, in this contrasting favourably with the Iliad, where no
+man foregoes an advantage. Cuculain having slain the sons of Neara,
+"thought it unworthy of him to take possession of their chariot and
+horses." [Note: P. 155; vol. i.] Goll Mac Morna, in the Fenian or
+Ossianic cycle, declares to Conn Cedcathah [Note: Conn of the
+hundred battles.] that from his youth up he never attacked an enemy
+by night or under any disadvantage, and many times we read of
+heroes preferring to die rather than outrage their geisa. [Note:
+Certain vows taken with their arms on being knighted.]
+
+A noble literature indeed it is, having too this strange interest,
+that though mainly characterised by a great plainness and
+simplicity of thought, and, in the earlier stages, of expression,
+we feel, oftentimes, a sudden weirdness, a strange glamour shoots
+across the poem when the tale seems to open for a moment into
+mysterious depths, druidic secrets veiled by time, unsunned caves
+of thought, indicating a still deeper range of feeling, a still
+lower and wider reach of imagination. A youth came once to the
+Fianna Eireen encamped at Locha Lein [Note: The Lakes of
+Killarney.], leading a hound dazzling white, like snow. It was the
+same, the bard simply states, that was once a yew tree, flourishing
+fifty summers in the woods of Ioroway. Elsewhere, he is said to
+have been more terrible than the sun upon his flaming wheels. What
+meant this yew tree and the hound? Stray allusions I have met, but
+no history. The spirit of Coelté, visiting one far removed in time
+from the great captain of the Fianna, with a different name and
+different history, cries:--
+
+ "I was with thee, with Finn"--
+
+giving no explanation.
+
+To MacPherson, however, I will do this justice, that he had the
+merit to perceive, even in the debased and floating ballads of the
+highlands, traces of some past greatness and sublimity of thought,
+and to understand, he, for the first time, how much more they meant
+than what met the ear. But he saw, too, that the historical origin
+of the ballads, and the position in time and place of the heroes
+whom they praised, had been lost in that colony removed since the
+time of St. Columba from its old connection with the mother
+country. Thus released from the curb of history, he gave free rein
+to the imagination, and in the conventional literary language of
+sublimity, gave full expression to the feelings that arose within
+him, as to him, pondering over those ballads, their gigantesque
+element developed into a greatness and solemnity, and their
+vagueness and indeterminateness into that misty immensity and weird
+obscurity which, as constituent factors in a poem, not as
+back-ground, form one of the elements of the false sublime. Either
+not seeing the literary necessity of definiteness, or having no
+such abundant and ordered literature as we possess, upon which to
+draw for details, and being too conscientious to invent facts,
+however he might invent language, he published his epics of Ossian--
+false indeed to the original, but true to himself, and to the
+feelings excited by meditation upon them. This done, he had not
+sufficient courage to publish also the rude, homely, and often
+vulgar ballads--a step which, in that hard critical age, would have
+been to expose himself and his country to swift contempt. The
+thought of the great lexicographer riding rough-shod over the poor
+mountain songs which he loved, and the fame which he had already
+acquired, deterred and dissuaded him, if he had ever any such
+intention, until the opportunity was past.
+
+MacPherson feared English public opinion, and fearing lied. He
+declared that to be a translation which was original work, thus
+relegating himself for ever to a dubious renown, and depriving his
+country of the honest fame of having preserved through centuries,
+by mere oral transmission, a portion, at least, of the antique
+Irish literature. To the magnanimity of his own heroes he could not
+attain:--
+
+ "Oscar, Oscar, who feared not armies--
+ Oscar, who never lied."
+
+Of some such error as MacPherson's I have myself, with less excuse,
+been guilty, in chapters xi. and xii., Vol. I., where I attempt to
+give some conception of the character of the Ossianic cycle. The
+age and the heroes around whom that cycle revolves have, in the
+history of Ireland, a definite position in time; their battles,
+characters, several achievements, relationships, and pedigrees;
+their Dûns, and trysting-places, and tombs; their wives, musicians,
+and bards; their tributes, and sufferings, and triumphs; their
+internecine and other wars--are all fully and clearly described in
+the Ossianic cycle. They still remain demanding adequate treatment,
+when we arrive at the age of Conn [Note: See page 20.], Art, and
+Cormac, kings of Tara in the second and third centuries of the
+Christian era. All have been forgotten for the sake of a vague
+representation of the more sublime aspects of the cycle, and the
+meretricious seductions of a form of composition easy to write and
+easy to read, and to which the unwary or unwise often award praise
+to which it has no claim.
+
+On the other hand, chapter xi. purports only to be a representation
+of the feelings excited by this literature, and for every assertion
+there is authority in the cycle. Chapter xii., however, is a
+translation from the original. Every idea which it contains, except
+one, has been taken from different parts of the Ossianic poems, and
+all together expressthe graver attitude of the mind of Ossian
+towards the new faith. That idea, occurring in a separate paragraph
+in the middle of the page, though prevalent as a sentiment
+throughout all the conversations of Ossian with St. Patrick, has
+been, as it stands, taken from a meditation on life by St.
+Columbanus, one of the early Irish Saints--a meditation which, for
+subtle thought, for musical resigned sadness, tender brooding
+reflection, and exquisite Latin, is one of the masterpieces of
+mediaeval composition.
+
+To the casual reader of the bardic literature the preservation of
+an ordered historical sequence, amidst that riotous wealth of
+imaginative energy, may appear an impossibility. Can we believe
+that forestine luxuriance not to have overgrown all highways, that
+flood of superabundant song not have submerged all landmarks? Be
+the cause what it may, the fact remains that they did not. The
+landmarks of history stand clear and fixed, each in its own place
+unremoved; and through that forest-growth the highways of history
+run on beneath over-arching, not interfering, boughs. The age of
+the predominance of Ulster does not clash with the age of the
+predominance of Tara; the Temairian kings are not mixed with the
+contemporary Fians. The chaos of the Nibelungen is not found here,
+nor the confusion of the Scotch ballads blending all the ages into
+one.
+
+It is not imaginative strength that produces confusion, but
+imaginative weakness. The strong imagination which perceives
+definitely and realises vividly will not tolerate that obscurity so
+dear to all those who worship the eidola of the cave. Of each of
+these ages, the primary impressions were made in the bardic mind
+during the life-time of the heroes who gave to the epoch its
+character; and a strong impression made in such a mind could not
+have been easily dissipated or obscured. For it must be remembered,
+that the bardic literature of Ireland was committed to the custody
+of guardians whose character we ought not to forget. The bards were
+not the people, but a class. They were not so much a class as an
+organisation and fraternity acknowledging the authority of one
+elected chief. They were not loose wanderers, but a power in the
+State, having duties and privileges. The ard-ollav ranked next to
+the king, and his eric was kingly. Thus there was an educated body
+of public opinion entrusted with the preservation of the literature
+and history of the country, and capable of repressing the
+aberrations of individuals.
