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myths and legends of the celtic race
Chapter 3: The Irish Invasion Myths
The Celtic Cosmogony
AMONG those secret doctrines about the "nature of things" which,
as Ciesar tells us, the Druida never would commit to writing, was
there any-thing in the nature of a cosmogony, any account of the
origin of the world and of man? There surely was. It would be
strange indeed if; alone among the races or the world, the Celts had
no world-myth. The spectacle of the universe with all its vast and
mysterious phenomena in heaven and on earth has aroused, first the
imagination, afterwards the speculative reason, in every people
which is capable of either. The Celts had both in abundance, yet,
except for that one phrase about the "indestructibility" of the
world handed down to us by Strabo, we know nothing of their early
imaginings or their reasoning's on this subject. Ireland possesses a
copious legendary literature. All of this, no doubt, assumed its
present form in Christian times; yet so much essential paganism has
been allowed to remain in it that it would be strange if Christian
infuences had led to the excision of everything in these ancient
texts that pointed to a. non-Christian conception of the origin of
things - if Christian editors and transmitters had never given us
even the least glimmer of the existence of such a conception. Yet
the fact is that they do not give it; there is nothing in the most
ancient legendary literature of the Irish Gaels, which is the oldest
Celtic literature in existence, corresponding to the Babylonian
conquest of Chaos, or the wild Norse myth of the making of Midgard
out of the corpse of Ymir, or the Egyptian creation of the universe
out of the primeval Water by Thoth, the Word of God, or even to the
primitive folk-lore
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conceptions found in almost every savage tribe. That the Druids
had some doctrine on this subject it is impossible to doubt. But, by
resolutely confining it to the initiated and forbidding all lay
speculation on the subject, they seem to have completely stifled the
myth-making instinct in regard to questions of cosmogony among the
people at large, and ensured that when their own order perished,
their teaching, whatever it was, should die with them.
In the early Irish accounts, therefore, of the beginnings of
things, we find that it is not with the World that the narrators
make their start-it is simply with their own country, with Ireland.
It was the practice, indeed, to prefix to these narratives of early
invasions and colonisations the Scriptural account of the making of
the world and man, and this shows that something of the kind was
felt to be required; but what took the place of the Biblical
narrative in pre-Christian days we do not know, and, unfortunately,
are now never likely to know.
The Cycles of Irish Legend
Irish mythical and legendary literature, as we have it in the
most ancient form, may be said to fall into four main divisions, and
to these we shall adhere in our presentation of it in this volume.
They are, in chronological order, the Mythological Cycle, or Cycle
of the Invasions, the Ultonian or Conorian Cycle, the Ossianic or
Fenian Cycle, and a multitude of miscellaneous tales and legends
which it is hard to fit into any historical framework.
The Mythological Cycle
The Mythological Cycle comprises the following sections:
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I. The coming of Partholan into Ireland.
2. The coming of Nemed into Ireland.
3. The coming of the Firbolgs into Ireland.
4. The invasion of the Tuatha De Danann, or People of the
god Dana.
5. The invasion of the Milesians (Sons of Miled) from Spain) and
their conquest of the People of Dana.
With the Milesians we begin to come into something resembling
history - they represent, in Irish legend, the Celtic race; and from
them the ruling families of Ireland are supposed to be descended.
The People of Dana are evidently gods. The pre-Danaan settlers or
invaders are huge phantom-like figures) which loom vaguely through
the mists of tradition, and have little definite characterisation.
The accounts which are given of them are many and conflicting, and
out of these we can only give here the more ancient narratives.
The Coming of Partholan
The Celts, as we have learned from Caesar, believed themselves to
be descended from the God of the Underworld, the God of the Dead.
Partholan is said to have come into Ireland from the West, where
beyond the vast, unsailed Atlantic Ocean the Irish Fairyland, the
Land of the Living - i.e., the land of the Happy Dead - was placed.
His father's name was Sera (? the West). He came with his queen
Dalny [Dealgnaid. I have been obliged here, as occasionally
elsewhere; to modify the Irish names so as to make them
pronounceable by English readers] and a number of companions of both
sexes. Ireland - and this is an imaginative touch intended to
suggest extreme antiquity-was then a different country, physically,
from what it is now. There were then but three lakes in Ireland)
nine rivers, and only one plain. Others were added gradually
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during the reign of the Partholanians. One, Lake Rury, was said
to have burst out as a grave was being dug for Rury, son of
Partholan.
The Fomorians
The Partholanians, it is said, had to do battle with a strange
race, called the Fomorians, of whom we shall hear much
in later sections of this book. They were a huge, misshapen, violent
and cruel people, representing, we may believe, the powers of evil.
One of these was surnamed Cenchos, which means The Footless,
and thus appears to be related to Vitra, the God of Evil in Vedantic
mythology, who had neither feet nor hands. With a host of these
demons Partholan fought for the lordship of Ireland, and drove them
out to the northern seas, whence they occasionally harried the
country under its later rulers.
The end of the race of Partholan was that they were afflicted by
pestilence, and having gathered together on the Old Plain (Senmag)
for convenience of burying their dead, they all perished there ; and
Ireland once more lay empty for reoccupation.
The Legend of Tuan mac Carell
Who, then, told the tale ? This brings us to the mention of a
very curious and interesting legend - one of the numerous legendary
narratives in which these tales of the Mythical Period have come
down to us. It is found in the so called "Book of the Dun Cow," a
manuscript of about the year A.D. 1100, and is entitled "The Legend
of Tuan mac Carell."
St. Finnen, an Irish abbot of the sixth century, is said to have
gone to seek hospitality from a chief named Tuan mac Carell, who
dwelt not far from Finnen's monastery at Moville, Co. Donegal. Tuan
refused
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him admittance. The saint sat down on the doorstep of the chief
and fasted for a whole Sunday [see p. 48, note 1] upon which
the surly pagan warrior opened the door to him. Good relations were
established between them, and the saint returned to his monks.
"Tuan is an excellent man," said he to them; "he will come to you
and comfort you, and tell you the old stories of Ireland." [I follow
in this narrative R. I. Best's translation of the "Irish
Mythological Cycle" of d'Arbois de Jubainville]
This humane interest in the old myths and legends of the country
is, it may here be observed, a feature as constant as it is pleasant
in the literature of early Irish Christianity.
Tuan came shortly afterwards to return the visit of the saint,
and invited him and his disciples to his fortress. They asked him of
his name and lineage, and he gave an astounding reply. "I am a man
of Ulster," he said. "My name is Tuan son of Carell. But once I was
called Tuan son of Starn, son of Sera, and my father, Starn, was the
brother of Partholan."
"Tell us the history of Ireland," then said Finnen, and Tuan
began. Partholan, he said, was the first of men to settle in
Ireland. After the great pestilence already narrated he alone
survived, "for there is never a slaughter that one man does not come
out of it to tell the tale." Tuan was alone in the land, and he
wandered about from one vacant fortress to another, from rock to
rock, seeking shelter from the wolves. For twenty-two years he lived
thus alone, dwelling in waste places, till at last he fell into
extreme decrepitude and old age.
"Then Nemed son of Agnoman took possession of Ireland. He
[Agnoman] was my father's brother. I
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saw him from the cliffs, and kept avoiding him. I was
long-haired, clawed, decrepit, grey, naked, wretched, miserable.
Then one evening I fell asleep, and when I woke again on the morrow
I was changed into a stag. I was young again and glad of
heart. Then I sang of the coming of Nermed and of his race, and of
my own transformation. . . . 'I have put on a new form, a skin rough
and grey. Victory and joy are easy to me; a little while ago I was
weak and defenceless.
Tuan is then king of all the deer of Ireland, and so remained all
the days of Nemed and his race.
He tells how the Nemedians sailed for Ireland in a fleet of
thirty-two barks, in each bark thirty persons. They went astray on
the sea for a year and a half, and most of them perished of hunger
and thirst or of ship-wreck. Nine only escaped - Nemed himself, with
four men and four women. These landed in Ireland, and increased
their numbers in the course of time till they were 8060 men and
women. Then all of them mysteriously died.
Again old age and decrepitude fell upon Tuan, but another
transformation awaited him. "Once I was standing at the mouth of my
cave - I still remember it - and l knew that my body changed into
another form. I was a wild boar. And I sang this song about it:
" 'Today I am a boar. . . . Time was when I sat in the assembly
that gave the judgments of Partholan. It was sung, and all praised
the melody. How pleasant was the strain of my brilliant judgment !
How pleasant to the comely young women ! My chariot went along in
majesty and beauty. My voice was grave and sweet. My step was swift
and firm in battle. My face was full of charm. Today, lo ! I am
changed into a black boar.'
"That is what I said. Yea, of a surety I was a wild boar. Then I
became young again and I was glad. I
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was king of the boar-herds in Ireland; and, faithful to any
custom, I went the rounds of my abode when I returned into the lands
of Ulster, at the times old age and wretchedness came upon me. For
it was always there that my transformations took place, and that is
why I went back thither to await the renewal of my body."
Tuan then goes on to tell how Semion son of Stariat settled in
Ireland, from whom descended the Firbolgs and two other tribes who
persisted into historic times. Again old age comes on, his strength
fails him, and he undergoes another transformation; he becomes "a
great eagle of the sea, and once more rejoices in renewed youth and
vigour. He then tells how the People of Dana came in, "gods and
false gods from whom every one knows the Irish men of learning are
sprung." After these came the Sons of Miled, who conquered the
People of Dana. All this time Tuan kept the shape of the Sea-eagle,
till one day, finding himself about to undergo another
transformation, he fasted nine days; "then sleep fell upon me, and I
was changed into a salmon." He rejoices in his new life, escaping
for many years the snares of the fishermen, till at last he is
captured by one of them and brought to the wife of Carell, chief of
the country. "The woman desired me and ate me by herself, whole, so
that I passed into her womb." He is born again, and passes for Tuan
son of Carell; but the memory of his pre-existence and all his
transformations and all the history of Ireland that he witnessed
since the days of Partholan still abides with him, and he teaches
all these things to the Christian monks, who carefully preserve
them.