+
+But the question arises, Did they so repress such perversions of
+history as their wandering undisciplined members might commit?
+Too much, of course, must not reasonably be expected. It was an
+age of creative thought, and such thought is difficult to control;
+but that one of the prime objects and prime works of the bards, as
+an organisation, was to preserve a record of a certain class of
+historical facts is certain. The succession of the kings and of the
+great princely families was one of these. The tribal system, with
+the necessity of affinity as a ground of citizenship, demanded such
+a preservation of pedigrees in every family, and particularly in
+the kingly houses. One of the chief objects of the triennial feis
+of Tara was the revision of such records by the general assembly of
+the bards, under the presidency of the Ard-Ollav of Ireland. In the
+more ancient times, such records were rhymed and alliterated, and
+committed to memory--a practice which, we may believe on the
+authority of Caesar, treating of the Gauls, continued long after
+the introduction of letters. Even at those local assemblies also,
+which corresponded to great central and national feis of Tara, the
+bards were accustomed to meet for that purpose. In a poem [Note:
+O'Curry's Manners and Customs, Vol. I., page 543.], descriptive of
+the fair [Note: On the full meaning of this word "fair," see Chap.
+xiii., Vol. I.] of Garman, we see this--
+
+ "Feasts with the great feasts of Temair,
+ Fairs with the fairs of Emania,
+ Annals there are verified."
+
+In the existing literature we see two great divisions. On the one
+hand the epical, a realm of the most riotous activity of thought;
+on the other, the annalistic and genealogical, bald and bare to the
+last degree, a mere skeleton. They represent the two great
+hemispheres of the bardic mind, the latter controlling the former.
+Hence the orderly sequence of the cyclic literature; hence the
+strong confining banks between which the torrent of song rolls down
+through those centuries in which the bardic imagination reached its
+height. The consentaneity of the annals and the literature
+furnishes a trustworthy guide to the general course of history,
+until its guidance is barred by _a priori_ considerations of a
+weightier nature, or by the statements of writers, having sources
+of information not open to us. For instance, the stream of Irish
+history must, for philosophical reasons, be no further traceable
+than to that point at which it issues from the enchanted land of
+the Tuátha De Danan. At the limit at which the gods appear, men and
+history must disappear; while on the other hand, the statement of
+Tiherna, that the foundation of Emain Alacha by Kimbay is the first
+certain date in Irish history, renders it undesirable to attach
+more historical reality of characters, adorning the ages prior to
+B.C. 299, than we could to such characters as Romulus in Roman, or
+Theseus in Athenian history.
+
+I desire here to record my complete and emphatic dissent from the
+opinions advanced by a writer in Hermathena on the subject of the
+Ogham inscriptions, and the introduction into this country of the
+art of writing. A cypher, i.e., an alphabet derived from a
+pre-existing alphabet, the Ogham may or may not have been. I
+advance no opinion upon that, but an invention of the Christian
+time it most assuredly was not. No sympathetic and careful student
+of the Irish bardic literature can possibly come to such a
+conclusion. The bardic poems relating to the heroes of the ethnic
+times are filled with allusions to Ogham inscriptions on stone, and
+contain some references to books of timber; but in my own reading I
+have not met with a single passage in that literature alluding to
+books of parchment and to rounded letters.
+
+If the Ogham was derived from the Roman characters introduced by
+Christian missionaries, then these characters would be the more
+ancient, and Ogham the more modern; books and Roman characters
+would be the more poetical, and inscriptions on stone and timber in
+the Ogham characters the more prosaic. The bards relating the lives
+and deeds of the ancient heroes, would have ascribed to their times
+parchment books and the Roman characters, not stone and wood, and
+the Ogham.
+
+In these compositions, whenever they were reduced to the form in
+which we find them to-day, the ethnic character of the times and
+the ethnic character of the heroes are clearly and universally
+observed. The ancient, the remote, the archaic clings to this
+literature. As Homer does not allude to writing, though all
+scholars agree that he lived in a lettered age, so the old bards do
+not allude to parchment and Roman characters, though the Irish
+epics, as distinguished from their component parts, reached their
+fixed state and their final development in times subsequent to the
+introduction of Christianity.
+
+When and how a knowledge of letters reached this island we know
+not. From the analogy of Gaul, we may conclude that they were
+known for some time prior to their use by the bards. Caesar tells
+us that the Gaulish bards and druids did not employ letters for the
+preservation of their lore, but trusted to memory, assisted,
+doubtless, as in this country, by the mechanical and musical aid of
+verse. Whether the Ogham was a native alphabet or a derivative
+from another, it was at first employed only to a limited extent.
+Its chief use was to preserve the name of buried kings and heroes
+in the stone that was set above their tombs. It was, perhaps,
+invented, and certainly became fashionable on this account,
+straight strokes being more easily cut in stone than rounded or
+uncial characters. For the same reason it was generally employed by
+those who inscribed timber tablets, which formed the primitive
+book, ere they discovered or learned how to use pen, ink, and
+parchment. The use of Ogham was partially practised in the
+Christian period for sepultural purposes, being venerable and
+sacred from time. Hence the discovery of Ogham-inscribed stones in
+Christian cemeteries. On the other hand, the fact that the majority
+of these stones are discovered in raths and forts, i.e., the tombs
+of our Pagan ancestors, corroborates the fact implied in all the
+bardic literature, that the characters employed in the ethnic times
+were Oghamic, and affords another proof of the close conservative
+spirit of the bards in their transcription, compilation, or
+reformation of the old epics.
+
+The full force of the concurrent authority of the bardic literature
+to the above effect can only be felt by one who has read that
+literature with care. He will find in all the epics no trace of
+original invention, but always a studied and conscientious
+following of authority. This being so, he will conclude that the
+universal ascription of Ogham, and Ogham only, to the ethnic times,
+arises solely from the fact that such was the alphabet then
+employed.
+
+If letters were unknown in those times, the example of Homer shows
+how unlikely the later poets would have been to outrage so
+violently the whole spirit of the heroic literature. If rounded
+letters were then used, why the universal ascription of the late
+invented Ogham which, as we know from the cemeteries and other
+sources, was unpopular in the Christian age.
+
+Cryptic, too, it was not. The very passages quoted in Hermathena
+to support this opinion, so far from doing so prove actually the
+reverse. When Cuculain came down into Meath on his first [Note:
+Vol. I., page 155.] foray, he found, on the lawn of the Dûn of the
+sons of Nectan, a pillar stone with this inscription in Ogham--"Let
+no one pass without an offer of a challenge of single combat." The
+inscription was, of course, intended for all to read. Should there
+be any bardic passage in which Ogham inscriptions are alluded to as
+if an obscure form of writing, the natural explanation is, that
+this kind of writing was passing or had passed into desuetude at
+the time that particular passage was composed; but I have never met
+with any such. The ancient bard, who, in the Tân-bo-Cooalney,
+describes the slaughter of Cailitin and his sons by Cuculain,
+states that there was an inscription to that effect, written in
+Ogham, upon the stone over their tomb, beginning thus--"Take
+notice"--evidently intended for all to read. The tomb, by the way,
+was a rath--again showing the ethnic character of the alphabet.
+
+In the Annals of the Four Masters, at the date 1499 B.C., we read
+these words:--
+
+"THE FLEET OF THE SONS OF MILITH CAME TO IRELAND TO TAKE IT FROM
+THE TUÁTHA DE DANAN," i.e., the gods of the ethnic Irish.
+
+Without pausing to enquire into the reasonableness of the date, it
+will suffice now to state that at this point the bardic history of
+Ireland cleaves asunder into two great divisions--the mythological
+or divine on the one hand, and the historical or heroic-historical
+on the other. The first is an enchanted land--the world of the
+Tuátha De Danan--the country of the gods. There we see Mananan with
+his mountain-sundering sword, the Fray-garta; there Lu Lamfada, the
+deliverer, pondering over his mysteries; there Bove Derg and his
+fatal [Note: Every feast to which he came ended in blood. He was
+present at the death of Conairey Mor, Chap. xxxiii., Vol. I.]
+swine-herd, Lir and his ill-starred children, Mac Mánar and his
+harp shedding death from its stricken wires, Angus Og, the
+beautiful, and he who was called the mighty father, Eochaidht
+[Note: Ay-o-chee, written Yeoha in Vol. I.] Mac Elathan, a land
+populous with those who had partaken of the feast of Goibneen, and
+whom, therefore, weapons could not slay, who had eaten [Note: In
+early Greek literature the province of history has been already
+separated from that of poetry. The ancient bardic lore and
+primaeval traditions were refined to suit the new and sensitive
+poetic taste. No commentator has been able to explain the nature of
+ambrosia. In the genuine bardic times, no such vague euphuism would
+have been tolerated as that of Homer on this subject. The nature of
+Olympian ambrosia would have been told in language as clear as that
+in which Homer describes the preparation of that Pramnian bowl for
+which Nestor and Machaon waited while Hecamede was grating over it
+the goat's milk cheese, or that in which the Irish bards described
+the ambrosia of the Tuátha De Danan, which, indeed, was no more
+poetic and awe-inspiring than plain bacon prepared by Mananan from
+his herd of enchanted pigs, living invisible like himself in the
+plains of Tir-na-n-Og, the land of the ever-young. On the other
+hand, there is a vagueness about the Feed Fia which would seem to
+indicate the growth of a more awe-stricken mood in describing
+things supernatural. The Faed Fia of the Greek gods has been
+refined by Homer into "much darkness," which, from an artistic
+point of view, one can hardly help imagining that Homer nodded as
+he wrote.] at the the table of Mananan, and would never grow old,
+who had invented for themselves the Faed Fia, and might not be seen
+of the gross eyes of men; there steeds like Anvarr crossing the wet
+sea like a firm plain; there ships whose rudder was the will, and
+whose sails and oars the wish, of those they bore [Note: Cf. The
+barks of the Phoenicians in the Odyssey.]; there hounds like that
+one of Ioroway, and spears like fiery flying serpents. These are
+the Tuátha De Danan [Note: A mystery still hangs over this
+three-formed name. The full expression, Tuátha De Danan, is that
+generally employed, less frequently Tuátha De, and sometimes, but
+not often, Tuátha. Tuátha also means people. In mediaeval times the
+name lost its sublime meaning, and came to mean merely "fairy," no
+greater significance, indeed, attaching to the invisible people of
+the island after Christianity had destroyed their godhood.], fairy
+princes, Tuátha; gods, De; of Dana, Danan, otherwise Ana and the
+Moreega, or great queen; mater [Note: Cormac's Glossary] deorum
+Hibernensium--"well she used to cherish [Note: Scholiast noting
+same Glossary.] the gods." Limitless, this divine population,
+dwelling in all the seas and estuaries, river and lakes, mountains
+and fairy dells, in that enchanted Erin which was theirs.
+
+But they have not started into existence suddenly, like the gods of
+Rome, nor is their genealogy confined to a single generation like
+those of Greece. Behind them extends a long line of ancestors, and
+a history reaching into the remotest depths of the past. As the
+Greek gods dethroned the Titans, so the Irish gods drove out or
+subjected the giants of the Fir-bolgs; but in the Irish mythology,
+we find both gods and giants descended from other ancient races of
+deities, called the Clanna Nemedh and the Fomoroh, and these a
+branch of a divine cycle; yet more ancient the race of Partholan,
+while Partholan himself is not the eldest.
+
+The history of the Italian gods is completely lost. For all that
+the early Roman literature tells us of their origin, they may have
+been either self-created or eternal. Rome was a seedling shaken
+from some old perished civilisation. The Romans created their own
+empire, but they inherited their gods. They supply no example of
+an Aryan nation evolving its own mythology and religion. Regal
+Rome, as we know from Niebuhr, was not the root from which our
+Rome sprang, but an old imperial city, from whose ashes sprang
+that Rome we all know so well. The mythology of the Latin writers
+came to them full-grown.
+
+The gods of Greece were a creation of the Greek mind, indeed; but
+of their ancestry, i.e., of their development from more ancient
+divine tribes, we know little. Like Pallas, they all but start into
+existence suddenly full-grown. Between the huge physical entities
+of the Greek theogonists and the Olympian gods, there intervenes
+but a single generation. For this loss of the Grecian mythology,
+and this substitution of Nox and Chaos for the remote ancestors of
+the Olympians, we have to thank the early Greek philosophers, and
+the general diffusion of a rude scientific knowledge, imparting a
+physical complexion to the mythological memory of the Greeks.