This wild tale, with its atmosphere of grey antiquity and of
childlike wonder, reminds us of the transformations of the Welsh
Taliessin, who also became an eagle,
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and points to that doctrine of the transmigration of the soul
which as we have seen, haunted the imagination of the Celt.
We have now to add some details to the sketch of of the
successive colonisations of Ireland outlined by Tuan mac Carell.
The Nemedians
The Nemedians, as we have seen, were akin to the Partholanians.
Both of them came from the mysterious regions of the dead, though
later Irish accounts, which endeavoured to reconcile this mythical
matter with Christianity, invented for them a descent from
Scriptural patriarchs and an origin in earthly lands such as Spain
or Scythia. Both of them had to do constant battle with the
Fomorians, whom the later legends make out to be pirates from
oversea, but who are doubtless divinities representing the powers of
darkness and evil. There is no legend of the Fomorians coming into
Ireland, nor were they regarded as at any time a regular portion of
the population. They were coeval with the world itself. Nemed fought
victoriously against them in four great battles, but shortly
afterwards died of a plague which carried off 2000 of his people
with him. The Fomorians were then enabled to establish their tyranny
over Ireland. They had at this period two kings, Morc and Conann.
The stronghold of the Formorian power was on Tory Island, which
uplifts its wild cliffs and precipices in the Atlantic off the coast
of Donegal - a fit home for this race of mystery and horror. They
extracted a crushing tribute from the people of Ireland, two-thirds
of all the milk and two-thirds of the children of the land. At last
the Nemedians rise in revolt. Lead by three chiefs, they land on
Tory Island, capture Conann's Tower, and Conann himself falls by
the
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hand of the Nemedian chief, Fergus. But Morc at this moment comes
into the battle with a fresh host, and utterly routs the Nemedians,
who are all slain but thirty:
"The men of Erin were all at the battle, After the Fomorians
came All of them the sea engulphed, Save only three times
ten." Poem by Eochy O'Flann, circa. A.D. 960.
The thirty survivors leave Ireland in despair. According to the
most ancient belief they perished utterly, leaving no descendants,
but later accounts, which endeavour to make sober history out of all
these myths, represent one family, that of the chief Britain, as
settling in Great Britain and giving their name to that country,
while two others returned to Ireland, after many wanderings, as the
Firbolgs and People of Dana.
The Coming of the FirboIgs
Who were the Firbolgs, and what did they represent in Irish
legend? The name appears to mean "Men of the Bags," and a legend was
in later times invented to account for it. It was said that after
settling in Greece they were oppressed by the people of that
country, who set them to carry earth from the fertile valleys up to
the rocky hills, so as to make arable ground of the latter. They did
their task by means of leathern bags; but at last, growing weary of
the oppression, they made boats or coracles out of their bags, and
set sail in them for Ireland. Nennius, however, says they came from
Spain, for according to him all the various races that inhabited
Ireland came originally from Spain; and "Spain" with him is a
rationalistic rendering of the Celtic words designating the Land of
the Dead. [De Jubainville, "Irish Mythological Cycle," p. 75] They
came in three
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groups, the Fir-Boig, the Fir-Domnan, and the Gailoin, who are
all generally designated as Firbolgs. They play no great part in
Irish mythical history, and a certain character of servility and
inferiority appears to attach to them throughout.
One of their kings, Eochy [Pronounced "Yeóhee"] mac Erc, took in
marriage Taltiu, or Telta, daughter of the King of the "Great Plain"
(the Land of the Dead). Telta had a palace at the palace now called
after her, Telltown (properly Teltin). There she died, and there,
even in medieval Ireland, a great annual assembly or fair was held
in her honour.
The Coming of the People of Dana
We now come to by far the most interesting and important of the
mythical invaders and colonisers of Ireland, the People of Dana. The
name, Tuatha De Danann; means literally "the folk of the god
whose mother is Dana." Dana also sometimes bears another name, that
of Brigit, a goddess held in much honour by pagan Ireland, whose
attributes are in a great measure transferred in legend to the
Christian St. Brigit of the sixth century. Her name is also found in
Gaulish inscriptions as "Brigindo," and occurs in several British
inscriptions as "Brigantia." She was the daughter of the supreme
head of the People of Dana, the god Dagda, "The Good." She had three
sons, who are said to have had in common one only son, named Ecne
that is to say, "Knowledge," or "Poetry." [The science of the
Druids, as we have seen, was conveyed in verse, and the professional
poets were a branch of the Druidic Order] Ecrie, then, may be said
to be the god whose mother was Dana, and the race to whom she gave
her name are the dearest representatives we have in Irish myths
of
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the powers of Light and Knowledge. It will be remembered that
alone among all these mythical races Tuan mac Carell gave to the
People of Dana the name of "gods." Yet it is not as gods that they
appear in the form in which Irish legends about them have now come
down to us. Christian influences reduced them to the rank of fairies
or identified them with the fallen angels. They were conquered by
the Milesians, who are conceived as an entirely human race, and who
had all sorts of relations of love and war with them until quite
recent times. Yet even in the later legends a certain splendour and
exaltation appears to invest the People of Dana, recalling the high
estate from which they had been dethroned.
The Popular and the Bardic Conceptions
Nor must it be overlooked that the popular conception of the
Danaan deities was probably at all times something different from
the bardic and Druidic, or in other words the scholarly, conception.
The latter, as we shall see, represents them as the presiding
deities of science and poetry. This is not a popular idea; it is the
product of the Celtic, the Aryan imagination, inspired by a strictly
intellectual conception. The common people, who represented mainly
the Megalithic element in the population, appear to have conceived
their deities as earth-powers - dei terreni; as they are
explicitly called in the eighth-century "Book of Armagh" [,Mever and
Nutt, "Voyage of Bran, ii. 197.] presiding, not over science and
poetry, but rather agriculture, controlling the fecundity of the
earth and water, and dwelling in hills, rivers, and lakes. In the
bardic literature the Aryan idea is prominent; the other is to be
found in innumerable folk-tales and popular observances; but of
course in each case a considerable amount
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of interpenetration of the two conceptions is to met with - no
sharp dividing line was drawn between them in ancient times, and
none can be drawn now.
The Treasures of the Danaans
Tuan mac Carell says they came to Ireland "out of heaven." This
is embroidered in later tradition into a narrative telling how they
sprang from four great cities, whose very names breathe of fairydom
and romance - Falias, Gorias, Finias, and Murias. Here they learned
science and craftsmanship from great sages one of whom was enthroned
in each city, and from each they brought with them a magical
treasure. From Falias came the stone called the Lia Fail or
Stone of Destiny, on which the High-Kings of Ireland stood when they
were crowned, and which was supposed to confirm the election of a
rightful monarch by roaring under him as he took his place on it.
The actual stone which was so used at the inauguration of a reign
did from immemorial times exist at Tara, and was sent thence to
Scotland early in the sixth century for the crowning of Fergus the
Great, son of Ere, who begged his brother Murtagh mac Erc, King of
Ireland, for the loan of it. An ancient prophecy told that wherever
this stone was, a king of the Scotic (i.e., Irish-Milesian)
race should reign. This is the famous Stone of Scone, which never
came back to Ireland, but was removed to England by Edward I. in
1297, and is now the Coronation Stone in Westminster Abbey. Nor has
the old prophecy been falsified, since through the Stuarts and
Fergus mac Erc the descent of the British royal family can be traced
from the historic kings of Milesian ireland.
The second treasure of the Danaans was the invincible sword of
Lugh of the Long Arm, of whom we shall hear later, and this sword
came from the city of
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Gorias. From Finias came a magic spear, and from Murias the
Cauldron of the Dagda, a vessel which had the property that it could
feed a host of men without ever being emptied.
With these possession; according to the version given in the
"Book of Invasions," the People of Dana came into Ireland.
The Danaans and the Firbolgs
They were wafted into the land in a magic cloud, making their
first appearance in Western Connacht. When the cloud cleared away,
the Firbolgs discovered them in a camp which they had already
fortified at Moyrein.
The Firbolgs now sent out one of their warriors, named Sreng, to
interview the mysterious newcomers; and the People of Dana, on their
side, sent a warrior named Bres to represent them. The two
ambassadors examined each other's weapons with great interest. The
spears of the Danaans, we are told, were light and sharp-pointed;
those of the Firbolgs were heavy and blunt. To contrast the power of
science with that of brute force is here the evident intention of
the legend, and we are reminded of the Greek myth of the struggle of
the Olympian deities with the Titans.
Bres proposed to the Firbolg that the two races should divide
Ireland equally between them, and join to defend it against all
comers for the future. They then exchanged weapons and returned each
to his own camp.
The First Battle of Moytura
The Firbolg, however, were not impressed with the the superiority
of the Danaans and decided to refuse their offer. The battle was
joined on the Plain of Moytura ["Moytura" means "The Plain of the
Towers" - i.e. sepulchral monuments]
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in the south of Co. Mayo, near the spot now called Cong.