+
+In the theogony of the ancient inhabitants of this country, we have
+an example of a slowly-growing, slowly-changing mythology, such as
+no other nation in the world can supply. The ancestry of the Irish
+gods is not bounded by a single generation or by twenty. The Tuátha
+De Danan of the ancient Irish are the final outcome and last
+development of a mythology which we can see advancing step by step,
+one divine tribe pushing out another, one family of gods swallowing
+up another, or perishing under the hands of time and change, to
+make room for another. From Angus Og, the god of youth and love and
+beauty, whose fit home was the woody slopes of the Boyne, where it
+winds around Rosnaree, we count fourteen generations to Nemedh and
+four to Partholan, and Partholan is not the earliest. As the bards
+recorded with a zeal and minuteness, so far as I can see, without
+parallel, the histories of the families to which they were
+adscript, so also they recorded with equal patience and care the
+far-extending pedigrees of those other families--invisible indeed,
+but to them more real and more awe-inspiring--who dwelt by the
+sacred lakes and rivers, and in the folds of the fairy hills, and
+the great raths and cairns reared for them by pious hands.
+
+The extent, diversity, and populousness of the Irish mythological
+cycles, the history of the Irish gods, and the gradual growth of
+that mythology of which the Tuátha De Danan, i.e., the gods of the
+historic period, were the final development, can only be rightly
+apprehended by one who reads the bardic literature as it deals with
+this subject. That literature, however, so far from having been
+printed and published, has not even been translated, but still
+moulders in the public libraries of Europe, those who, like myself,
+are not professed Irish scholars, being obliged to collect their
+information piece-meal from quotations and allusions of those who
+have written upon the subject in the English or Latin language. For
+to read the originals aright needs many years of labour, the Irish
+tongue presenting at different epochs the characteristics of
+distinct languages, while the peculiarities of ancient caligraphy,
+in the defaced and illegible manuscripts, form of themselves quite
+a large department of study. Stated succinctly, the mythological
+record of the bards, with its chronological decorations, runs thus:--
+
+AGE OF KEASAIR.
+
+2379 B.C. the gods of the KEASAIRIAN cycle, Bith, Lara, and
+Fintann, and their wives, KEASAIR, Barran and Balba; their sacred
+places, Carn Keshra, Keasair's tomb or temple, on the banks of the
+Boyle, Ard Laran on the Wexford Coast, Fert Fintann on the shores
+of Lough Derg.
+
+About the same time Lot Luaimenich, Lot of the Lower Shannon, an
+ancient sylvan deity.
+
+AGE OF PARTHOLAN AND THE EARLIEST FOMORIAN GODS.
+
+2057 B.C. a new spiritual dynasty, of which PARTHOLAN was father
+and king. Though their worship was extended over Ireland, which is
+shown by the many different places connected with their history,
+yet the hill of Tallaght, ten miles from Dublin, was where they
+were chiefly adored. Here to the present day are the mounds and
+barrows raised in honour of the deified heroes of this cycle,
+PARTHOLAN himself, his wife Delgna, his sons, Rury, Slaney, and
+Laighlinni, and among others, the father of Irish hospitality,
+bearing the expressive name of Beer. Now first appear the Fomoroh
+giant princes, under the leadership of curt Kical, son of Niul, son
+of Garf, son of U-Mor--a divine cycle intervening between KEASAIR
+and PARTHOLAN, but not of sufficient importance to secure a
+separate chapter and distinct place in the annals. Battles now
+between the Clan Partholan and the Fomoroh, on the plain of Ith,
+beside the river Finn, Co. Donegal, so called from Ith [Note: See
+Vol. I, p. 60], son of Brogan, the most ancient of the heroes,
+slain here by the Tuátha De Danan, but more anciently known by some
+lost Fomorian name; also at Iorrus Domnan, now Erris, Co. Mayo,
+where Kical and his Fomorians first reached Ireland. These battles
+are a parable--objective representations of a fact in the mental
+history of the ancient Irish--typifying the invisible war waged
+between Partholanian and Fomorian deities for the spiritual
+sovereignty of the Gael.
+
+AGE OF THE NEMEDIAN GODS AND SECOND CYCLE OF THE FOMORIANS.
+
+1700 B.C. age of the NEMEDIAN divinities, a later branch of the
+PARTHOLANIAN _vide post_ NEMEDIAN pedigree. NEMEDH, his wife Maca
+(first appearance of Macha, the war goddess, who gave her name to
+Armagh, i.e., Ard Macha, the Height of Macha), Iarbanel; Fergus,
+the Red-sided, and Starn, sons of Nemedh; Beothah, son of Iarbanel;
+Erglann, son of Beoan, son of Starn; Siméon Brac, son of Starn;
+Ibath, son of Beothach; Britan Mael, son of Fergus. This must be
+remembered, that not one of the almost countless names that figure
+in the Irish mythology is of fanciful origin. They all represent
+antique heroes and heroines, their names being preserved in
+connection with those monuments which were raised for purposes of
+sepulture or cult.
+
+Wars now between the Clanna Nemedh and the second cycle of the
+Fomoroh, led this time by Faebar and More, sons of Dela, and
+Coning, son of Faebar; battles at Ros Freachan, now Rosreahan,
+barony of Murresk, Co. Mayo, at Slieve Blahma [Note: Slieve
+Blahma, now Slieve Bloom, a mountain range famous in our mythology;
+one of the peaks, Ard Erin, sacred to Eiré, a goddess of the Tuátha
+De Danan, who has given her name to the island. The sites of all
+these mythological battles, where they are not placed in the
+haunted mountains, will be found to be a place of raths and
+cromlechs.] and Murbolg, in Dalaradia (Murbolg, i.e., the
+stronghold of the giants,) also at Tor Coning, now Tory Island.
+
+FIRBOLGS AND THIRD CYCLE OF THE FOMOROH.
+
+1525 B.C. Age of the FIRBOLGS and third cycle of the Fomorians,
+once gods, but expulsed from their sovereignty by the Tuátha De
+Danan, after which they loom through the heroic literature as
+giants of the elder time, overthrown by the gods. From the FIRBOLGS
+were descended, or claimed to have descended, the Connaught
+warriors who fought with Queen Meave against Cuculain, also the
+Clan Humor, appearing in the Second Volume, also the heroes of
+Ossian, the Fianna Eireen. Even in the time of Keating, Irish
+families traced thither their pedigrees. The great chiefs of the
+FIR-BOLGIC dynasty were the five sons of Dela, Gann, Genann,
+Sengann, Rury, and Slaney, with their wives Fuad, Edain, Anust,
+Cnucha, and Libra; also their last and most potent king, EOCAIDH
+MAC ERC, son of Ragnal, son of Genann, whose tomb or temple may be
+seen to-day at Ballysadare, Co. Sligo, on the edge of the sea.
+
+The Fomorians of this age were ruled over by Baler Beimenna and
+his wife Kethlenn. Their grandson was Lu Lamáda, one of the
+noblest of the Irish gods.
+
+The last of the mythological cycles is that of the Tuátha De Danan,
+whose character, attributes, and history will, I hope, be rendered
+interesting and intelligible in my account of Cuculain and the Red
+Branch of Ulster.
+
+Irish history has suffered from rationalism almost more than from
+neglect and ignorance. The conjectures of the present century are
+founded upon mediaeval attempts to reduce to verisimilitude and
+historical probability what was by its nature quite incapable of
+such treatment. The mythology of the Irish nation, being relieved
+of the marvellous and sublime, was set down with circumstantial
+dates as a portion of the country's history by the literary men of
+the middle ages. Unable to excide from the national narrative those
+mythological beings who filled so great a place in the imagination
+of the times, and unable, as Christians, to describe them in their
+true character as gods, or, as patriots, in the character which
+they believed them to possess, namely, demons, they rationalized
+the whole of the mythological period with names, dates, and ordered
+generations, putting men for gods, flesh and blood for that
+invisible might, till the page bristled with names and dates, thus
+formulating, as annals, what was really the theogony and mythology
+of their country. The error of the mediaeval historians is shared
+by the not wiser moderns. In the generations of the gods we seem to
+see prehistoric racial divisions and large branches of the Aryan
+family, an error which results from a neglect of the bardic
+literature, and a consequently misdirected study of the annals.
+
+As history, the pre-Milesian record contains but a limited supply
+of objective truths; but as theogony, and the history of the Irish
+gods, these much abused chronicles are as true as the roll of the
+kings of England.
+
+These divine nations, with their many successive generations and
+dynasties, constitute a single family; they are all inter-connected
+and spring from common sources, and where the literature permits
+us to see more clearly, the earlier races exhibit a common
+character. Like a human clan, the elements of this divine family
+grew and died, and shed forth seedlings which, in time, over-grew
+and killed the parent stock. Great names became obscure and passed
+away, and new ones grew and became great. Gods, worshipped by the
+whole nation, declined and became topical, and minor deities
+expanding, became national. Gods lost their immortality, and were
+remembered as giants of the old time--mighty men, which were of
+yore, men of renown.
+
+ "The gods which were of old time rest in their tombs,"
+
+sang the Egyptians, consciously ascribing mortality even to gods.
+Such was Mac Ere, King of Fir-bolgs. His temple [Note: Strand near
+Ballysadare, Co. Sligo], beside the sea at Iorrus Domnan [Note:
+Keating--evidently quoting a bardic historian], became his tomb.
+Daily the salt tide embraces the feet of the great tumulus, regal
+amongst its smaller comrades, where the last king of Fir-bolgs was
+worshipped by his people. "Good [Note: Temple--vide post.] were the
+years of the sovereignty of Mac Ere. There was no wet or
+tempestuous weather in Ireland, nor was there any unfruitful year."
+Such were all the predecessors of the children of Dana--gods which
+were of old times, that rest in their tombs; and the days, too, of
+the Tuátha De Danan were numbered. They, too, smitten by a more
+celestial light, vanished from their hills, like Ossian lamenting
+over his own heroes; those others still mightier, might say:--
+
+ "Once every step which we took might be heard throughout the
+ firmament. Now, all have gone, they have melted into the air."
+
+But that divine tree, though it had its branches in fairy-land, had
+its roots in the soil of Erin. An unceasing translation of heroes
+into Tir-na-n-og went on through time, the fairy-world of the
+bards, receiving every century new inhabitants, whose humbler human
+origin being forgotten, were supplied there with both wives and
+children. The apotheosis of great men went forward, tirelessly; the
+hero of one epoch becoming the god of the next, until the formation
+of the Tuátha De Danan, who represent the gods of the historic
+ages. Had the advent of exact genealogy been delayed, and the
+creative imagination of the bards suffered to work on for a couple
+of centuries longer, unchecked by the historical conscience,
+Cuculain's human origin would, perhaps, have been forgotten, and he
+would have been numbered amongst the Tuátha De Danan, probably, as
+the son of Lu Lamfáda and the Moreega, his patron deities. It was,
+indeed, a favourite fancy of the bards that not Sualtam, but Lu
+Lamfáda himself, was his father; this, however, in a spiritual or
+supernatural sense, for his age was far removed from that of the
+Tuátha De Danan, and falling well within the scope of the historic
+period. Even as late as the time of Alexander, the Greeks could
+believe a great contemporary warrior to be of divine origin, and
+the son of Zeus.
+
+When the Irish bards began to elaborate a general history of their
+country, they naturally commenced with the enumeration of the elder
+gods. I at one time suspected that the long pedigrees running
+between those several divisions of the mythological period were the
+invention of mediaeval historians, anxious to spin out the national
+record, that it might reach to Shinar and the dispersion. Not only,
+however, was such fabrication completely foreign to the genius of
+the literature, but in the fragments of those early divine cycles,
+we see that each of these personages was at one time the centre of
+a literature, and holds a definite place as regards those who went
+before and came after. These pedigrees, as I said before, have no
+historical meaning, being pre-Milesian, and therefore absolutely
+prehistoric; but as the genealogy of the gods, and as representing
+the successive generations of that invisible family, whose history
+not one or ten bards, but the whole bardic and druidic organisation
+of the island, delighted to record, collate, and verify--those
+pedigrees are as reliable as that of any of the regal clans. They
+represent accurately the mythological panorama, as it unrolled
+itself slowly through the centuries before the imagination and
+spirit of our ancestors accurately that divine drama, millennium--
+lasting, with its exits and entrances of gods. Millennium-lasting,
+and more so, for it is plain that one divine generation represents
+on the average a much greater space of time than a generation of
+mortal men. The former probably represents the period which would
+elapse before a hero would become so divine, that is, so
+consecrated in the imagination of the country, as to be received
+into the family of the gods. Cuculain died in the era of the
+Incarnation, three hundred years, if not more, before the country
+even began to be Christianised, yet he is never spoken of as
+anything but a great hero, from which one of two things would
+follow, either that the apotheosis of heroes needed the lapse of
+centuries, or that, during the first, second, third, and fourth
+centuries, the historical conscience was so enlightened, and a
+positive definite knowledge of the past so universal, that the
+translation of heroes into the divine clans could no longer take
+place. The latter is indeed the more correct view; but the reader
+will, I think, agree with me that the divine generations, taken
+generally, represent more than the average space of man's life. To
+what remote unimagined distances of time those earlier cycles
+extend has been shown by an examination of the tombs of the lower
+Moy Tura. The ancient heroes there interred were those who, as
+Fir-bolgs, preceded the reign of the Tuáth De Danan, coming long
+after the Clanna Nemedh in the divine cycle, who were themselves
+preceded by the children of Partholan, who were subsequent to the
+Queen Keasair. Such then being the position in the divine cycle of
+the Fir-bolgs, an examination of the Firbolgic raths on Moy Tura
+has revealed only implements of stone, proving demonstratively that
+the early divine cycles originated before the bronze age in
+Ireland, whenever that commenced. Those heroes who, as Fir-bolgs,
+received divine honours, lived in the age of stone. So far is it
+from being the case, that the mythological record has been extended
+and unduly stretched, to enable the monkish historians to connect
+the Irish pedigrees with those of the Mosaic record, that it has, I
+believe, been contracted for this purpose.