The Firbolgs were Ied by their king, mac Erc, and the Danaans by
Nuada of the Silver Hand, who got his name from an incident in this
battle. His hand, it is said, was cut off in the fight, and one of
the skilful artificers who abounded in the ranks of the Danaans made
him a new one of silver. By their magical and healing arts the
Danaans gained the victory, and the Firbolg king was slain. But a
reasonable agreement followed : the Firbolgs were allotted the
province of Connacht for their territory, while the Danaans took the
rest of Ireland. So late as the seventeenth century the annalist Mac
Firbis discovered that many of the inhabitants of Connacht traced
their descent to these same Firbolgs. Probably they were a veritable
historic race, and the conflict between them and the People of Dana
may be a piece of actual history invested with some of the features
of a myth.
The Expulsion of King Bres
Nuada of the Silver Hand should now have been ruler of the
Danaans, but his mutilation forbade it, for no blemished man might
be a king in Ireland. The Danaans therefore chose Bres, who was the
son of a Danann woman named Eri, but whose father was unknown, to
reign over them instead. This was another Bres, not the envoy who
had treated with the Firbolgs and who was slain in the battle of
Moytura. Now Bres, although strong and beautiful to look on, had no
gift of kingship, for he not only allowed the enemy of
Ireland, the Fomorians, to renew their oppression and taxation in
the land, but he himself taxed his subjects heavily too; and was
so niggardly that he gave no hospitality to chiefs and nobles and
harpers. Lack of generosity and hospitality was always reckoned the
worst of vices
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in an Irish prince. One day it is said that there came to his
court the poet Corpry, who found himself housed in a small, dark
chamber without fire or furniture, where, after long delay,
he was served with three dry cakes and no ale. In revenge he
composed a satirical quatrain on his churlish host :
"Without food quickly served, Without a cow's milk, whereon a
calf can grow, Without a dwelling fit for a man under the gloomy
night, Without means to entertain a bardic company, - Let such
he the condition of Bres."
Poetic satire in Ireland was supposed to have a kind of magical
power. Kings dreaded it; even rats could be exterminated by it.
[Shakespeare alludes to this in "As You Like It." "I never was so
be-rhymed," says Rosalind, "since Pythagoras' time, that I was an
Irish rat-which I can hardly remember."] This quatrain of Corpry's
was repeated with delight among the people, and Bres had to lay down
his sovranty. This was said to be the first satire ever made in
Ireland. Meantime, because Nuada had got his silver hand through the
art of his physician Diancecht, or because, as some versions of the
legend say, a still greater healer, the son of Diancecht, had made
the veritable hand grow again to the stump, he was chosen to be king
in place of Bres.
The latter now betook himself in wrath and resentment to his
mother Eri, and begged her to give him counsel and to tell him of
his lineage. Eri then declared to him that his father was Elatha, a
king of the Fomorians, who had come to her secretly from over sea,
and when he departed had given her a ring, bidding her never bestow
it on any man save him whose finger it would fit. She now brought
forth the ring, and it fitted the finger of Bres, who went
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down with her to the strand where the Fomorian lover had landed,
and they sailed togethcr for his father's home.
The Tyranny of the Formorians
Elatha recognised the ring, and gave his son an army wherewith to
reconquer Ireland, and also sent him to seek further aid from the
greatest of the Fomorian kings, Balor. Now Balor was surnamed "of
the Evil Eye," because the gaze of his one eye could slay like a
thunderbolt those on whom he looked in anger. He was now, however,
so old and feeble that the vast eyelid drooped over the
death-dealing eye, and had to be lifted up by his men with ropes and
pulleys when the time came to turn it on his foes. Nuada could make
no more head against him than Bres had done when king ; and the
country still groaned under the oppression of the Fomorians and
longed for a champion and redeemer.
The Coming of Lugh
A new figure now comes into the myth, no other than Lugh son of
Kian, the Sun-god par excellance of all Celtica, whose name
we can still identify in many historic sites on the Continent.
[Lyons, Leyden, Laon were all in ancient times known as
Lug-dunum, the Fortress of Lugh. Luguvallum was the
name of a town near Hadrian's: Wall in Roman Britain.] To explain
his appearance we must desert for a moment the ancient manuscript
authorities, which are here incomplete, and have to be supplemented
by a folk-tale which was fortunately discovered and taken down
orally so late as the nineteenth century by the great Irish
antiquary, O'Donovan. [It is given by him in a note to the " Four
Master:," vol. i. P. 18, and is also reproduced by de
Jubainville.]
[109]
In this folk-tale the names of Balor and his daughter Ethlinn
(the latter in the form "Ethnea") are preserved, as well as those of
some other mythical personages, but that of the father of Lugh is
faintly echoed in MacKineely; Lugh's own name is forgotten, and the
death of Balor is given in a manner inconsistent with the ancient
myth. In the story as I give it here the antique names and mythical
outline are preserved, but are supplemented where required from the
folk-tale, omitting from the latter those modern features which are
not reconcilable with the myth.
The story, then, goes that Balor, the Formorian king, heard in a
Druidic prophecy that he would be slain by his grandson. His only
child was an infant daughter named Ethlinn. To avert the doom he,
like Acrisios, father of Danae, in the Greek myth, had her
imprisoned in a high tower which he caused to be built on a
precipitous headland, the Tor Mōr, in Tory Island. He placed the
girl in charge of twelve matrons, who were strictly charged to
prevent her from ever seeing the face of man, or even learning that
there were any beings of a different sex from her own. In this
seclusion Ethlinn grew up as all sequestered princesses do - into a
maiden of surpassing beauty.
Now it happened that there were on the mainland three brothers,
namely, Kian, Sawan, and Goban the Smith, the great armourer and
artificer of Irish myth, who corresponds to Wayland Smith in
Germanic legend. Kian had a magical cow, whose milk was so abundant
that every one longed to possess her, and he had to keep her
strictly under protection.
Balor determined to possess himself of this cow. One day Kian and
Sawan had come to the forge to have some weapons made for them,
bringing fine steel for that purpose. Kian went into the forge,
leaving
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Sawan in charge of the cow. Balor now appeared on the scene,
taking on himself the form of a little red-headed boy, and told
Sawan that he had overheard the brothers inside the forge concocting
a plan for using all the fine steel for their own swords, leaving
but common metal for that of Sawan. The latter, in a great rage,
gave the cow's halter to the boy and rushed into the forge to put a
stop to this nefarious scheme. Balor immediately carried off the
cow, and dragged her across ,the sea to Tory Island.
Kian now determined to avenge himself on Balor, and to this end
sought the advice of a Druidess named Birōg. Dressing himself in
woman's garb, he was wafted by magical spells across the sea, where
Birag, who accompanied him, represented to Ethlinn's guardians that
they were two noble ladies cast upon the shore in escaping from an
abductor, and begged for shelter. They were admitted; Kian found
means to have access to the Princess Ethlinn while the matrons were
laid by Birog under the spell of an enchanted slumber, and when they
awoke Kian and the Druidess had vanished as they came. But Ethlinn
had given Kian her love, arid soon her guardians found that she was
with child. Fearing Balor's wrath, the matrons persuaded her that
the whole transaction was but a dream, and said nothing about it;
but in due time Ethlinn was delivered of three sons at a birth.
News of this event came to Balor, arid in anger and fear he
commanded the three infants to be drowned in a whirlpool off the
Irish coast. The messenger who was charged with this command rolled
up the children in a sheet, but in carrying them to the appointed
place the pin of the sheet came loose, and one of the children
dropped out and fell into a little bay, called to this day Port
na Delig, or the Haven of the Pin. The other two
[111]
were duly drowned, and the servant reported his mission
accomplished.
But the child who had fallen into the bay was guarded by the
Druidess, who wafted it to the home of its father, Kian, and Kian
gave it in fosterage to his brother the smith, who taught the child
his own trade and made it skilled in every manner of craft and
handiwork This child was Lugh. When he was grown to a youth the
Danaans placed him in charge of Duach, "The Dark," king of the Great
Plain (Fairyland, or the "Land of the Living," which is also the
Land of the Dead), and here he dwelt till he reached manhood.
Lugh was, of course, the appointed redeemer of the Danann people
from their servitude. His coming is narrated in a story which brings
out the solar attributes of universal power, and shows him, like
Apollo, as the presiding deity of all human knowledge and of all
artistic and medicinal skill. He came, it is told, to take service
with Nuada of the Silver Hand, and when the doorkeeper at the royal
palace of Tara asked him what he could do, he answered that he was a
carpenter -
"We are in no need of a carpenter," said the doorkeeper; "we have
an excellent one in Luchta son Luchad." "I am a smith too," said
Lugh. "We have a master-smith," said the doorkeeper, "already."
"Then I am a warrior," said Lugh. "We do not need one," said the
doorkeeper, "while we have Ogma." Lugh goes on to name all the
occupations and arts he can think of - he is a poet, a harper, a man
of science, a physician, a spencer, and so forth, always receiving
the answer that a man of supreme accomplishment in that art is
already installed at the court of Nuada/ "Then ask the King," said
Lugh, "if he has in his service any one man who is accomplished in
every one of these arts, and if he have, I shall stay here no
[112]
longer, nor seek to enter his palace." Upon this Lugh is
received, and the surname Ildánach is conferred upon him, meaning
"The All-Craftsman," Prince of all the Sciences; while another name
that he commonly bore was Lugh Lamfada, or Lugh of the Long Arm. We
are reminded here, as de Jubainville points out, of the Gaulish god
whom Caesar identifies with Mercury, inventor of all the arts," and
to whom the Gauls put up many statues. The Irish myth supplements
this information and tells us the Celtic name of this deity.