+
+The reader will be now prepared to peruse with some interest and
+understanding one or two of the mythological pedigrees. To these I
+have at times appended the dates, as given in the chronicles, to
+show how the early historians rationalised the pre-historic record.
+
+Angus Og, the Beautiful, represents the Greek Eros. He was surnamed
+Og, or young; Mac-an-Og, or the son of youth; Mac-an-Dagda, son of
+the Dagda. He was represented with a harp, and attended by bright
+birds, his own transformed kisses, at whose singing love arose in
+the hearts of youths and maidens. To him and to his father the
+great tumulus of New Grange, upon the Boyne, was sacred.
+
+ "I visited the Royal Brugh that stands
+ By the dark-rolling waters of the Boyne,
+ Where Angus Og magnificently dwells."
+
+He was the patron god of Diarmid, the Paris of Ossian's Fianna, and
+removed him into Tir-na-n-Og, when he died, having been ripped by
+the tusks of the wild boar on the peaks of Slieve Gulban.
+
+Lu Lamfáda was the patron god of Cuculain. He was surnamed Ioldana,
+as the source of the sciences, and represented the Greek Apollo.
+The latter was argurgurotoxos [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the
+original], but Lu was a sling bearing god. Of Fomorian descent
+on the mother's side, he joined his father's people, the Tuátha
+De Danan, in the great war against the Fomoroh. He is principally
+celebrated for his oppression of the sons of Turann, in vengeance
+for the murder of his father.
+
+ANGUS OG, (circa 1500 B.C.) LU LAMFADA, (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+THE DAGDA, (Zeus) Cian,
+ son of son of
+Elathan, Diancéct, (god the healer)
+ son of son of
+Dela, Esric,
+ son of son of
+Ned, Dela,
+ son of son of
+Indaei, Ned,
+ son of son of
+ Indaei,
+ son of
+ ALLDAEI.
+
+Amongst other Irish gods was Bove Derg, who dwelt invisible in
+the Galtee mountains, and in the hills above Lough Derg. The
+transformed children alluded to in Vol. I. were his grand-children.
+It was his goldsmith Len, who gave its ancient name to the Lakes of
+Killarney, Locha Lein. Here by the lake he worked, surrounded by
+rainbows and showers of fiery dew.
+
+Mananan was the god of the sea, of winds and storms, and most
+skilled in magic lore. He was friendly to Cuculain, and was invoked
+by seafaring men. He was called the Far Shee of the promontories.
+
+BOVE DERG (circa 1500 B.C.) MANANAN (circa 1500 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+Eocaidh Garf, Alloid,
+ son of son of
+Duach Temen, Elathan,
+ son of son of
+Bras, Dela,
+ son of son of
+Dela, Ned,
+ son of son of
+Ned, Indaei,
+ son of son of
+Indaei,
+ son of
+ ALLDAEI.
+
+The Tuátha De Danan maybe counted literally by the hundred, each
+with a distinct history, and all descended from Alldaei.
+
+From Alldaei the pedigree runs back thus:--
+
+ Alldaei
+ son of
+ Tath,
+ son of
+ Tabarn,
+ son of
+ Enna,
+ son of
+ Baath,
+ son of
+ Ebat,
+ son of
+ Betah,
+ son of
+ Iarbanel,
+ son of
+ NEMEDH (circa 1700 B.C.)
+
+Nemedh, as I have said, forms one of the great epochs in the
+mythological record. As will be seen, he and the earlier Partholan
+have a common source:--
+
+NEMEDH
+ son of
+Sera,
+ son of
+Pamp,
+ son of
+Tath, PARTHOLAN (2000 B.C.)
+ son of son of
+ Sera,
+ son of
+ Sru,
+ son of
+ Esru,
+ son of
+ Pramant.
+
+The connection between Keasair, the earliest of the Irish gods, and
+the rest of the cycle, I have not discovered, but am confident of
+its existence.
+
+How this divine cycle can be expunged from the history of Ireland I
+am at a loss to see. The account which a nation renders of itself
+must, and always does, stand at the head of every history.
+
+How different is this from the history and genealogy of the Greek
+gods which runs thus:--
+
+ The Olympian gods,
+ Titans,
+ Physical entities, Nox, Chaos, &c.
+
+The Greek gods, undoubtedly, had a long ancestry extending into the
+depths of the past, but the sudden advent of civilisation broke up
+the bardic system before the historians could become philosophical,
+or philosophers interested in antiquities.
+
+But the Irish history corrects our view with regard to other
+matters connected with the gods of the Aryan nations of Europe
+also.
+
+All the nations of Europe lived at one time under the bardic and
+druidic system, and under that system imagined their gods and
+elaborated their various theogonies, yet, in no country in Europe
+has a bardic literature been preserved except in Ireland, for no
+thinking man can believe Homer to have been a product of that rude
+type of civilisation of which he sings. This being the case, modern
+philosophy, accounting for the origin of the classical deities by
+guesses and _a priori_ reasonings, has almost universally adopted
+that explanation which I have, elsewhere, called Wordsworthian, and
+which derives them directly from the imagination personifying the
+aspects of nature.
+
+ "In that fair clime, the lonely herdsman, stretched
+ On the soft grass through half a summer's day,
+ With music lulled his indolent repose,
+ And in some fit of weariness if he,
+ When his own breath was silent, chanced to hear
+ A distant strain far sweeter than the sounds
+ Which his poor skill could make, his fancy fetched,
+ Even from the blazing chariot of the sun,
+ A beardless youth who touched a golden lute
+ And filled the illumined groves with ravishment--
+ ***
+ "Sunbeams upon distant hills,
+ Gliding apace with shadows in their train,
+ Might, with small help from fancy, be transformed
+ Into fleet oreads, sporting visibly."