When Lugh came from the Land of the Living he brought with him
many magical gifts. There was the Boat of Mananan, son of Lir the
Sea God, which knew a man's thoughts and would travel whithersoever
he would, and the Horse of Mananan, that could go alike over land
and sea, and a terrible sword named Fragarach ("The
Answerer"), that could cut through any mail. So equipped, he
appeared one day before an assembly Of the Danaan chiefs who were
met to pay their tribute to the envoys of the Formorian oppressors;
and when the Danaans saw him, they felt, it is said, as if they
beheld the rising of the sun on a dry summer's day. Instead of
paying the tribute, they, under Lugh's leadership, attacked the
Fomorians, all of whom were slain but nine men, and these were sent
back to tell Balor that the Danaans defied him and would pay no
tribute henceforward. Balor then made him ready for battle; and bade
his captains, when they had subdued the Danaans, make fast the
island by cables to their ships and tow it far northward to the
Fomorian regions of ice and gloom, where it would trouble them no
longer.
The Quest of the Sons of Turenn
Lugh, on his side, also prepared for the final combat; but to
ensure victory certain magical instruments were
[113]
still needed for him, and these had now to be obtained. The story
of the quest of these objects, which incidentally tells us also of
the end of Lugh's father, Kian, is one of the most valuable and
curious in Irish legend, and formed one of a triad of mythical tales
which were reckoned as the flower of Irish romance. [The other two
were "The Fate of the Children of Lir" and "The Fate of the Sons of
Usna." The stories of the Quest of the Sons of Turenn and that of
the Children of Lir have been told in full by the author in his
"High Deeds of Finn and other Bardic Romances," and that of the
"Sons of Usna" (the Deirdre Legend) by Miss Eleanor Hull in her
"Cuchulain," both published by Harrap and Co.]
Kian, the story goes, was sent northward by Lugh to summon the
fighting men of the Danaans in Ulster to the hosting against the
Fomorians. On his way, as he crosses the Plain of Murthemney, near
Dundalk, he meets with three brothers, Brian, luchar, and Iucharba,
sons of Turenn, between whose house and that of Kian there was a
blood-feud. He seeks to avoid them by changing into the form of a
pig and joining a herd which is rooting in the plain, but the
brothers detect him and Brian wounds him with a cast from a spear.
Kian, knowing that his end is come, begs to be allowed to change
back into human form be fore he is slain. "I had liefer kill a man
than a pig," says Brian, who takes throughout the leading part in
all the brothers' adventures. Kian then stands before them as a man,
with the blood from Brian's spear trickling from his breast. "I have
outwitted ye," he cries, "for if ye had slain a pig ye would have
paid but the eric [blood fine] of a pig, but now ye shall pay the
eric of a man; never was greater eric than that which ye shall pay;
and the weapons ye slay me with shall tell the tale to. the avenger
of blood."
"Then you shall be slain with no weapons at all,"
[114]
says Brian, and he and the brothers stone him to death and bury
him in the ground as deep as the height of a man.
But when Lugh shortly afterwards passes that way the stones on
the plain cry out and tell him of his brother's murder at the hands
of the sons of Turenn. He uncovers the body, and, vowing vengeance,
returns to Tara. Here he accuses the sons of Turenn before the High
King, and is permitted to have them executed, or to name the eric he
will accept in remission of that sentence. Lugh chooses to have the
eric, and he names it as follows, concealing things of vast price,
and involving unheard-of toils, under the names of common objects
Three apples, the skin of a pig, a spear, a chariot with two horses,
seven swine, a hound, a cooking-spit, and, finally, to give three
shouts on a hill. The brothers bind themselves to pay the fine, and
Lugh then declares the meaning of it. The three apples are those
which grow in the Garden of the Sun the pig-skin is a magical skin
which heals every wound arid sickness if it can be laid on the
sufferer, and it is a possession of the King of Greece ; the spear
is a magical weapon owned by the King of Persia (these names, of
course, are mere fanciful appellations for places in the world of
Faery) ; the seven swine belong to King Asal of the Golden Pillars,
and may be killed and eaten every night and yet be found whole next
day the spit belongs to the sea-nymphs of the sunken Island of
Finchory; and the three shouts are to be given on the hill of a
fierce warrior, Mochaen, who, with his sons, are under vows to
prevent any man from raising his voice on that hill. To fulfil any
one of these enterprises would be an all but impossible task, and
the brothers must accomplish them all before they can clear
them-selves of the guilt and penalty of Kian's death.
[115]
The story then goes on to tell how with infinite daring and
resource the sons of Turenn accomplish one by one all their tasks,
but when all are done save the capture of the cooking-spit and the
three shouts on the Hill of Mochaen, Lugh, by magical arts, causes
forgetfulness to fall upon them, and they return to Ireland with
their treasures. These, especially the spear and the pig-skin, are
just what Lugh needs to help him against the Fomorians; but his
vengeance is not complete, and after receiving the treasures he
reminds the brothers of what is yet to be won. They, in deep
dejection, now begin to understand how they are played with, and go
forth sadly to win, if they can, the rest of the eric. After long
wandering they discover that the Island of Finchory is not above,
but under the sea. Brian in a magical "water-dress" goes down to it,
sees the thrice fifty nymphs in their palace, and seizes the golden
spit from their hearth. The ordeal of the Hill of Mochaen is the
last to be attempted. After a desperate combat which ends in the
slaying of Mochaen and his sons, the brothers, mortally wounded,
uplift their voices in three faint cries, and so the eric is
fulfilled. The life is still in them, however, when they return to
Ireland, and their aged father, Turenn, implores Lugh for the loan
of the magic pig-skin to heal them; but the implacable Lugh refuses,
and the brothers and their father die together. So ends the
tale.
The Second Battle of Moytura
The Second Battle of Moytura took place on a plain in the north
of Co. Sligo, which is remarkable for the number of sepulchral
monuments still scattered over it. The first battle, of course, was
that which the Danaans had waged with the Firbolgs, and the Moytura
there referred to was much further south, in Co. Mayo.
[116]
The battle with the Fomorians is related with an astounding
wealth of marvellous incident. The crafts-men of the Danaans, Goban
the smith, Credné the artificer (or goldsmith), and Luchta the
carpenter, keep repairing the broken weapons of the Danaans with
magical speed - three blows of Goban's hammer make a spear or sword,
Luchta flings a handle at it and it sticks on at once, and Credné
jerks the rivets at it with his tongs as fast as he makes them and
they fly into their places. The wounded are healed by the magical
pig-skin The plain resounds with the clamour of battle:
"Fearful indeed was the thunder which rolled over the
battlefield; the shouts of the warriors, the breaking of the
shields, the flashing and clashing of the swords, of the straight,
ivory-hilted swords, the music and harmony of the 'belly-darts' and
the sighing and winging of the spears and lances." [O'Curry's
translation from the bardic tale, "The Battle of Moytura."]
The Death of Balor
The Fomonans bring on their champion, Balor, before the glance of
whose terrible eye Nuada of the Silver Hand and others of the
Danaans go down. But Lugh, seizing an opportunity when the eyelid
drooped through weariness, approached close to Balor, and as it
began to lift once more he hurled into the eye a great stone which
sank into the brain, and Balor lay dead, as the prophecy had
foretold, at the hand of his grandson. The Fomorians were then
totally routed, and it is not recorded that they ever again gained
any authority or committed any extensive depredations in Ireland.
Lugh, the Ildánach, was then enthroned in place of Nuada, and the
myth of the victory of the solar
[117]
hero over the powers of darkness and brute force is complete.
The Harp of the Dagda
A curious little incident bearing on the power which the Danaans
could exercise by the spell of music may here be inserted. The
flying Fomorians, it is told, had made prisoner the harper of the
Dagda and carried him off with them. Lugh, the Dagda, and the
warrior Ogma followed them, and came unknown into the
banqueting-hall of the Fomorian camp. There they saw the harp
hanging on the wall. The Dagda called to it, and immediately it flew
into his hands, killing nine men of the Fomorians on its way. The
Dagda's invocation of the harp is very singular, and not a little
puzzling:
"Come, apple-sweet murmurer,' he cries, "come, four-angled frame
of harmony, come, Summer, come, Winter, from the mouths of harps and
bags and pipes." [O'Curry, "Manners and Customs," iii. 214.]
The allusion to summer and winter suggests the practice in Indian
music of allotting certain musical modes to the different seasons of
the year (and even to different times of day) and also an Egyptian
legend referred to in Burney's "History of Music" where the three
strings of the lyre were supposed to answer respectively to the
three seasons, spring, summer, and winter. [The ancient Irish
division of the year contained only these three seasons, including
autumn in summer (O'Curry, "Manners and Customes," iii. 217.]
When the Dagda got possession of the harp, the tale goes on, he
played on it the "three noble strains"
[118]
which every great master of the harp should command, namely, the
Strain of Lament, which caused the hearers to weep, the Strain of
Laughter, which made them merry, and the Strain of Slumber, or
Lullaby, which plunged them all in a profound sleep. And under cover
of that sleep the Danaan champion stole out and escaped. It may be
observed that throughout the whole of the legendary literature of
Ireland skill in music, the art whose influence most resembles that
of a mysterious spell or gift of Faery, is the prerogative of the
People of Dana and their descendants. Thus in the "Colloquy of the
Ancients," a collection of tales made about the thirteenth or
fourteenth century, St. Patrick is introduced to a minstrel,
Cascorach, "a handsome, curly-headed, dark-browed youth," who plays
so Sweet a strain that the saint and his retinue all fall asleep.
Cascorach, we are told, was son of a minstrel of the Danaan folk.
St. Patrick's scribe, Brogan, remarks, "A good cast of thine art is
that thou gavest us."