+
+This is pretty, but untrue. In all the ancient Irish literature we
+find the connection of the gods, both those who survived into the
+historic times, and those whom they had dethroned, with the raths
+and cairns perpetually and almost universally insisted upon. The
+scene of the destruction of the Firbolgs will be found to be a
+place of tombs, the metropolis of the Fomorians a place of tombs,
+and a place of tombs the sacred home of the Tuátha along the shores
+of the Boyne. Doubtless, they are represented also as dwelling in
+the hills, lakes, and rivers, but still the connection between the
+great raths and cairns and the gods is never really forgotten. When
+the floruit of a god has expired, he is assigned a tomb in one of
+the great tumuli. No one can peruse this ancient literature without
+seeing clearly the genesis of the Irish gods, _videlicet_ heroes,
+passing, through the imagination and through the region of poetic
+representation, into the world of the supernatural. When a king
+died, his people raised his ferta, set up his stone, and engraved
+upon it, at least in later times, his name in ogham. They
+celebrated his death with funeral lamentations and funeral games,
+and listened to the bards chanting his prowess, his liberality, and
+his beauty. In the case of great warriors, these games and
+lamentations became periodical. It is distinctly recorded in many
+places, for instance in connection with Taylti, who gave her name
+to Taylteen and Garman, who gave her name to Loch Garman, now
+Wexford, and with Lu Lamfáda, whose annual worship gave its name to
+the Kalends of August. Gradually, as his actual achievements became
+more remote, and the imagination of the bards, proportionately,
+more unrestrained, he would pass into the world of the supernatural.
+Even in the case of a hero so surrounded with historic light as
+Cuculain we find a halo, as of godhood, often settling around him.
+His gray warsteed had already passed into the realm of mythical
+representation, as a second avatar of the Liath Macha, the grey
+war-horse of the war-goddess Macha. This could be believed, even
+in the days when the imagination was controlled by the annalists
+and tribal heralds.
+
+The gods of the Irish were their deified ancestors. They were not
+the offspring of the poetic imagination, personifying the various
+aspects of nature. Traces, indeed, we find of their influence over
+the operations of nature, but they are, upon the whole, slight and
+unimportant. From nature they extract her secrets by their
+necromantic and magical labours, but nature is as yet too great to
+be governed and impelled by them. The Irish Apollo had not yet
+entered into the sun.
+
+Like every country upon which imperial Rome did not leave the
+impress of her genius, Ireland, in these ethnic times, attained
+only a partial unity. The chief king indeed presided at Tara, and
+enjoyed the reputation and emoluments flowing to him on that
+account, but, upon the whole, no Irish king exercised more than a
+local sovereignty; they were all reguli, petty kings, and their
+direct authority was small. This being the case, it would appear to
+me that in the more ancient times the death of a king would not be
+an event which would disturb a very extensive district, and that,
+though his tomb might be considerable, it would not be gigantic.
+
+Now on the banks of the Boyne, opposite Rosnaree, there stands a
+tumulus, said to be the greatest in Europe. It covers acres of
+ground, being of proportionate height. The earth is confined by a
+compact stone wall about twelve feet high. The central chamber,
+made of huge irregular pebbles, is about twenty feet from ground to
+roof, communicating with the outer air by a flagged passage.
+Immense pebbles, drawn from the County of Antrim, stand around it,
+each of which, even to move at all, would require the labour of
+many men, assisted with mechanical appliances. It is, of course,
+impossible to make an accurate estimate of the expenditure of
+labour necessary for the construction of such a work, but it would
+seem to me to require thousands of men working for years. Can we
+imagine that a petty king of those times could, after his death,
+when probably his successor had enough to do to sustain his new
+authority, command such labour merely to provide for himself a
+tomb. If this tomb were raised to the hero whose name it bears
+immediately after his death, and in his mundane character, he must
+have been such a king as never existed in Ireland, even in the late
+Christian times. Even Brian of the Tributes himself, could not have
+commanded such a sepulture, or anything like it, living though he
+did, probably, two thousand years later than that Eocaidh Mac
+Elathan, whenever he did live. There is a _nodus_ here needing a
+god to solve it.
+
+Returning now to what would most likely take place after the
+interment of a hero, we may well imagine that the size of his tomb
+would be in proportion to the love which he inspired, where no
+accidental causes would interfere with the gratification of that
+feeling. Of one of his heroes, Ossian, sings--
+
+ "We made his cairn great and high
+ Like a king's."
+
+After that there would be periodical meetings in his honour, the
+celebration of games, solemn recitations by bards, singing his
+aristeia [Transcriber's Note: Greek in the original]. Gradually
+the new wine would burst the old bottles. The ever-active,
+eager-loving imagination would behold the champion grown to
+heroic proportions, the favourite of the gods, the performer of
+superhuman feats. The tomb, which was once commensurate with the
+love and reverence which he inspired, would seem so now no longer.
+The tribal bards, wandering or attending the great fairs and
+assemblies, would disperse among strangers and neighbours a
+knowledge of his renown. In the same cemetery or neighbourhood
+their might be other tombs of heroes now forgotten, while he,
+whose fame was in every bardic mouth in all that region, was
+honoured only with a tomb no greater than theirs. The mere king
+or champion, grown into a topical hero, would need a greater tomb.
+
+Ere long again, owing to the bardic fraternity, who, though coming
+from Innishowen or Cape Clear, formed a single community, the
+topical hero would, in some cases, where his character was such as
+would excite deeper reverence and greater fame, grow into a
+national hero, and a still nobler tomb be required, in order that
+the visible memorial might prove commensurate with the imaginative
+conception.
+
+Now all this time the periodic celebrations, the games, and
+lamentations, and songs would be assuming a more solemn character.
+Awe would more and more mingle with the other feelings inspired by
+his name. Certain rites and a certain ritual would attend those
+annual games and lamentations, which would formerly not have been
+suitable, and eventually, when the hero, slowly drawing nearer
+through generations, if not centuries, at last reached Tir-na-n-Og,
+and was received into the family of the gods, a religious feeling
+of a different nature would mingle with the more secular
+celebration of his memory, and his rath or cairn would assume in
+their eyes a new character.
+
+To an ardent imaginative people the complete extinction by death of
+a much-loved hero would even at first be hardly possible. That the
+tomb which held his ashes should be looked upon as the house of
+the hero must have been, even shortly after his interment, a
+prevailing sentiment, whether expressed or not. Also, the feeling
+must have been present, that the hero in whose honour they
+performed the annual games, and periodically chanted the
+remembrance of whose achievements, saw and heard those things that
+were done in his honour. But as the celebration became greater and
+more solemn, this feeling would become more strong, and as the
+tomb, from a small heap of stones or low mound, grew into an
+enormous and imposing rath, the belief that this was the hero's
+house, in which he invisibly dwelt, could not be avoided, even
+before they ceased to regard him as a disembodied hero; and after
+the hero had mingled with the divine clans, and was numbered
+amongst the gods, the idea that the rath was a tomb could not
+logically be entertained. As a god, was he not one of those who had
+eaten of the food provided by Mananan, and therefore never died.
+The rath would then become his house or temple. As matter of fact,
+the bardic writings teem with this idea. From reason and
+probability, we would with some certainty conclude that the great
+tumulus of New Grange was the temple of some Irish god; but that it
+was so, we know as a fact. The father and king of the gods is
+alluded to as dwelling there, going out from thence, and returning
+again, and there holding his invisible court.
+
+ "Behold the _Sid_ before your eyes,
+ It is manifest to you that it is a king's mansion."
+[Note: O'Curry's Manuscript Materials of Irish History, page 505.]
+
+ "Bove Derg went to visit the Dagda at the Brugh of Mac-An-Og."
+[Note: "Dream of Angus," Révue Celtique, Vol. III., page 349.]
+
+Here also dwelt Angus Og, the son of the Dagda. In this, his spiritual
+court or temple, he is represented as having entertained Oscar and
+the Ossianic heroes, and thither he conducted [Note: Publications of
+Ossianic Society, Vol. III., page 201.] the spirit of Diarmid, that
+he might have him for ever there.
+
+In the etymology also we see the origin of the Irish gods. A grave
+in Irish is Sid, the disembodied spirit is Sidhe, and this latter
+word glosses Tuátha De Danan.
+
+The fact that the grave of a hero developed slowly into the temple
+of a god, explains certain obscurities in the annals and
+literature. As a hero was exalted into a god, so in turn a god sank
+into a hero, or rather into the race of the giants. The elder gods,
+conquered and destroyed by the younger, could no longer be regarded
+as really divine, for were they not proved to be mortal? The
+development of the temple from the tomb was not forgotten, the
+whole country being filled with such tombs and incipient temples,
+from the great Brugh on the Boyne to the smallest mound in any of
+the cemeteries. Thus, when the elder gods lost their spiritual
+sovereignty, and their destruction at the hands of the younger took
+the form of great battles, then as the god was forced to become a
+giant, so his temple was remembered to be a tomb. Doubtless, in his
+own territory, divine honours were still paid him; but in the
+national imagination and in the classical literature and received
+history, he was a giant of the olden time, slain by the gods, and
+interred in the rath which bore his name. Such was the great Mac
+Erc, King of Fir-bolgs.
+
+Again, when the mediaeval Christians ceased to regard the Tuátha De
+Danan as devils, and proceeded to rationalise the divine record as
+the ethnic bards had rationalised the history of the early gods;
+the Tuátha De Danan, shorn of immortality, became ancient heroes
+who had lived their day and died, and the greater raths, no longer
+the houses of the gods, figure in that literature irrationally
+rational, as their tombs. Thus we are gravely informed [Note:
+Annals of Four Masters.] that "the Dagda Mor, after the second
+battle of Moy Tura, retired to the Brugh on the Boyne, where he
+died from the venom of the wounds inflicted on him by Kethlenn"--
+the Fomorian amazon--"and was there interred." Even in this passage
+the writer seems to have been unable to dispossess his mind quite
+of the traditional belief that the Brugh was the Dagda's house.
+
+The peculiarity of this mound, in addition to its size, is the
+spaciousness of the central chamber. This was that germ which, but
+for the overthrow of the bardic religion, would have developed into
+a temple in the classic sense of the word. A two-fold motive would
+have impelled the growing civilisation in this direction. A desire
+to make the house of the god as spacious within as it was great
+without, and a desire to transfer his worship, or the more esoteric
+and solemn part of it, from without to within. Either the absence
+of architectural knowledge, or the force of conservatism, or the
+advent of the Christian missionaries, checked any further
+development on these lines.
+
+Elsewhere the tomb, instead of developing as a tumulus or barrow,
+produced the effect of greatness by huge circumvallations of earth,
+and massive walls of stone. Such is the temple of Ned the war-god,
+called Aula Neid, the court or palace of Ned, near the Foyle in
+the North. Had the ethnic civilisation of Ireland been suffered to
+develop according to its own laws, it is probable that, as the
+roofed central chamber of the cairn would have grown until it
+filled the space occupied by the mound, so the open-walled temple
+would have developed into a covered building, by the elevation of
+the walls, and their gradual inclination to the centre.
+
+The bee-hive houses of the monks, the early churches, and the round
+towers are a development of that architecture which constructed the
+central chambers of the raths. In this fact lies, too, the
+explanation of the cyclopean style of building which characterizes
+our most ancient buildings. The cromlech alone, formed in very
+ancient times the central chamber of the cairn; it is found in the
+centre of the raths on Moy Tura, belonging to the stone age and
+that of the Firbolgs. When the cromlech fell into disuse, the
+arched chamber above the ashes of the hero was constructed with
+enormous stones, as a substitute for the majestic appearance
+presented by the massive slab and supporting pillars of the more
+ancient cromlech, and the early stone buildings preserved the same
+characteristic to a certain extent.
+
+The same sentiment which caused the mediaeval Christians to
+disinter and enshrine the bones of their saints, and subsequently
+to re-enshrine them with greater art and more precious materials,
+caused the ethnic worshippers of heroes to erect nobler tombs over
+the inurned relics of those whom they revered, as the meanness of
+the tomb was seen to misrepresent and humiliate the sublimity of
+the conception. But the Christians could never have imagined their
+saints to have been anything but men--a fact which caused the
+retention and preservation of the relics. When the Gentiles exalted
+their hero into a god, the charred bones were forgotten or ascribed
+to another. The hero then became immortal in his own right; he had
+feasted with Mananan and eaten his life-giving food, and would not
+know death.
+
+When the mortal character of the hero was forgotten, his house or
+temple might be erected anywhere. The great Raths of the Boyne--a
+place grown sacred from causes which we may not now learn--
+represented, probably, heroes and heroines, who died and were
+interred in many different parts of the country.
+
+To recapitulate, the Dagda Mor was a divine title given to a hero
+named Eocaidh, who lived many centuries before the birth of Christ,
+and in the depths of the pre-historic ages. He was the mortal scion
+or ward of an elder god, Elathan, and was interred in some unknown
+grave--marked, perhaps, by a plain pillar stone, or small
+insignificant cairn.
+
+The great tumulus of New Grange was the temple of the divine or
+supernatural period of his spiritual or imagined career after
+death, and was a development by steps from that small unremembered
+grave where once his warriors hid the inurned ashes of the hero.
+
+What is true of one branch of the Aryan family is true of all.
+Sentiments of such universality and depth must have been common to
+all. If this be so, the Olympian Zeus himself was once some rude
+chieftain dwelling in Thrace or Macedonia, and his sublime temple
+of Doric architecture traceable to some insignificant cairn or
+flagged cist in Greece, or some earlier home of the Hellenic race,
+and his name not Zeus, but another; and Kronos, that god whom he,
+as a living wight, adored, and under whose protection and favour he
+prospered.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, EARLY BARDIC LITERATURE, IRELAND. ***
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