"Good indeed it were," said Patrick, "but for a twang of the
fairy spell that infests it; barring which nothing could more nearly
resemble heaven's harmony." [S. H. O'Grady, "Silva Gadelica," p.
191]
Some of the most beautiful of the antique Irish folk-medlodies, -
e.g. the Coulin - are traditionally supposed to
have been overheard by mortal harpers at the revels of the Fairy
Folk.
Names and Characteristics of the Danaan Deities
I may conclude this narrative of the Danaan conquest some account
of the principal Danaan gods and attributes, which will be useful to
readers of the subsequent pages. The best with which I am acquainted
is to be found in Mr. Standish O'Grady's "Critical
[119]
History of Ireland." [Pp. 104 sqq., and passim] his
work is no less remark-able for its critical insight - it was
published in 1881, when scientific study of the Celtic mythology was
little heard of - than for the true bardic imagination, kindred to
that of the ancient myth-makers themselves, which recreates the dead
forms of the past and dilates them with the breath of life. The
broad outlines in which Mr. O'Grady has laid down the typical
characteristics of the chief personages in the Danaan cycle hardly
need any correction at this day, and have been of much use to me in
the following summary of the subject.
The Dagda
The Dagda Mōr was the father and chief of the People of Dana. A
certain conception of vastness attaches to him and to his doings. In
the Second Battle of Moytura his blows sweep down whole ranks of the
enemy, and his spear, when he trails it on the march, draws a furrow
in the ground like the fosse which marks the mearing of a province.
An element of grotesque humour is present in some of the records
about this deity. When the Fomorians give him food on his visit to
their camp, the porridge and milk are poured into a great pit in the
ground, and he eats it with a spoon big enough, it was said, for a
man and a woman to lie together in it. With this spoon he scrapes
the pit, when the porridge is done, and shovels earth and gravel
unconcernedly down his throat. We have already seen that, like all
the Danaans, he is a master of music, as well as of other magical
endowments, and owns a harp which comes flying through the air at
his call. "The tendency to attribute life to inanimate things is
apparent in the Homeric literature, but exercises a very great
influence in the mythology
[120]
of this country. The living, fiery spear of Lugh; the magic ship
of Mananan ; the sword of Conary Mōr, which sang; Cuchulain's sword,
which spoke; the Lia Fail, Stone of Destiny, which roared for joy
beneath the feet of rightful kings; the waves of the ocean, roaring
with rage and sorrow when such kings are in jeopardy ; the waters of
the Avon Dia, holding back for fear at the mighty duel between
Cuchulain and Ferdia, are but a few out of many examples." [O'Grady,
loc. cit.] A legend of later times tells how once, at the
death of a great scholar, all the books in Ireland fell from their
shelves upon the floor.
Angus Og
Angus Og (Angus the Young), son of the Dagda, by Boanna (the
river Boyne), was the Irish god of love. His palace was supposed to
be at New Grange, on the Boyne. Four bright birds that ever hovered
about his head were supposed to be his kisses taking shape in this
lovely form, and at their singing love came springing up in the
hearts of youths and maidens. Once he fell sick of love for a maiden
whom he had seen in a dream. He told the cause of his sickness to
his mother Boanna, who searched all Ireland for the girl, but could
not find her. Then the Dagda was called in, but he too was at a
loss, till he called to his aid Bōv the Red, king of the Danaans of
Munster - the same whom we have met with in the tale of the Children
of Lir, and who was skilled in all mysteries and enchantments. Bōv
undertook the search, and after a year had gone by declared that he
had found the visionary maiden at a lake called the Lake of the
Dragon's Mouth.
[121]
Angus goes to Bōv, and, after being entertained by him three
days, is brought to the lake shore, where he sees thrice fifty
maidens walking in couples, each couple linked by a chain of gold,
but one of them is taller than the rest by a head and shoulders.
"That is she !" cries Angus. "Tell us by what name she is known."
Bōv answers that her name is Caer, daughter of Ethal Anubal, a
prince of the Danaans of Connacht. Angus laments that he is not
strong enough to carry her off from her companions, but, on Bōv's
advice, betakes himself to Ailell and Maev, the mortal King and
Queen of Connacht, for assistance. The Dagda and Angus then both
repair to the palace of Ailell, who feasts them for a week, and then
asks the cause of their coming. When it is declared he answers, " We
have no authority over Ethal Anubal." They send a message to him,
however, asking for the hand of Caer for Angus, but Ethal refuses to
give her up. In the end he is besieged by the combined forces of
Ailell and the Dagda, and taken prisoner. When Caer is again
demanded of him he declares that he cannot comply, "for she is more
powerful than I." He explains that she lives alternately in the form
of a maiden and of a swan year and year about, "and on the first of
November next," he says, "you will see her with a hundred and fifty
other swans at the Lake of the Dragon's Mouth."
Angus goes there at the appointed time, and cries to her, "Oh,
come and speak to me !" "Who calls me?" asks Caer. Angus explains
who he is, and then finds himself transformed into a swan. This is
an indication of consent, and he plunges in to join his love in the
lake. After that they fly together to the palace on the Boyne,
uttering as they go a music so divine that all hearers are lulled to
sleep for three days and nights.
Angus is the special deity and friend of beautiful
[122]
youths and maidens. Dermot of the Love-spot, a follower of Finn
mac Cumhal, and lover of Grania, of whom we shall hear later, was
bred up with Angus in the palace on the Boyne. He was the typical
lover of Irish legend. When he was slain by the wild boar of Ben
Bulben, Angus revives him and carries him off to share his
immortality in his fairy palace.
Lea of Killarney
Of Bōv the Red, brother of the Dagda, we have already heard. He
had, it is said, a goldsmith named Len, who "gave their ancient name
to the Lakes of Killarney, once known as Locha Lein, the Lakes of
Len of the Many Hammers. Here by the lake he wrought, surrounded by
rainbows and showers of fiery dew." [O'Grady, loc. cit.]
Lugh
Lugh has already been described. [p. 112] He has more distinctly
solar attributes than any other Celtic deity; and, as we know, his
worship was spread widely over Continental Celtica. In the tale of
the Quest of the Sons of Turenn we are told that Lugh approached the
Fomorians from the west. Then Bres, son of Balor, arose and said: "I
wonder that the sun is rising in the west today, and in the east
every other day." "Would were so," said his Druids. "Why, what else
but the sun is it?" said Bres. "It is the radiance of the of Lugh of
the Long Arm," they replied.
Lugh was the father, by the Milesian maiden Dectera, of
Cuchulain, the most heroic figure in Irish legend, in whose story
there is evidently a strong element of the solar myth. [Miss Hull
has described this subject fully in the introduction to her
invaluable work, "The Cuchullin Saga."]
[123]
Midir the Proud
Midir the Proud is a son of the Dagda. His fairy palace is at
Bri Leith, or Slieve CaIlary,in Co. Longford. He frequently
appears in legends dealing partly with human, partly with Danaan
personages, and is always represented as a type of splendour in his
apparel and in personal beauty. When he appears to King Eochy on the
Hill of Tara he is thus described : [See the tale of "Etain and
Midir," in Chap. IV.]
"It chanced that Eochaid Airemm, the King of Tara, arose upon a
certain fair day in the time of summer; and he ascended the high
ground of Tara [The name of Tara is derived from an oblique case of
the nominative Teamhair, meaning "the place of the wide
prospect." It is now a broad grassy hill, in Co. Meath, covered with
earthworks representing the sites of the ancient royal buildings,
which can all be clearly located from ancient descriptions.] to
behold the plain of Breg; beautiful was the colour of that plain,
and there was upon it excellent blossom glowing with all hues that
are known. And as the aforesaid Eochy looked about and around him,
he saw a young strange warrior upon the high ground at his side. The
tunic that the warrior wore was purple in colour, his hair was of a
golden yellow, and of such length that it reached to the edge of his
shoulders. The eyes of the young warrior were lustrous and grey; in
the one hand he held a fine pointed spear, in the other a shield
with a white central boss, and with gems of gold upon it. And
Eochaid held his peace, for he knew that none such had been in Tara
on the night before, and the gate that led ,into the Liss had not at
that time been thrown open." [A.H. Leahy, "Heroic Romances," i.
27]
[124]
Lir and Mananan
Lir, as Mr. O'Grady remarks, "appears in two distinct forms. In
the first he is a vast, impersonal presence commensurate with the
sea; in fact, the Greek Oceanus. In the second, he is a separate
person dwelling invisibly on Slieve Fuad," in Co. Armagh. We hear
little of him in Irish legend, where the attributes of the sea-god
are mostly conferred on his son, Mananan.
This deity is one of the most popular in Irish mythology. He was
lord of the sea, beyond or under which the Land of Youth or Islands
of the Dead were supposed to lie; he therefore was the guide of man
to this country. He was master of tricks and illusions, and owned
all kinds of magical possessions - the boat named Ocean-sweeper,
which obeyed the thought of those who sailed in it and went without
oar or sail, the steed Aonbarr, which could travel alike on sea or
land, and the sword named The Answerer, which no armour could
resist. White-crested waves were called the Horses of Mananan, and
it was forbidden (tabu) for the solar hero, Cuchulain, to
perceive them - this indicated the daily death of the sun at his
setting in the western waves. Mananan wore a great cloak which was
capable of taking on every kind of colour, like the widespread field
of the sea as looked on from a height; and as the protector of the
island of Erin it was said that when any hostile force invaded it
they heard his thunderous tramp and the flapping of his mighty cloak
as he marched angrily round and round their camp at night. The Isle
of Man, seen dimIy from the Irish coast, was supposed to be the
throne of Mananan, and to take its name from this deity.
[125]
The Goddess Dana
The greatest of the Danaan goddesses was Dana, "mother of the
Irish gods," as she is called in an early text. She was daughter of
the Dagda, and, like him, associated with ideas of fertility and
blessing. According to d'Arbois de Jubainville, she was identical
with the goddess Brigit, who was so widely worshipped in Celtica.
Brian, luchar, and lucharba are said to have been her sons - these
really represent but one person, in the usual Irish fashion of
conceiving the divine power in triads. The name of Brian, who takes
the in all the exploits of the brethren, [p. 114] is a derivation
from a more ancient form, Brenos, and under this form was the god to
whom the Celts attributed their victories at the Allia and at
Delphi, mistaken by Roman and Greek chroniclers for an earthly
leader.
The Morrigan
There was also an extraordinary goddess named the Morrigan, [I
cannot agree with Mr. O' Grady's identi6cation of this goddess with
Dana, though the name appears to mean "The Great Queen"] who appears
to embody all that is perverse and horrible among supernatural
powers. She delighted in setting men at war, and fought among them
herself, changing into many frightful shapes and often hovering
above fighting armies in the aspect of a crow. She met Cuchulain
once and proffered him her love in the guise of a human maid. He
refused it, and she persecuted him thenceforward for the most of his
life. Warring with him once in the middle of the stream, she turned
herself into a water-serpent, and then into a mass of water-weeds,
seeking to entangle and drown him. But he conquered and wounded her,
and she afterwards
[126]
became his friend. Before his last battle she passed through
Emain Macha at night, and broke the pole of his chariot as a
warning.
Cleena's Wave
One of the most notable landmarks of Ireland was the Tonn
Cliodhna, or "Wave of Cleena," on the seashore at Glandore Bay,
in Co. Cork. The story about Cleena exists in several versions,
which do not agree with each other except in so far as she seems to
have been a Danaan maiden once living in Mananan's country, the Land
of Youth beyond the sea. Escaping thence with a mortal lover, as one
of the versions tells, she landed on the southern coast of Ireland,
and her lover, Keevan of the Curling Locks, went off to hunt in the
woods. Cleena, who remained on the beach, was lulled to sleep by
fairy music played by a minstrel of Mananan, when a great wave of
the sea swept up and carried her back to Fairyland, leaving her
lover desolate. Hence the place was called the Strand of Cleena's
Wave.
The Goddess Ainé
Another topical goddess was Ainé, the patroness of Munster, who
is still venerated by the people of that county. She was the
daughter of the Danaan Owel, a foster-son of Mananan and a Druid.
She is in some sort a love-goddess, continually inspiring mortals
with passion. She was ravished, it was said, by Ailill Olum, King of
Munster, who was slain in consequence by her magic arts, and the
story is reed in far later times about another mortal lover, who was
not, however, slain, a Fitzgerald, to whom she the bore the famous
wizard Earl. [Gerald, the fourth Earl of Desmond. He disappeared, it
is said, in 1398, and the legend goes that he still lives beneath
the waters of Loch Gur, and may be seen riding round its banks on
his, white steed once every seven years. He was surnamed a "Gerald
the Poet" from the "witty and ingenious" verses he composed in
Gaelic. Wizardry, poetry, and science were all united in one
conception in the mind the ancient Irish/] Many of the
aristocratic
[127]
families of Munster claimed descent from this union. His name
still clings to the "Hill of Ainé" (Knockainey), near Loch Gur, in
Munster. All the Danaan deities in the popular imagination were
earth-god; dei terreni, associated with ideas of fertility
and increase. Ainé is not heard much of in the bardic literature,
but she is very prominent in the folk-lore of the neighbourhood. At
the bidding of her son, Earl Gerald, she planted all Knockainey with
pease in a single night. She was, and perhaps still is, worshipped
on Midsummer Eve by the peasantry, who carried torches of hay and
straw, tied on poles and lighted, round her hill at night.
Afterwards they dispersed themselves among their cultivated fields
and pastures, waving the torches over the crops and the cattle to
bring luck and increase for the following year. On one night, as
told by Mr. D. Fitzgerald, ["Popular Tales of Ireland." by D.
Fitzgerald, in Revue Celtique," vol iv.] who has collected the local
traditions about her, the ceremony was omitted owing to the death of
one of the neighbours. Yet the peasantry at night saw the torches in
greater number than ever circling the hill, and Ainé herself in
front, directing and ordering the procession.
"On another St. John's Night a number of girls had stayed late on
the Hill watching the cliars (torches) and joining in the
games. Suddenly Ainé appeared among them, thanked them for the
honour they had done he; but said she now wished them to go home, as
they wanted the hill to themselves. She let them understand
whom she
[128]
meant by they, for calling some of the girls she made them
look through a ring, when behold, the hill appeared crowded with
people before invisible."
"Here," observed Mr. Alfred Nutt, "we have the antique ritual
carried out on a spot hallowed to one of the antique powers, watched
over and shared in by those powers themselves. Nowhere save in
Gaeldom could be found such a pregnant illustration of the identity
of the fairy class with the venerable powers to ensure whose
goodwill rites and sacrifices, originally fierce and bloody, now a
mere simulacrum of their pristine form, have been performed for
countless ages." ["The Voyage of Bran," vol. Ii, p. 219]
Sinend and the Well of Knowledge
There is a singular myth which, while intended to account for the
name of the river Shannon, expresses the Celtic veneration for
poetry and science, combined with the warning that they may not be
approached without danger. The goddess Sinend, it was said, daughter
of Lodan son of Lir, went to a certain well named Connla's Well,
which is under the sea - i.e., in the Land of Youth in
Fairyland. "That is a well," says the bardic narrative, "at which
are the hazels wisdom and inspirations, that is, the hazels of the
science of poetry, and in the same hour their fruit and their
blossom and their foliage break forth, and then fall upon the well
in the same shower, which raises upon the water a royal surge of
purple." When Sinend came to the well we are not told what rites or
preparation she had omitted, but the angry waters broke and
overwhelmed her, and washed her up on the Shannon shore, where she
died, giving to the river its name. [In Irish, Sionnain.] This myth
of the hazels of inspiration and
[129]
knowledge and their association with springing water runs through
all Irish legend, and has been finely treated by a living Irish
poet, Mr. G. W. Russell, in the following verses:
"A cabin on the mountain-side hid in a grassy nook, With door
and window open wide, where friendly stars may look; The rabbit
shy may patter in, the winds may enter free Who roam around the
mountain throne in living ecstasy.
"And when the sun sets dimmed in eve, and purple fills the
air, I think the sacred hazel-tree is dropping berries
there, From starry fruitage, waved aloft where Connla's Well
o'erflows For sure, the immortal waters run through every wind
that blows.
"I think when Night towers up aloft and shakes the trembling
dew, How every high and lonely thought that thrills my spirit
through Is but a shining berry dropped down through the purple
air, And from the magic tree of life the fruit falls
everywhere."
The Coming of the Milesians
After the Second Battle of Moytura the Danaans held rule in
Ireland until the coming of the Milesians, the sons of Miled. These
are conceived in Irish legend as an entirely human race, yet in
their origin they, like the other invaders of Ireland, go back to a
divine and mythical ancestry. Miled, whose name occurs as a god in a
Celtic inscription from Hungary, is represented as a son of Bilé.
Bilé, like Balor, is one of the names of the god of Death, i.e.,
of the Underworld. They come from "Spain "- the usual term
employed by the later rationalising historians for the Land of the
Dead.
The manner of their coming into Ireland was as follows: Ith, the
grandfather of Miled, dwelt in a great tower which his father,
Bregon, had built in "Spain." One clear winter's day, when looking
out westwards from this lofty tower, he saw the coast of Ireland in
the distance, and resolved to sail to the unknown land.
[130]
He embarked with ninety warriors, and took land at Corcadyna, in
the south-west. In connexion with this episode I may quote a passage
of great beauty and interest from de Jubainville's "irish
Mythological Cycle : [Translation by R. I. Best]
"According to an unknown writer cited by Plutarch, who died about
the year 120 of the present era, and also by Procopius, who wrote in
the sixth century A.D., 'the Land of the Dead' is the western
extremity of Great Britain, separated from the eastern by an
impassable wall. On the northern coast of Gaul, says the legend, is
a populace of mariners whose business is to carry the dead across
from the continent to their last abode in the island of Britain. The
mariners, awakened in the night by the whisperings of some
mysterious voice, arise and go down to the shore, where they find
ships awaiting them which are not their own, [The solar vessels
found in dolmen carvings. See Chap. II. P. 71 sqq. Note that
the Celtic spirits, though invisible, are material and have weight;
not so those in Vergil and Dante.] and, in these, invisible beings,
under whose weight the vessels sink almost to the gunwales. They go
on board, and with a single stroke of the oar, says one text, in one
hour, says another, they arrive at their destination, though with
their own vessels, aided by sails, it would taken them at least a
day and a night to reach the coast of Britain. When they come to the
other shore invisible passengers land, and at the same time the
unloaded ships are seen to rise above the waves, and a is heard
announcing the names of the new arrivals, who have just been added
to the inhabitants of the of the Dead.
"One stroke of the oar, one hour's voyage at most, for the
midnight journey which transfers the
[131]
Dead from he Gaulish continent to their final abode. Some
mysterious law, indeed, brings together in the night the great
spaces which divide the domain of the living from that of the dead
in daytime. It was the same law which enabled Ith one fine winter
evening to perceive from the Tower of Bregon, in the Land of the
Dead, the shores of Ireland, or the land of the living. The
phenomenon took place in winter; for winter is a sort of night;
winter, like night, lowers the barriers between the regions of Death
and those of Life ; like night, winter gives to life the semblance
of death, and suppresses, as it were, the dread abyss that lies
between the two.''
At this time, it is said, Ireland was ruled by three Danaan
kings, grandsons of the Dagda. Their names were MacCuill, MacCecht,
and MacGrené, and their wives were named respectively Banba, Fohla,
and Eriu. The Celtic habit of conceiving divine persons in triads is
here illustrated. These triads represent one person each, and the
mythical character of that personage is. evident from the name of
one of them, MacGrené, Son of the Sun. The names of the three
goddesses have; each at different times been applied to Ireland, but
that of the third, Eriu, has alone persisted, and in the dative
form, Erinn, is a poetic name for the country to this day. That Eriu
is the wife of MacGrené means, as de Jubainville observes, that the
Sun-god, the god of Day, Life, and Science, has wedded the land and
is reigning over it.
Ith, on landing, finds that the Danaan king, Neit, has just been
slain in a battle with the Fomorians, and the three sons, MacCuill
and the others, are at the fortress of Aileach, in Co. Donegal,
arranging for a division of the land among themselves. At first
they.
[132]
welcome Ith, and ask him to settle their inheritance. Ith gives
his judgment, but, in concluding, big admiration for the newly
discovered country breaks out: "Act," he says, "according to the
laws of justice, for the country you dwell in is a good one, it is
rich in fruit and honey, in wheat and in fish; and in heat and cold
it is temperate." From this panegyric the Danaans conclude that Ith
has designs upon their land, and they seize him and put him to
death. His companions, however, recover his body and hear it back
with them in their ships to "Spain"; when the children of Miled
resolve to take vengeance for the outrage and prepare to invade
Ireland.
They were commanded by thirty-six chiefs, each having his own
ship with his family and his followers. Two of the company are said
to have perished on the way. One of the sons of Miled, having
climbed to the masthead of his vessel to look out or the coast of
Ireland, fell into the sea and was drowned. The other was Skena,
wife of the poet Amergin, son of Miled, who died on the way. The
Milesians buried her when they landed, and called the place
"Inverskena" after her; this was the ancient name of the Kenmare
River Co. Kerry.
"It was on a Thursday, the first of May, and the seventeenth day
of the moon, that the sons of Miled arrived in Ireland. Partholan
also landed in Ireland the first of May, but on a different day of
the week of the moon ; and it was on the first day of May, that the
pestilence came which in the space of one destroyed utterly his
race. The first of May was sacred to Beltené, one of the names of
the god of Death, the god who gives life to men and takes it away
from them again. Thus it was on the feast day
[133]
of this god that the sons of Miled began their conquest of
Ireland."
[De Jubainville, "Irish Mythological Cycle," p.136. Beltené is
the modern Irish name for the month of May, and is derived from an
ancient root preserved in the Old Irish compound epelta,
"dead".]
The Poet Amergin
When the poet Amergin set foot upon the soil of Ireland it is
said that he chanted a strange and mystical lay:
I am the Wind that blows over the sea, I am the Wave of the
Ocean; I am the Murmur of the billows; lam the Ox ofthe Seven
Combats; lam the Vulture upon the rock; I am a Ray of the
Sun; I am the fairest of Plants; I am a Wild Boar in
valour; I am a Salmon in the Water; I am a Lake in the
plain; lam the Craft of the artificer; I am a Word of
Science; I am the Spear-point that gives battle; I am the god
that creates in the head of man the fire of thought. Who is it
that enlightens the assembly upon the mountain, if not I? Who
telleth the ages of the moon, if not I? Who showeth the place
where the sun goes to rest, if not I?"
De Jubainville, whose translation I have in the main followed,
observes upon this strange utterance:
"There is a lack of order in this composition, the ideas,
fundamental and subordinate, are jumbled together without method;
but there is no doubt as to the meaning: the filé [poet] is
the Word of Science, he is the god who gives to man the fire of
thought; and as science is not distinct from its object, as God and
Nature are but one, the being of the filé is mingled with
the
[134]
winds and the waves, with the wild animals and the warrior's
arms." ["Irish Mythological Cycle," p. 138]
Two other poems are attributed to Amergin, in which he invokes
the land and physical features of Ireland to aid him:
"I invoke the land of Ireland, Shining, shining
sea, Fertile, fertile Mountain; Gladed, gladed wood
! Abundant river, abundant in water ! Fish-abounding
lake!"
[I have again followed de Jubainville's translation;
but in connexion with this and the previous poems see also Ossianic
Society's "Transactions," vol. V.]
The Judgment of Amergin
The Milesian host, after landing, advance to Tara, where they
find the three kings of the Danaans awaiting them, and summon them
to deliver up the island. The Danaans ask for three days' time to
consider whether they shall quit Ireland, or submit, or give battle;
and they propose to leave the decision, upon request, to Amergin.
Amergin pronounces judgement - "the first judgment which was
delivered in Ireland." He agrees that the Milesians must not take
foes by surprise - they are to withdraw the length nine waves from
the shore, and then return; if then conquer the Danaans the land is
to be fairly by right of battle.
The Milesians submit to this decision and embark their ships. But
no sooner have they drawn off for this mystical distance of the nine
waves than a mist and storm are raised by the sorceries of the
Danaan - the coast of Ireland is hidden from their sight, and they
wander dispersed upon the ocean. To ascertain if it is
[135]
a natural or a Druidic tempest which afflicts them, a man named
Aranan is sent up to the masthead to see if the wind is blowing
there also or not He is flung from the swaying mast, but as he falls
to his death he cries his message to his shipmates: "There is no
storm aloft." Amergin, who as poet - that is to say, Druid - takes
the lead in all critical situations, thereupon chants his
incantation to the land of Erin. The wind falls, and they turn their
prows, rejoicing, towards the shore. But one of the Milesian lords,
Eber Donn, exults in brutal rage at the prospect of putting all the
dwellers in Ireland to the sword; the tempest immediately springs up
again, and many of the Milesian ships founder, Eber Donn's being
among them. At last a remnant of the Milesians find their way to
shore, and land in the estuary of the Boyne.
The Defeat of the Danaans
A great battle with the Danaans at Telltown [Teltin; so named
after the goddess Telta. See p. 103] then follows. The three kings
and three queens of the Danaans, with many of their people, are
slain, and the children of Miled - the last of the mythical invaders
of Ireland - enter upon the sovranty of Ireland. But the People of
Dana do not withdraw. By their magic art they cast over themselves a
veil of invisibility, which they can put on or off as they choose.
There are two Irelands henceforward, the spiritual and the earthly.
The Danaans dwell in the spiritual Ireland, which is portioned out
among them by their great overlord, the Dagda. Where the human eye
can see but green mounds and ramparts, the relics of ruined
fortresses or sepulchres, there rise the fairy palaces of the
defeated divinities; there they hold their revels in eternal
sun-shine, nourished by the magic meat and ale that give
[136]
them undying youth and beauty ; and thence they come forth at
times to mingle with mortal men in love or in war. The ancient
mythical literature conceives them as heroic and splendid in
strength and beauty. In later times, and as Christian influences
grew stronger, they dwindle into fairies, the People of the Sidhe;
[Pronounced "Shee". It means literally the People of the [Fairy]
Mounds] but they have never wholly perished; to this day the Land of
Youth and its inhabitants live in the imagination of the Irish
peasant.
The Meaning of the Danaan Myth
All myths constructed by a primitive people are symbols, and if
we can discover what it is that they symbolise, we have a valuable
clue to the spiritual character and sometimes even to the history,
of the people from whom they sprang. Now the meaning of the Danaan
myth as it appears in the bardic literature, though it has undergone
much distortion before it reached us, is perfectly clear. The
Danaans represent the Celtic reverence for science, poetry, and
artistic skill, blended, of course, with the earlier conception of
the divinity of the powers of Light. In their combat with the
Firbolgs the victory of the intellect over dullness and ignorance is
plainly portrayed - the comparison of the heavy, blunt weapon of the
Firbolgs with the light and penetrating spears of the People of Dana
is an indication which it is impossible to mistake. Again, in their
struggle with a far more powerful and dangerous enemy, the
Fomorians, we are evidently to see the combat of the powers of Light
with evil of a more positive kind than that represented by the
Firbolgs. The Fomorians stand not for mere dullness or
[137]
stupidity, but for the forces of tyranny, cruelty, and greed -
for moral rather than for intellectual darkness.
The Meaning of the Milesian Myth
But the myth of the struggle of the Danaans with the sons of
Miled is more difficult to interpret. How does it come that the
lords of light and beauty, wielding all the powers of thought
(represented by magic and sorcery), succumbed to a human race, and
were dispossessed by them of their hard-won inheritance? What is the
meaning of this shrinking of their powers which at once took place
when the Milesians came on the scene? The Milesians were not on the
side of the powers of darkness. They were guided by Amergin, a clear
embodiment of the idea of poetry and thought. They were regarded
with the utmost veneration, and the dominant families of Ireland all
traced their descent to them. Was the Kingdom of Light, then,
divided against itself? Or, if not, to what conception in the Irish
mind are we to trace the myth of the Milesian invasion and
victory?
The only answer I can see to this puzzling question is to suppose
that the Milesian myth originated at a much later time than the
others, and was, in its main features, the product of Christian
influences. The People of Dana were in possession of the country,
but they were pagan divinities they could not stand for the
progenitors of a Christian Ireland. They had somehow or other to be
got rid of, and a race of less embarrassing antecedents substituted
for them. So the Milesians were fetched from "Spain" and endowed
with the main characteristics, only more humanised, of the People of
Dana. But the latter, in contradistinction to the usual attitude of
early Christianity, are treated very tenderly in the story of their
overthrow.
[138]
One of them has the honour of giving her name to the island, the
brutality of one of the conquerors towards them is punished with
death, and while dispossessed Of the lordship of the soil they still
enjoy life in the fair world which by their magic art they have made
invisible to mortals. They are no longer gods, but they are more
than human, and frequent instances occur in which they are shown as
coming forth from their fairy world, being embraced in the Christian
fold, and entering into heavenly bliss. With two cases of this
redemption of the Danaans we shall close this chapter on the
Invasion Myths of Ireland.
The first is the strange and beautiful tale of the Transformation
of the Children of Lir.
The Children of Lir
Lir was a Danaan divinity, the father of the sea-god Mananan who
continually occurs in magical tales of the Milesian cycle. He had
married in succession two sisters, the second of whom was named
Aoife. [Pronounced "Eefa"] She was childless, but the former wife of
Lir had left him four children, a girl named Fionuala [This name
means "The Maid of the Fair Shoulder"] and three boys. The intense
love of Lir for the children made the step-mother jealous, and she
ultimately resolved on their destruction. It will be observed, by
the way, that the ;People of Dana, though conceived as unaffected by
time, and naturally immortal, are nevertheless subject to violent
death either at the hands of each other or even of mortals.
With her guilty object in view, Aoife goes on a journey to a
neighbouring Danaan king, Bov the Red, taking the four children with
her. Arriving at a lonely place by Lake Derryvaragh, in Westmeath,
she
[139]
orders her attendants to slay the children. They refuse, and
rebuke her. Then she resolves to do it herself; but, says the
legend, "her womanhood overcame her," and instead of killing the
children she transforms them by spells of sorcery into four white
swans, and lays on them the following doom: three hundred years they
are to spend on the waters of Lake Derryvaragh, three hundred on the
Straits of Moyle (between Ireland and Scotland), and three hundred
on the Atlantic by Erris and Inishglory. After that, "when the woman
of the South is mated with the man of the North," the enchantment is
to have an end.
When the children fail to arrive with Aoife at the palace of Bov
her guilt is discovered, and Bov changes her into "a demon of the
air." She flies forth shrieking, and is heard of no more in the
tale. But Lir and Bov seek out the swan-children, and find that they
have not only human speech, but have preserved the characteristic
Danaan gift of making wonderful music. From all parts of the island
companies of the Danaan folk resort to Lake Derryvaragh to hear this
wondrous music and to converse with the swans, and during that time
a great peace and gentleness seemed to pervade the land.
But at last the day came for them to leave the fellowship of
their kind and take up their life by the wild cliffs and ever angry
sea of the northern coast. Here they knew the worst of loneliness,
cold, and storm. Forbidden to land, their feathers froze to the
rocks in the winter nights, and they were often buffeted and driven
apart by storms. As Fionuala sings:
Cruel to us was Aoife Who played her magic upon us, And
drove us out on the water - Four wonderful snow-white swans.
[140]
"Our bath is the frothing brine, In bays by red rocks
guarded; For mead at our father's table We drink of the salt,
blue sea.
Three sons and a single daughter, In clefts of the cold rocks
dwelling, The hard rocks, cruel to mortals - We are full of
keening to-night."
Fionuala, the eldest of the four, takes the lead in all their
doings, and mothers the younger children most tenderly, wrapping her
plumage round them on nights of frost. At last the time comes to
enter on the third and last period of their doom, and they take
flight for the western shores of Mayo. Here too they suffer much
hardship; but the Milesians have now come into the land, and a young
farmer named Evric, dwelling on the shores of Erris Bay, finds out
who and what the swans are, and befriends them. To him they tell
their story, and through him it is supposed to have been preserved
and handed down. When the final period of their suffering is close
at hand they resolve to fly towards the palace of their father Lir,
who dwells, we are told, at the Hill of the White Field, in Armagh,
to see how things have fared with him. They do so; but not knowing
what has happened on the coming of the Milesians, they are shocked
and bewildered to find nothing but green mounds and whin-bushes and
nettles where once stood - and still stands, only that they cannot
see it - the palace of their father. Their eyes are holden, we are
to understand, because a higher destiny was in Store for them than
to return to the Land of Youth.
On Erris Bay they hear for the first time the sound of a
Christian beIl It comes from the chapel of a hermit who has
established himself there. The swans are at first startled and
terrified by the "thin, dreadful
[141]
sound," but afterwards approach and make themselves known to the
hermit, who instructs them in the faith, and they join him in
singing the offices of the Church.
Now it happens that a princess of Munster, Deoca, (the "woman of
the South") became betrothed to a Connacht chief named Lairgnen, and
begged him as wedding gift to procure for her the four wonderful
singing swans whose fame had come to her. He asks them of the
hermit, who refuses to give them up, where-upon the "man of the
North" seizes them violently by the silver chains with which the
hermit had coupled them, and drags them off to Deoca. This is their
last trial. Arrived in her presence, an awful transformation befalls
them. The swan plumage falls off; and reveals, not, indeed, the
radiant forms of the Danaan divinities, but four withered,
snowy-haired, and miserable human beings, shrunken in the
decrepitude of their vast old age. Lairgnen flies from the place in
horror, but the hermit prepares to administer baptism at once, as
death is rapidly approaching them. "Lay us in one grave, says
Fionuala, "and place Conn at my right hand and Fiachra at my left,
and Hugh before my face, for there they were wont to be when I
sheltered them many a winter night upon the seas of Moyle." And so
it was done, and they went to heaven; but the hermit, it is said,
sorrowed for them to the end of his earthly days. [The story here
summarised is given in full in the writer's "High Deeds of Finn"
(Harrap and Co.]
In all Celtic legend there is no more tender and beautiful tale
than this of the Children of Lir.
The Tale of Ethné
But the imagination of the Celtic bard always played with delight
on the subjects of these transition tales,
[142]
where the reconciling of the pagan order with the Christian was
the theme. The same conception is embodied in the tale of Ethné,
which we have now to tell.
It is said that Mananan mac Lir had a daughter who was given in
fosterage to the Danaan prince Angus, whose fairy palace was at
Brugh na Boyna. This is the great sepulchral tumulus now called New
Grange, on the Boyne. At the same time the steward of Angus had a
daughter born to him whose name was Ethné, and who was allotted to
the young princess as her handmaiden.
Ethné grew up into a lovely and gentle maiden, but it was
discovered one day that she took no nourishment of any kind,
although the rest of the household fed as usual on the magic swine
of Mananan, which might be eaten to-day and were alive again for the
feast to-morrow. Mananan was called in to penetrate the mystery, and
the following curious story came to light. One of the chieftains of
the Danaans who had been on a visit with Angus, smitten by the
girl's beauty, had endeavoured to possess her by force. This woke in
Ethné's pure spirit the moral nature which is proper to man, and
which the Danaan divinities know not. As the tale says, her
"guardian demon " left her, and an angel of the true God took its
place. After that event she abstained altogether from the food of
Faery, and was miraculously nourished by the will of God. After a
time, however, Mananan and Angus, who had been on a voyage to the
East, brought back thence two cows whose milk never ran dry, and as
they were supposed to have come from a sacred land Ethné lived on
their milk thenceforward.
All this is supposed to have happened during the reign of Eremon,
the first Milesian king of all Ireland,
[143]
who was contemporary with King David. At the time of the coming
of St. Patrick, therefore, Ethné would have been about fifteen
hundred years of age. The Danaan folk grow up from childhood to
maturity, but then they abide unaffected by the lapse of time.
Now it happened one summer day that the Danaan princess whose
handmaid Ethné was went down with all her maidens to bathe in the
river Boyne. When arraying themselves afterwards Ethné discovered,
to her dismay -and this incident was, of course, an instance of
divine interest in her destiny - that she had lost the Veil of
Invisibility, conceived here as a magic charm worn on the person,
which gave her the entrance to the Danaan fairyland and hid her from
mortal eyes. She could not find her way back to the palace of Angus,
and wandered up and down the banks of the river seeking in vain for
her companions and her home. At last she came to a walled garden,
and, looking through the gate, saw inside a stone house of strange
appearance and a man in a long brown robe. The man was a Christian
monk, and the house was a little church or oratory. He beckoned her
in, and when she had told her story to him he brought her to St.
Patrick, who completed her adoption into the human family by giving
her the rite of baptism.
Now comes in a strangely pathetic episode which reveals the
tenderness, almost the regret, with which early Irish Christianity
looked back on the lost world of paganism. As Ethné was one day
praying in the little church by the Boyne she heard suddenly a
rushing sound in the air, and innumerable voices, as it seemed from
a great distance, lamenting and calling her name. It was her Danaan
kindred, who were still seeking for her in vain. She sprang up to
reply, but was so overcome with emotion that she fell in a swoon
[144]
on the floor. She recovered her senses after a while, but
from that day she was struck with a mortal sickness, and in no long
time she died, with her head upon the breast of St. Patrick, who
administered to her the last rites, and ordained that the church
should be named after her, Kill Ethné - a name doubtless borne, at
the time the story was composed, by some real church on the banks of
Boyne. [It may be mentioned that the syllable "Kill," which enters
into so many Irish place-names (Kilkenny, Killiney, Kilcooley,
&c.), usually represents the Latin cella, a monastic
cell, shrine, or church.]
Christianity and Paganism in Ireland
These, taken together with numerous other legendary incidents
which might be quoted, illustrate well the attitude of the early
Celtic Christians, in Ireland at least, towards the divinities of
the o |